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John F. Kennedy Assassination

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John F. Kennedy Assassination

Is People life worth getting taken from them over pointless things? Would you want to be killed because a certain person has a problem with what you are doing? Well, John Kennedy had no chance to answer those questions. John was assassinated because many people didn't like him. In broad day light his life was taken in front of thousands of people. John Kennedy was a great political leader who had no reason to get assassinated, and his death leaves many people wondering why he was killed.

Born in Brookline, Massachusetts on May 29, 1917, John Fitzgerald Kennedy was the second child born from a batch of nine children. John was taught in religious teachings of the Roman Catholic Church school. His father Joseph Kennedy had a multimillion-dollar fortune in banking, bootlegging, shipbuilding, and the film industry. In 1938, Joseph was the U.S ambassador to Great Britain and john was his secretary for six months. This led John to write his senior thesis at Harvard University in 1940. The topic of his paper was on Great Britain's military and how they were unprepared for a lot of things. John thesis was expanded and it became the best-selling book with the title named, Why England Slept (Bigraphy.com). I think the way john grew up was good for him. I can tell that John was raised up known to have a big mind-setting by thinking bigger than others. He started his life off on the right tracks and it preceded him to doing good things in his life.

Many years passed by and John succeeded in many things. In the fall of 1941 John got in the U.S. Navy. The next two following years he was sent to the South Pacific. In 1945, John was discharged and his older brother Joe was killed in the war. John father thought that Joe was going to be the first Kennedy to run for office, but after his death the family's political standards passed to John. Those standards crushed John's dreams of pursuing an academic or journalistic career. John barely escaped death in the tough battles. Commanding a patrol torpedo (PT) boat, he was seriously injured when a Japanese destroyer sank it. Casted away far behind enemy lines, john led his men back to safety and was given an award by the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps medal for being a hero. (Biography.com). John should've kept moving on with his dreams. It doesn't matter what other people want you to do if you have other plans for your life I believe that you should succeed in completing them. Along that process he almost died from malaria because of the aggravation he caused in his ailment and contracted. These painful injuries from his war cursed him for the rest of his life (Americanhistory.com). After that major injury he suffered from Addison's disease, an adrenal gland disorder that causes fatigue and muscle weakness (Lerner). It's amazing how he risked his life to save other people. Not too many people will normally do that knowing that they have a back injury. John was a good person and he had a good heart and it was meant for him to get awarded for doing what he did.

As in his father's request John ran for office. In 1946, he was elected as a Massachusetts Democrat

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