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American Minute with Bill Federer
How "Landslide Lyndon" stole Senate race in 1948? - And U.S. entered Vietnam War.
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In 1941,
Lyndon Baines Johnson
ran for
U.S. Senate.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
made a speech on the eve of the election criticizing LBJ’s opponent, Wilbert Lee O’Daniel, nevertheless,
LBJ
lost by 1,311 votes.
LBJ
alleged voter fraud.
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In 1948,
LBJ
ran for
Senate
again.
On election night, September 2, 1948, in the Democrat Primary runoff against former Texas Governor
Coke Stevenson,
it appeared
LBJ
lost.
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Then, mysteriously, a box of uncounted ballots was “discovered” in the south
Texas
town of
Alice
in
Jim Wells County, Precinct 13.
Confusion reigned in Texas and by the end of the week,
LBJ
won by
87 votes.
Both sides accused the other of voter fraud.
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The
FBI, Postal Department
and
other agencies were investigated
.
Piecing together the details, the story emerged that during the tabulation period,
LBJ’s
campaign manager,
John B. Connally,
traveled to Alice, Texas, in Jim Wells County.
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George Parr - The Duke of Duval,
the wealthy
“political boss”
of Jim Wells County and neighboring Duval County, gave
John Connally
access to be present when the ballots were "counted" and the returns amended.
George Parr
later committed
suicide.
When the dust settled, the newly recounted ballots showed
202 additional voters,
some of whom were deceased and buried in the local cemetery or were absent from the county on election day.
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These voters “lined up” in
alphabetical order
at the last minute, signed in the
same blue ink
in the
same handwriting
and all cast their ballots for
LBJ.
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The New York Times
published an article July 30, 1977, titled
"Ex-Official Says He Stole 1948 Election for Johnson":
"The disclosure was made by
Luis Salas,
who was the election judge for
Jim Well's County's Box 13,
which produced just enough votes in the 1948 Texas Democratic primary runoff to give
Mr. Johnson
the party's nomination for the
United States Senate ...
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'Johnson did not win that election - it was stolen for him
and I know exactly how it was done,' said
Mr. Salas,
now a lean, white-haired 76 year old ...
...
George B. Parr,
the South Texas political leader whom
Mr. Salas
served for a decade, shot and killed himself in April of 1975.
Mr. Johnson
is dead and so is his opponent ...
Mr. Salas
said he decided to
break his silence in quest for 'peace of mind'
...
'I was just going along with my party' ...
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... He said
Mr. Parr
ordered that 200-odd votes be added to
Mr. Johnson's
total from Box 13.
Mr. Salas
said he had seen the fraudulent votes added in alphabetical order and had them certified then as authentic on order from Mr. Parr ...
...
Parr was the Godfather
... He ... could tell any election judge: 'give us 80 percent of the vote, and the other guy 20 percent.' We had it made in every election ..."
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The New York Times
article continued:
"The Associated Press interviewed ... a former agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, T. Keilis Dibrell ... He confirmed Mr. Salas' statement that
the last 200 votes had been in alphabetical order' ...
Mr. Dibrell said 'Also, the last
202 names
were made with the
same colored ink,
and in the
same handwriting,
whereas the earlier names in the poll list were written by different individuals and in different color inks.'
The final statewide count, including the
Box 13 votes,
gave
Mr. Johnson
an
87 vote margin
... earning him the
tongue-in-cheek nickname 'Landslide Lyndon.'"
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The Democrat Central Committee
was deadlocked 28 to 28 on whether or not to certify the questionable election results.
John Connally
persuaded
Frank W. Mayborn,
publisher of the
Temple Daily Telegram,
to cut short a business trip in Nashville, Tennessee, and return to cast the deciding
Committee
vote to certify the election results.
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Coke Stevenson
took
LBJ
to court and on September, 24, 1948, and won. Judge T. Whitfield Davidson ordered
LBJ’s name to be removed
from the general election ballot.
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LBJ
turned for help to Washington attorney and former FDR appointee
Abe Fortas.
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Abe Fortas
persuaded
Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black,
who was also appointed by
FDR,
to intervene.
On September 28, 1948,
Justice Black
overturned the lower court ruling, letting the decision in the
Johnson-Stevenson race
rest with the
Texas Democrat Central Committee.
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In return for his favor,
Abe Fortas
was nominated in 1965 by
President Lyndon Johnson
to be a
Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
During
LBJ’s term
as President, many of the
records of his contested 1948 race disappeared.
In 1966,
Abe Fortas
accepted money from a Wall Street financier investigated for securities violations.
Abe Fortas
resigned in 1969.
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In the
Washington Post
article,
"HOW 'LANDSLIDE LYNDON' EARNED HIS NAME,"
March 4, 1990, David S. Broder reviewed Robert Caro's book
"The Years of Lyndon Johnson":
"The slimy creature who
stole the 1948 Texas Senate election
...
Lyndon Johnson
... driven by 'a boundless ambition ... his career had been a story of manipulation, deceit and ruthlessness ... the morality of the ballot box ... in which nothing matters but victory and any maneuver that leads to victory is justified ...
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Johnson ... stole the victory in the 1948 Senate race
... That campaign was an American classic ...
Johnson
battled ... a strongly favored opponent to win by the narrowest of margins --
the 87-vote victory
that earned him the derisive nickname of
'Landslide Lyndon'
...
Johnson
went through an equally breathless battle in the state convention and the courts to make his clearly tainted victory stand up."
