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Inside the State House

Steve Flowers

60th anniversary of JFK assassination

BY STEVE FLOWERS

OPINION—

The assassination of President John F. Kennedy happened 60 years ago this week. It occurred to me that a good many of you may be too young to remember that horribly sad day of Nov. 22, 1963.
Anyone living on that day can tell you exactly where they were when Kennedy was shot and killed by an assassin in Dallas, Texas. It was a perfect fall day in the Lone Star State. Lyndon Johnson was vice president, and he and Kennedy disliked each other immensely — it was totally a political marriage. The Kennedys had put Johnson on the ticket in 1960 to assure that the Democrats carried Texas in the general election, not because they liked him. They not only did not like Johnson, they did not trust him.
It was a Friday afternoon. The last high school games of the year were to be played that night. High school football was big in Alabama. By the way, it was also big in Texas, thus the movie “Friday Night Lights.”
I was in the seventh grade. It was just after lunch. My homeroom teacher at Troy Junior High School was Mrs. Elaine Dodson. All of a sudden, the music teacher for our schools, Jerry Spann, came into our room and announced that the president had been shot. Everyone was traumatized. The president died about an hour later at a Dallas hospital.
For the next three days, all of America watched on television the funeral preparations and the Monday funeral. It was an unbelievably sad event. The scene of the riderless white horse brought tears to your eyes. If that did not, the scene where little John John Kennedy, a precious precocious two-year-old boy gave a salute to his father was one of the most heart wrenching, tear jerking moments I have ever witnessed in my life. It still brings tears to my eyes 60 years later as I write this column.
John John grew to be a very handsome young man like his father. He, like his father, died an early untimely death in an airplane crash. Even though he did not have political aspirations, I believe that John Kennedy Jr. would have been president.
I am not a conspiracy theorist, but allow me to illuminate some facts. Johnson was the most ruthless, morally bankrupt and crudest man to ever sit in the White House. Johnson was the ultimate political animal. He lived by the rule that whatever it took to win and grab control of power is what you did. If you doubt that, read Robert Caro’s books on LBJ, or better yet ask any historian about his years as U.S. Senate Majority Leader.
In recent years, the Secret Service has released files that reveal the following facts. First, Johnson insisted that Kennedy go to Dallas, Texas, and campaign. The Secret Service asked Kennedy not to go because the civil rights issue was boiling in Texas. At Johnson’s urging, Kennedy agreed to go.
Second, the Secret Service came to Kennedy and said, “Mr. President, if you go you cannot use the main artery boulevard in your entourage. We cannot protect you.” Kennedy agreed. When Johnson heard of this, he told Kennedy he had to go down that boulevard because, “It is a Texas tradition.” Kennedy agreed at Johnson’s insistence.
Finally, the Secret Service, in exasperation, told President Kennedy, “Mr. President we asked you not to go to Dallas. We also asked you not to go down that boulevard because we cannot protect you from all the high building windows. To a sharpshooter you will be a sitting duck. If you go to Dallas and go down that thoroughfare, we must insist you let us put up a protective bubble to protect you.” Kennedy agreed. Johnson heard of the bubble and insisted to Kennedy that he could not do that because he would appear distant, detached, aloof and arrogant to Texans. The president, once again, acquiesced to Johnson’s pleas. The rest is history.
The horrific, tragic scenes of Jackie Kennedy’s blood stained pink dress, a little two year old boy’s goodbye salute to his father and the riderless white horse are indelibly planted in my memory 60 years later. The 1960s were a very tumultuous and memorable time to come of age in America, and Nov. 22, 1963, is etched in a lot of our generation’s minds.
See you next week.
Steve Flowers is Alabama’s leading political columnist. His weekly column appears in over 60 Alabama newspapers. He served 16 years in the state legislature. He may be reached at: www.steveflowers.us.

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