The federal government finally released secret files about Robert Kennedy’s assassination. Tulsi Gabbard led the charge, announcing 10,000 pages of documents are now public. These records had been locked away for decades, but President Trump’s push for transparency forced them into the light.
The files don’t have a “smoking gun,” but they expose shocking details. Messages sent to American embassies in Kuwait, London, Tel Aviv, and Beirut right after the shooting raise new questions. Why were so many foreign countries looped into conversations about an American senator’s murder?
Conspiracy theories gain fuel with these revelations. Witnesses reported a woman fleeing the scene yelling, “We shot him!” The angle of the bullets and possible second shooters are still unexplained. Gabbard admits there are more mysteries than answers, proving the official story doesn’t add up.
President Trump’s leadership made this historic disclosure possible. His order forced bureaucrats to release files they’d hidden for over 50 years. This is how government should work — letting patriots see the truth instead of protecting crooked insiders.
RFK Jr. backs the release, saying Americans deserve to know what happened to his father. He’s spent years fighting lies from the deep state. Now, with these documents, everyday citizens can investigate for themselves. The elites hate that.
These files follow last month’s JFK document dump, exposing more Cold War secrets. Both releases show a pattern: shadowy agencies manipulating history. Patriots won’t rest until every redacted line is exposed.
Gabbard toured the National Archives vault holding Oswald’s passport and the bloody shirt he wore when killed. These artifacts belong to the people, not stuck-up DC gatekeepers. Letting Americans see the evidence builds trust in our nation’s story.
The fight for truth isn’t over. Real patriots will dig through these files, challenge the lies, and honor RFK’s legacy. Thanks to Trump and Gabbard, the swamp’s secrets are crumbling. Freedom wins when government fears the people.