A Personal Note About Assassination and Murder
Defined: The act of assassinating; a killing by treacherous violence.
Hillary Clinton’s remarks hit me in a place too close to home. Not only from a political standpoint, but from a personal standpoint. Those who know me, know that I don’t look forward to Memorial Day weekend, because my grandfather, my father’s father, was murdered in downtown Los Angeles close to Union Station on Memorial Day weekend, 1971.
To this day, we’re not 100% certain of who actually did it, though LAPD closed the case and tied it to a black guy on a rampage (presumably over drugs, though that isn’t known for sure because the archived files were destroyed. In a murder case, go figure.) The problem with the LAPD theory is that their file was incredibly thin, so thin, in fact, that they could not put the man on trial for my grandfather’s murder. He was convicted on the murders of two others, one of which had an eyewitness.
My grandfather was shot once on the right side of his neck at point-blank range, and once on the left side at point-blank range, then stuffed into the trunk of his car and left for the police to discover 3 days later.
Assassination usually applies to political killings. My grandfather was simply murdered. Whatever verb is used, it is an ugly, horrible memory. Invoking that on Memorial Day weekend sent shivers up my spine.
I generally crawl into my own self on Memorial Day and come out the day after. The only difference this year is that I’m inclined to do it a couple of days early.
If she were standing in front of me with that self-righteous shake of the head, I’d have to suppress the urge to slap her, while asking what exactly she meant through clenched teeth.
There are some things never forgotten. I don’t need an ambitious, cynical candidate to magnify them. If that’s how I feel, how much more must it have stung the Kennedys and those who lived through that horrible night when RFK was assassinated in LA? And why the dig at California?
The sooner she crawls back under her rock, the better.
On this 37th year of the murder of Charles G. Hayes, we all still remember.
Sphere: Related ContentVince Bugliosi – Prosecute George W. Bush
But he deserves much more than impeachment. I mean, in America, we apparently impeach presidents for having consensual sex outside of marriage and trying to cover it up. If we impeach presidents for that, then if the president takes the country to war on a lie where thousands of American soldiers die horrible, violent deaths and over 100,000 innocent Iraqi civilians, including women and children, even babies are killed, the punishment obviously has to be much, much more severe. That’s just common sense. If Bush were impeached, convicted in the Senate, and removed from office, he’d still be a free man, still be able to wake up in the morning with his cup of coffee and freshly squeezed orange juice and read the morning paper, still travel widely and lead a life of privilege, still belong to his country club and get standing ovations whenever he chose to speak to the Republican faithful. This, for being responsible for over 100,000 horrible deaths?* For anyone interested in true justice, impeachment alone would be a joke for what Bush did.