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In March of 2006,
Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott
posted a column on the Texas State Attorney General’s website, stating:
"Voter fraud
is no newcomer to the Lone Star State. Six decades ago, the
votes ‘found’
in
Jim Wells County’s infamous Ballot Box 13
helped
Lyndon Johnson
squeak into the
U.S. Senate
in that
1948 primary."
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After two terms as a Senator from Texas,
LBJ
became
John F. Kennedy's Vice-President.
Life Magazine
was reportedly set to publish an edition on November 24, 1963, with
information damaging to LBJ,
potentially causing him to be
dropped
from the Democrat reelection ticket as
John F. Kennedy's running-mate,
but
Kennedy's assassination
in
Texas,
November 22, preempted it.
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Lyndon Johnson
was the President during the
Vietnam War.
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The
Vietnam War Memorial
was dedicated NOVEMBER 13, 1982, honoring 58,000 American troops who died.
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U.S. forces inflicted over a million enemy fatalities, yet involvement by politicians thwarted victory.
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North Vietnamese colonel, Bui Tin,
received the unconditional surrender of
South Vietnam
on April 30, 1975.
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Bui Tin
explained how the protests by
"anti-war peace demonstrators"
was key to the Communist victory:
"Every day our leadership would listen to world news over the radio at 9 a.m. to follow the growth of the American antiwar movement ...
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... Visits to Hanoi by people like Jane Fonda and former Attorney General Ramsey Clark and ministers gave us confidence that we should hold on in the face of battlefield reverses ...
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... We were elated when Jane Fonda, wearing a red Vietnamese dress, said at a press conference that she was ashamed of American actions in the war and that she would struggle along with us."
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After the war,
Bui Tin
became vice chief editor of the Communist Party's official newspaper in Vietnam,
People's Daily,
but he grew disillusioned with Communist corruption and, in 1990, fled to Paris.
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In an interview,
Bui Tin
stated:
"The roots of the Vietnam War - its all-encompassing and underlying nature - lie in a confrontation between two ideological worlds: socialism versus capitalism ... totalitarianism versus democracy ...
The conscience of America was part of its war-making capability, and we were turning that power in our favor. America lost because of its democracy; through dissent and protest it lost the ability to mobilize a will to win."
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Commenting on this dangerous trend is retired
Major General Patrick Brady,
considered the most decorated living veteran.
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A Medal of Honor recipient,
Major General Patrick Brady
flew over 2,500 combat missions in Vietnam, rescuing over 5,000 wounded.
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As told in his book,
Dead Men Flying,
Brady
once rescued 51 wounded in one day, flying 3 different helicopters which were shot up with over 400 holes from enemy fire and explosions.
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Major General Patrick Brady wrote, June 4, 2013 (WND.com):
"The greatest danger ... the feminization, emasculation and dismantling of our military.
The two most important elements of national survival are the media and the military ...
We know the media are failing - God help us if the military does also ...
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... Let's begin with Benghazi. It is incomprehensible that any commander, let alone the commander in chief, would go AWOL during a crisis such as Benghazi, but he was ...
Unprecedented rates of suicide ... Cut benefits to veterans ... Quad-sexual military with all the health, readiness and moral issues that come with exalting sodomy ... Sexual assault ...
Women will be tasked to lead bayonet charges ... Billions of defense dollars are unaccounted for ... Christianity is under military attack, and Bibles have been burned to appease Muslims ...
Just as the way forward for America is a return to the morality and values of the past, so too must the military return to the readiness standards and common sense of the past."
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A first-hand account of the Vietnam War is from
Marine Sergeant George Hutchings
in his book,
Combat Survival-Life Stories from a Purple Heart.
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George Hutchings
wrote that on October 12, 1967, during Operation Medina, Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Division, was ambushed by North Vietnamese in the Hai Lang jungle:
"Thirteen men were killed in front of me and countless more behind me. I was in shock; never had I heard such noise or saw so many dead.
Nevertheless, I returned fire and my M-16 jammed...We had walked into an ambush of an enemy four times our size ..."
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Pinned down in the jungle on top of a hill,
George Hutchings
continued:
"We slowly crawled ... to see who was alive ...
The next morning ... the captain ordered me to water detail ... I cursed about the order and Corporal Bice said, 'George, I'll go for you' ...
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... Just after he left, a sniper battle erupted ...
By the time our perimeter was cleared, several hours passed, and I went to check on Corporal Bice. I found him - head and boots.
We knew his boots because they bore his signature. He had been hit in the chest with a light anti-tank weapon. My inner voice said, 'He died for you; Christ died for you ...'"
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In 1968,
George Hutchings
was shot three times, bayoneted and left for dead, as he wrote:
"On March 14th I stepped on a pungie stick.
Luckily ... it went through the bottom of my boot and out the side ...
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... March 18th ... shot rang from the right rear. I hit the dirt. Was I shot? ...
Remembering my training, I didn't look at the wound, If you look ... you might go into shock.
I felt my hip with my hand and it came back bloody ... I was better off than the two men who had been directly in front of me. They lay dead ...
Corporal Ed Grant ... crawled over to me ... with a shotgun ... 'If you get overrun, you'll need this,' he said ...
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... Laying there with no cover, a machine gun battle raged just over my helmet ... 'Oh God, get me out of here and I'll live for you the rest of my life.'"
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Of the
Vietnam Memorial,
George Hutchings
said:
"On that wall is the name of
Corporal Quinton Bice,
who was hit in the chest with a rocket while running a patrol in my place.
A Christian,
Corporal Bice
had shared the Gospel with me, but I didn't understand it till he gave his life in my place."
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American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924
wjfederer@gmail.com
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