Robert F. Kennedy Jr reveals the truth about the assassination of President Kennedy and the government coverup in this interview on the app, Clubhouse.
The discussion was lead by The Preservation of the Human Race Club. Learn more about them here: https://www.clubhouse.com/club/preservationofthehumanrace
First, we'd just like to talk about, give a quick background of some of your environmental work and your activism that you've done, and then kind of especially touch on, you know, the big win for Monsanto and what that means for other cases going forward.
I've been doing environmental litigation Since 1985, and I was the founder of the Waterkeeper Alliance.
I first worked for the Hudson Riverkeeper, who was a coalition of commercial and recreational fishermen, who started suing polluters on Hudson.
We used bounties from those lawsuits to construct a boat.
and suing the polluter and I ended up sending hundreds polluters on Hudson Hudson is a now a model for ecosystem restoration so we force polluters we so it's super over 500 polluters on the river or we force them to spend five and a half billion dollars to Today, the Hudson has the richest waterway in the North Atlantic.
It produces more biomass per gallon, more pounds of fish per acre than any other waterway in the Atlantic Ocean or the equator.
The miraculous resurrection of the Hudson inspired the creation out of 350 other water keepers in 46 countries.
Each one has a patrol boat.
They have local...
We're a full-time paid water keeper.
They patrol their waterways and we sue the polluters.
So I ran that litigation and ran that group.
It became the biggest water protection group in the world.
Around 2017, I founded the predecessor to Children's Health Defense.
I also have been doing for over a decade Multi-district and class action litigation against pharmaceutical companies and against big polluters.
So I did the DuPont case that is now the subject of the Mark Ruffalo film, Dark Waters, if you've seen that.
I was on the trial team in the Monsanto case.
Where we won the three Monsanto cases.
The first one, we won $289 million from Roundup.
The second one, we won $89 million.
That was a federal case that we were supposed to lose.
The third one, we were back in the state superior court in California.
And we won a $2.2 billion judgment from the jury.
Billion with a B. We've unsettled all of the cases, and there were some 40,000 cases with Monsanto for around a little over $10 billion.
Today, I'm chair of the Children's Health events, which Our research focuses on toxic exposures to children.
We do pesticides like glyphosate, neonicotid pesticides.
We do BFOA's and also cell phones.
We do fluoride.
We do vaccines.
We focus on trying to address the causes of the current pandemic of chronic disease in America's children.
6% of our children being affected by chronic disease in the early 1960s to 54% today.
I would like to say also rest in peace to your father and to your uncle.
Today is the anniversary of his assassination so I really appreciate you taking out the time on this special day to honor I really appreciate your time.
Thank you so much.
I was gonna say while we're talking about pushing back paperwork it seems like maybe a good time to talk about the latest pushback on the assassination papers.
And if you have any idea as to, you know, I mean, I assume it's along the same lines of suit, but what they're hiding and, you know, just any details you have on that and is it some game they're going to keep playing with us?
There is a lot of speculation as to what those papers say, but clearly it's very, very strange because, you know, Donald Trump, one of his campaign promises was that he was going to release it.
Years ago, or eight years ago, the last of the papers.
And Trump promised him during his campaign that he was going to release them no matter what.
And then when he got in there, he changed his mind.
And you have to say, how could that have happened?
Because Trump, you know, no matter what you feel about Trump, he definitely was a guy who was willing to break things.
And he hated the CIA. So, you know, what is it that they said to him That made him Okay, I'm going to keep these things in the lockbox.
And then Biden said the same thing, promised during his presidency.
Biden's a long-term friend of my family's, but, you know, somebody...
All I can say is clearly this is about protecting institutions and not, you know, protecting individuals.
Because most of the individuals who are involved in the assassination and the cover-up All the Warren Commission stuff are now long gone.
So if I can dig a little deeper, if you have any insight on the situation, the assassinations around your father, your uncle, as well as being related, as well as potentially MLK, if there's any connection between a couple of them or all three of them?
I do not know that much about Martin Luther King's assassination, but I... You know, other people have said that the intelligence agencies were also involved in that.
I don't think there's any doubt that the intelligence agency, that the CIA in particular, and particularly the group that was involved in the Castro, you know, what they call the Miami Station, people like David Adley Phillips, William Harvey, and the Cuban group, That was from Alpha 66, and some of the other Cuban groups were clearly involved in my uncle's assassination.
