RFK Remembered

I’m writing this post on the 50th anniversary of the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.  I was 6 years old when this happened.  I remember seeing footage of the event on television at my grandmother’s house.  I was young enough at the time that I assumed everything I saw was live.  I was also confused enough to think that he was his brother John.  For years I told people that I remembered seeing the assignation of President Kennedy on live television.  When I started hearing people talk about him being killed at Dealey Plaza while riding in a convertible, I thought, “These people are wrong!” I know I saw him in the kitchen of that hotel!”  Book Depository? Grassy Knoll? I didn’t know anything about all that.  What I saw was probably on a Thursday morning news report instead of the “live” coverage I assumed I was seeing.  

​Of course, I learned the difference a few years later, especially as documentaries and conspiracies about the JFK assassination became more common. There may be other important news events that I saw on the news that happened before this one.  But this is the first one that stuck with me even though I missed several important details.

As much as I would like to say that Robert Kennedy influenced me, it would be dishonest for me to do so.  While I believe that much of our political philosophies and leanings are similar, my beliefs were well established by the time I really understood much about him.  He is less someone that influenced me and more someone that I admire.  Especially his stance on racial, social and economic justice.  

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