John F. Kennedy’s grandson has fired out at Donald Trump’s decision to release highly classified JFK assassination files that have been kept from the public for over half a century.
Jack Schlossberg took to X Thursday in response to Trump’s executive order to declassify records in 1963, Senator Robert F. Kennedy in 1968, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. the same year – three deaths that have sparked countless conspiracy theories.
“The truth is a lot sadder than the myth — a tragedy that didn’t need to happen. Not part of an inevitable grand scheme.
“Declassification is using JFK as a political prop, when he’s not here to punch back.
“There’s nothing heroic about it,” Schlossberg, 32, wrote.
On Thursday, Trump was on camera signing the bold executive order saying: “That’s a big one, huh? A lot of people have been waiting long for this for years, for decades.
“And everything will be revealed – OK.”
The President signaled staff to return the signing pen to JFK’s nephew, vaccine skeptic and health secretary nominee Robert F Kennedy Jr, who has controversially woven himself into Trump’s political circle. However, it emerged this week that Trump was planning to hire prominent health industry lobbyist Don Dempsey, something that would appear to be at odds with RFK Jr’s agenda.
Specifically, the executive order requires top administration officials to strike up a plan that seeks to declassify the restricted documents within 15 days – however, it is not watertight and does not guarantee their release.
Trump previously flirted the idea that he would release the clandestine documents ahead of his re-election after being met with resistance from the CIA.
Despite many of the documents having already been released, thousands are still redacted, particularly those connected to JFK. As history relays, JFK was killed on 22 November 1963 in Dallas by suspected assassin, Lee Harvey Oswald, who, only two days later was murdered by nightclub owner and bagman for the mafia, Jack Ruby.
The U.S. government declared Oswald acted alone. But this did not stop many people from developing suspicions after a range of questions went unanswered prompting a surge of absurd conspiracy theories.
Schlossberg, who has previously condemned Trump for inciting politically motivated violence, boasts a 567K TikTok following where he regularly spouts his views.
He has even posted bizarre tweets in the week of Trump’s inauguration such as the suggestion that the new Second Lady of the United States, Ursha Vance, was “hotter” than his late grandma, Jacqueline Lee Kennedy Onassis. A claim he relished about on TikTok.
“This one goes out to Usha Vance. The most beautiful woman in the world. Whenever you’re ready, I’m here for you”, he sang in a TikTok video.
X users were quick to snap back at the political commentator highlighting how strange it was to comment on the attractiveness of his late relative who passed when he was just a year old.
“That’s your grandmother!!!!”, one shocked user wrote.
Schlossberg is known for spouting sardonic utterances and has been particularly vocal in the wake of Trump 2.0. On Sunday, a day ahead of Trump’s monumental inauguration, Schlossberg said: “How do I get a testosterone Rx? I want the kind you inject.”
Schlossberg and his deluges are arguably a ticking time bomb, difficult to anticipate, and difficult to predict, particularly how explosively critical the next may be.