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A Certain Arrogance: The Sacrificing of Lee Harvey Oswald and the Wartime Manipulation of Religious Groups by U.S. Intelligence
George Michael Evica and Charles Robert Drago
Last accessed on Saturday March 9, 2019
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Oswald’s spelling and punctuation, his grammar and sentence structure, his rhetoric, and his logic varied so considerably throughout
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his reported communications and writing as to raise serious questions about what he might have personally written, what was dictated to him or copied by him verbatim, and what was fabricated, imitating either closely or very broadly his handwriting and ‘style.’
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Anything relatively well-written and largely free from error might therefore be suspect as an intelligence invention; unless its anomalous literacy was an
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The gaming aspects of intelligence and espionage have been explored most
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extensively in so-called “spy” fiction, primarily in the United Kingdom and the United States. Gaming phenomena can be observed in detective fiction, in popular romance, in the history of “comic books,” in the development of action cinema, including the serials of the 1930s and 40s, and in the confluence of these popular cultural strands in video games.
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