RFK Jr. Says He Must “Be Careful” The CIA Doesn’t Assassinate Him

June 17th, 2023

Via: Summit News:

During a discussion with Joe Rogan, Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy junior admitted that he is putting his life in danger by speaking out about the assassinations of his uncle and his father, and that he “takes precautions” to ensure the CIA doesn’t kill him.

Rogan asked RFK Jr. what he thought would happen if he managed to get into office, to which Kennedy replied “I gotta be careful.”

“I’m aware of that, you know, I’m aware of that danger. I don’t live in fear of it — at all. But I’m not stupid about it, and I take precautions,” he added.

Kennedy spoke about his Uncle JFK being “at war” with the military industrial complex, and asserted that the intelligence agencies were “trying to trick him” into launching military excursions into Cuba and Vietnam.

RFK Jr. again spoke about JFK eventually concluding that he must “shatter” the CIA “into a thousands pieces” and “scatter it to the winds.”

3 Responses to “RFK Jr. Says He Must “Be Careful” The CIA Doesn’t Assassinate Him”

  1. NH says:

    The conversation he is bringing forward–priceless.
    Sucessfully suing Monsanto (Roundup):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGoNyvAvhf0

  2. NH says:

    Musk and Kennedy in a Twitter spaces conversation—Kennedy: what gives you such strong conviction based on a principle, you weren’t even born in the United States? Musk: I do very much consider myself an american, I don’t have homes outside the United States, I carry no other passport, I will live and die here:

    https://www.theburningplatform.com/2023/06/17/rfk-jr-and-elon-musk-discuss-reclaiming-democracy/

  3. NH says:

    In the vein (so to speak) of CIA funding, it’s hard to believe the following article isn’t produced by the Onion! (maybe it’s some sort of psyop 4D chess propaganda?)—the Taliban has outlawed opium production again, and this United States Institute of Peace author William Byrd comes up with all kinds of laments about the effects on the Afghan economy.

    The author—“During 2002-2006,” (when opium production hit record production year after year following the cancellation of the Taliban’s previous ban on opium by the US military) “he was stationed in Kabul, Afghanistan, where he served as the World Bank’s country manager for Afghanistan and then as economic adviser.”

    https://www.sott.net/article/481413-The-Talibans-successful-opium-ban-is-bad-for-Afghans-and-the-world-sez-the-US

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