Fred Koch – Co-founder of John Birch Society

Fred_Koch_225pxFred Koch is a founder of the John Birch Society that backed General Walker. While in Russia, Fred may have approached by the White Movement and told about the Bolsheviks on his payroll. There was a purge. Fred Koch had to be a Kennedy Hater, just like his sons are a Obama Hater. The Koch Brothers spend millions on ASSASINATING the character of the President of the United States. They back Ted Cruz who might also believe the Republican Party is full of Communists.

I found this article this morning that backs up my Walker theory.

http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/item/16873-50th-anniversary-of-jfk-assassination-spawns-attacks-on-dallas-right-wingers

Central America is the Coffee Bean Capital of the World. If John Birch and General Walker believed Kennedy was a Communist conspiring to recruit all the Catholics in America, then, JFK would have to go because he is threatening the Coffee Empire Capitalists. Like Obama, JFK would be labeled an ‘Anti-Capitalist’. Here is a good MOTIVE to kill him. Folks south of the border are mainly Catholics. We are dealing with paranoids, the same nuts who went after our President just after he was elected. The CIA would want to employ a coffee buyer because they already have agents in the field.

Jon Presco

“”Before he left the William Reily Coffee Company, Oswald visited [garage owner Adrian Alba] to say goodbye. According to the record, he had been fired for malingering. Yet Oswald seemed pleased, telling Alba he expected to work next at the New Orleans plant of NASA — the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. He never did work there, although four of his colleagues at Reily did move to NASA within weeks of Oswald’s departure. At all events Oswald departed, telling Alba, ‘I have found my pot of gold at the end of the rainbow’” (Anthony Summers, Conspiracy, 1989, Paragon House, 284).

http://www.ctka.net/LetJusticeBeDone/chapter4.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_C._Koch

“During his time in the Soviet Union, Koch came to despise communism and Joseph Stalin’s regime,[6][7] writing in his 1960 book, A Business Man Looks at Communism, that he found the Soviet Union to be “a land of hunger, misery, and terror”.[16] He toured the countryside with his handler Jerome Livshitz. Livshitz gave Fred Koch what he would call a “liberal education in Communist techniques and methods” and Koch grew persuaded that the Soviet threat needed to be countered in America.[11]

According to his son, Charles, “Many of the Soviet engineers he worked with were longtime Bolsheviks who had helped bring on the revolution.” It deeply bothered Fred Koch that so many of those so committed to the Communist cause were later purged.[11]

He was one of the founding members of the John Birch Society.[17]

He claimed that the Democratic and Republican Parties were infiltrated by the Communist Party, and he supported Mussolini’s suppression of communists. He wrote that “The colored man looms large in the Communist plan to take over America,” and that public welfare was a secret plot to attract rural blacks and Puerto Ricans to Eastern cities to vote for Communist causes and “getting a vicious race war started.”[16]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Frank_Norris

http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/item/16873-50th-anniversary-of-jfk-assassination-spawns-attacks-on-dallas-right-wingers

However, since some members of the media have already started to rearrange the events of 50 years ago to divert blame from a self-described Marxist — Lee Harvey Oswald — onto those they like to label as (variously) “ultra-conservative,” “archconservative,” or simply “right-wing,” a sane and sober look at these claims is definitely called for.

Crowing Claimant

Leading the charge against the “ultra-conservatives” is Scott K. Parks, who penned an article for the Dallas News for October 12 headlined: “Extremists in Dallas created volatile atmosphere before JFK’s 1963 visit.” Parks lamented that following November 22, 1963, “Dallas became known to the world as the city of hate, the city that killed Kennedy.”

Parks proceeded to assign blame for exactly who was responsible for manufacturing this “hateful” atmosphere in Dallas, and — lest anyone miss his point — his explanation falls under a subheading, “John Birch Society HQ.”

Moving on to name names, Parks named Texas oilmen H.L. Hunt and Clint Murchison and General Edwin Walker as among the powerful and influential Dallasites who disliked John Kennedy’s policies and — by a very long stretch of logic — shared in the blame for Kennedy’s murder. Walker comes under special scrutiny in the hit piece because of his membership in The John Birch Society. Oddly, though Parks noted that Lee Harvey Oswald attempted to kill Walker on April 10, 1963, and also that Oswald’s widow, Marina, said Oswald had once told her that Walker was a leader of a “fascist organization” (typical communist labeling for anti-communists), he fails to see the incongruity between his assertions that “right-wingers” contributed to Kennedy’s assassination and the fact that an admitted Marxist shot the president. He either experiences or feigns puzzlement by writing: “[Marina Oswald] could offer no logical explanation for why Lee Oswald, an avowed leftist, would target the right-wing extremist Walker and the president, who was despised by so many on the far right.”

In his article, Parks relates how General Walker, after he learned of UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson’s visit to Dallas to deliver a speech commemorating United Nations Day, scheduled a United States Day at the same auditorium one day earlier. Walker’s obvious intent was to emphasize U.S. sovereignty over the threat to that sovereignty that U.S. membership in the UN constituted.

The following day, during Stevenson’s UN address, a heckler shouted at the ambassador through a bullhorn. After the speech, outside the auditorium a small crowd of 100 protesters surrounded the ambassador and things got ugly. One man reportedly spat at him and a woman, who later claimed she was pushed, conked him over the head with her protest sign — inexcusable behavior to say the least.

In October, he was hired by the graphic-arts firm of Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall as a photoprint trainee. A fellow employee at Jaggars-Chiles-Stovall testified that Oswald’s rudeness at his new job was such that fights threatened to break out, and that he once saw Oswald reading a Russian language publication.[69] [n 6]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reily_Foods_Company

On December 11, 1902, Reily and his partners began their coffee roasting, grinding and distributing company in New Orleans. At the time, more than 85% of all coffee beans imported into the United States passed through New Orleans so it gave Reily first choice of the best coffee beans available. Later the next year, the company added to its products offerings as a convenience to its customers. Both his coffee and tea products were sold under the Luzianne (a regional pronunciation of Louisiana) brand name that he created. In 1906 the company was renamed the Reily Taylor Company and then later, in 1919, became Wm. B. Reily & Co., Inc.
In 1932, noticing the increased popularity of iced tea, especially in the South, Reily and his sons created a blend of tea made specifically to be used for iced tea. Luzianne Iced Tea has since become the cornerstone product of the company and the second best selling iced tea in the United States.
Lee Harvey Oswald, one of the alleged assassins of President John F. Kennedy, worked briefly at Reily’s New Orleans facility in the months before the assassination. Oswald was discharged from his position on July 19, 1963.[2]

http://www.ctka.net/LetJusticeBeDone/chapter4.htm

“Before he left the William Reily Coffee Company, Oswald visited [garage owner Adrian Alba] to say goodbye. According to the record, he had been fired for malingering. Yet Oswald seemed pleased, telling Alba he expected to work next at the New Orleans plant of NASA — the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. He never did work there, although four of his colleagues at Reily did move to NASA within weeks of Oswald’s departure. At all events Oswald departed, telling Alba, ‘I have found my pot of gold at the end of the rainbow’” (Anthony Summers, Conspiracy, 1989, Paragon House, 284)

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