And, you know, I don't think it's no longer controversial that Lee Harvey Oswald was a CIA asset.
He was recruited in, I think, 1957 by James Jesus Angleton, who was the head of counterintelligence.
You know, he was at that time a radar operator at the Adatsui Air Force Base in Japan, which was the CIA base where the U-2 flights flew out of.
And when the U-2 was shot down and Gary Francis Powers was captured by the Russians, which was a huge embarrassment to our country, the CIA had said they can't be shot down.
The Russians don't even know they're flying because they're so high.
And it was clear at that point that they had a mole in Langley.
And they had known this for some time, and that mole's existence is now well-documented, although nobody has ever disclosed who it was.
And Angleton sent Oswald to Moscow as what they called a dangle.
They put a trigger on his file in Langley, and then he went and defected to, he made a very, very dramatic defection to Moscow and told them he was going to, publicly, that he was going to tell the KGB everything about the U-2.
And James Jesus Angleton believed that Moscow, that the KGB and the GRU would be really frightened and puzzled about who Oswald was and whether or not he was real.
And they would ask their asset at Langley, their mole, to look at his files.
And Angleton had put a trigger system on his file so that he would catch anybody who looked at it.
And when that project failed, nobody ever asked for Oswald's file.
Oswald just came back to the United States.
He was never debriefed by the CIA. He was given an airplane ticket and his passport, which he had disavowed back during a 20-minute meeting at the State Department.
And You know, then he went to Dallas and he was ushered around by CIA assets throughout Dallas.
And that's a very well-documented story.
And, you know, we now have CIA cables talking about Oswald.
And, you know, then it gets even more arcane and Byzantine after that.
Wow.
That's a lot, though.
It's interesting, and I'm sure those details would be interesting as well.
One more question on that.
Do you think that J. Edgar Hoover was involved?
In my view, I don't think that J. Edgar Hoover was involved.
I know J. Edgar Hoover was involved in the cover-up, because Oswald was also working for the FBI, and he was an embarrassment.
And Hoover fired a bunch of his agents who were aware of that.
So Hoover's participation in the cover-up is also pretty well documented today.
I think Hoover hated my uncle, and he definitely hated my father even worse.
But I don't know any convincing evidence that he was involved in the murder at all.
I think the people who were involved in my uncle's murder were people who were associated with the Miami station, which were The CIA agents themselves, you know, high officers, William Harvey, David Adley Phillips, and a number of others, they were the same group who participated in the 1953 coup in Guatemala and in the Bay of Pigs, and they all convened at the Miami station to murder Castro, and they were murderers.
They were hitmen.
They had recruited Johnny Roselli and Santos Traficante and Carlos Marcello all into this cabal to murder Castro and to reclaim the mobs and mafia of Havana Casinos.
And so they had recruited hitmen from the Mafia who are now working as CIA assets.
And all of those characters are, you know, at some level or not, their involvement has been documented.
People who want to read a really, probably, I think one of the best books about my uncle's assassination is Jim Douglas' book, The Unspeakable.
There's many, many good books about it.
That book is good because what happened is the Warren Commission came out and established the orthodoxy.
And then the Congress investigated in 73 and said, no, the Warren Commission was wrong.
This was a conspiracy.
And a lot more documents came out.
But over the years, hundreds of thousands of documents have been released.
But they come out in trickles, and some of them have extraordinary revelations in them and proofs of things.
Like, you know, Oswald's involvement is now very well proven, but the major commissars of the orthodoxy, like the New York Times in particular, and the Washington Post, Which were Operation Mockingbird assets.
They were CIA assets.
And that's very well documented as well.
They have been guardians of the orthodoxy that it was a single killer.
So when these new documents come out, there's no news.
But some of them have extraordinary significance.
And what Douglass did is he's collected 60 years of documents and distilled them and put them All into one story and he's done it in a brilliant way and reading that book is like reading a spy novel.
You won't be able to put it down.
It's a really, really good chronicle of the events and the people who murdered my uncle.
Well, I'm definitely getting that one.
Ms.
Kennedy on the entire club, Preservation of the Human Race, thank you for your time today.
We really admire you for being courageous and for being able to join us on this platform.
And like I said, we really value and appreciate your time with us today.