1.
Jack Ruby asked some of the employees in the News paper office if they were keen on coming with him to the president motorcade and looking at the ”fire works”, moments before disappearing from the office. Hmm .... [emphasis added]
2.
Which is weird because he was there at the Dallas Morning News when word JFK had been shot came in. Almost as if he had no idea what was going on, and was running his mouth as usual. [emphasis added]
1.
I'd love to see the testimony from the employees that Ruby said anything about fireworks in the Dallas Morning News offices.
Let me help you out. Here's the testimony of the three people I'm aware of that worked at a Dallas newpaper:
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/russ/testimony/newnam.htm
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/russ/testimony/rea.htm
http://mcadams.posc.mu.edu/russ/testimony/watherwax.htm
I invite Manifesto to read it for the first time. I invite him to tell us where those employees said anything about Ruby mentioning fireworks, at any time.
2.
I'd want to caution everyone again against accepting any claims made by conspiracy theorists anywhere, at any time. There is no documentation in the record that Ruby made any such statement as claimed by Manifesto. Conspiracy theorists never bother to ascertain the facts, nor read the testimony. They are more than happy to repeat some nonsense that is fourth, fifth, or sixth hand speculation mutated into 'fact' as if it's true.
Ruby was at the DNM office on the afternoon of 11/22/63 to revise the ad copy for his night club. No one testified to seeing him prior to 12:40.
Newnam (not Newman) said he first saw Ruby at "approximately 12:40", which is ten minutes after the assassination.
Rea said he first saw Ruby about 1 pm, "within 5 or 10 minutes either way" That is, between 12:50pm and 1:10pm.
Watherwax saw Ruby on 11/23/63, the day after the assassination, "about 5 minutes after 4" in the morning. This was to change his advertisement that his nightclubs would be closed Saturday, Sunday, and Monday nights (11/23 - 11/25) to honor the memory of the late President.
There is absolutely no testimony that Ruby saw any of the Dallas Morning News staff prior to the assassination, nor that he said anything about going to see the parade together, nor anything about fireworks.
Here's the truth:
In 1977, a man with a criminal record, Bob Vanderslice, who was also an IRS informant, told his IRS contact, Arlen Fuhlendorf, that he saw Ruby shortly before the assassination outside the postal annex (at the corner of Houston and Commerce, facing the Depository) and Vanderslice
in 1977 said Ruby made that comment about the fireworks.
Fuhlendorf wrote up the claim in a memo, but said he never believed a word of it.
https://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/...ory-just-bad-guy-telling-good-guy-great-story
So an undocumented claim, made 14 years after the assassination, with no verification whatsoever, somehow becomes a 'fact' to Manifesto and conspiracy theorists like him, and gets transmuted into the nonsense Manifesto claims.
Along the way, it mutates from one man to several hearing Jack make this claim. It mutates from an undocumented claim made 14 years after the fact by a low-level criminal, a burglar, to being sourced to honest newspapermen.
All to make it appear less specious.
And just in case there's any doubt, he adds the specious "Hmm ...." at the end as if to imply "Think about it. Of course this is suspicious! How could it not be?"
It's still just an unproven claim by Manifesto. He apparently specializes in those.
Hmm ....
Hank