Published Paranoia Magazine
Fall 2007
Issue 45
Lee Harvey Oswald as Fortean Man
By
Colin Bennett

From Fort’s Book of the Damned
“By the damned, I mean the excluded. We shall have a procession of data that
Science has excluded.
Battalions of the accursed, captained by pallid data that I have exhumed, will
march. You'll read them--or they'll march. Some of them livid and some of them
fiery and some of them rotten.
Some of them are corpses, skeletons, mummies, twitching, tottering, ani¬mated by
companions that have been damned alive. There are giants that will walk by,
though sound asleep. There are things that are theorems and things that are
rags: they'll go by like Euclid arm
in arm with the spirit of anarchy. Here and there will flit little harlots. Many
are clowns. But many are of the highest respectability.
Some are assassins. There are pale stenches and gaunt superstitions and mere
Harvey shadows and lively malices: whims and Lee Harvey Oswald had what Charles
Fort called a "wild Talent" amiabilities.”
Lee Harvey Oswald had what Charles Fort called a "wild Talent."
He was designed and built for escapes of all kinds – not only from fixed
determined background and psychology, but from the very space and time that
contained him. He could not help violating such things any more than Saint
Joseph of Copertino (1603-1663) could help levitating on communal occasions,
when such a violation of Nature was both embarrassing and uncalled for.
In his The Book of the Damned, written in 1919, Charles Hoy Fort pointed out
that rationalism was as much thought control as anything else. Today, the term
Fortean or Forteana is used to describe various anomalous phe¬nomena of the sort
Fort obsessively collected. Fort deconstructed science by showing its systems of
"explanations" to be rather like the actions of a group of wall-papering circus
clowns.
We are always absorbed in some kind of advertising culture, of which science is
but one type. As history shows, societies are "run" by massively engineered
fantasies involving glamour, images and dreams – as distinct from linear streams
of carefully pro¬cessed "facts" which play little or no part in historical
causation.
Lee Harvey Oswald's performance as a gun-toting assassin is not nearly of as
much interest as is his demonstration that the goal posts are far less stable
than we ever thought. He was a threat to
mankind long before he took the path he did; he was dangerous because he utterly
violated the rules of the world of appearances. Long before his arrest, most
people who knew Oswald suspected that there was something unusual about him.
At home and at school he changed the rules. Later in life he changed the laws of
relationships and ambi¬tions. Oswald deceived clever men with ease, and he ran
rings around the most dangerous and powerful organizations in the world. For a
hat trick he challenged our entire explanatory system of time and personality,
body, mind and spirit.

Photographs like this one above) are rare. This depiction is of someone just
hours away from becoming immortal, becoming a pure piece of media structure
wherein death and decay belong to the very lowest levels of corporeal
percep¬tion. In becoming a Star, Oswald has changed the rules behind all
explanations.
As soon as the microphone appears his eyes light up and he becomes star stuff.
He smiles like a rock star being interviewed after a concert. Though death is
near he has no inkling of it. All that matters to him is that he is on air to
the nation. At this very moment, Oswald knows that he is now a Star for all
time, and he is going to get far more than fifteen minutes of fame.
If the world of appearances was to mean anything at all, by all common
expectation, there should be hardly anything behind this rather doll-like
face-the face of a short order cook from a gay salad bar-although Oswald was
nothing of the kind. It is the face that these days would be in need of
"support" from counsellors of all kinds; yet, Oswald's mask now sits
permanently
in the modern unconscious, like strontium 90, in every piece of flesh and bone
of the post-nuclear world.
Oswald's face always had a certain suspicious bland perfection. There is not
much wear and tear-no weathering of lines and creases; no wrinkles of the habits
of thought; no estuaries of puzzlement, curiosity or etched character. Like the
murdered six-year-old mannequin Jonbenet Ramsey, he looks like some consumer
product, but on a second look there is something of the robot-doll or golem
about this face. It arouses a specialised form of fear, more intellectual than
physical.
Certainly there is something in the sallow features that does not add up. Like a
manic researcher suddenly discovering a manufactured series of phoney
explanations, we realise that the face is intended to make us go away lest we
discover the veritable furnace of networking plots, agendas and conspiracies
behind it.
Perhaps we fear that if we penetrated this reassuring blandness we would see
inconceivable creatures scurrying under a lifted garden stone. Because we do not
want the roof of our universe torn off in such a manner, we would prefer to
leave Oswald alone - with his hint of a Gioconda smile, older perhaps than the
rock upon which he sits. After he had gone from us, we could not fit the world
together again. Oswald left behind ruins, each piece of which did not appear to
belong to any other piece.
Certainly Oswald won't be defined by atoms and molecules or applied rationale of
facts and figures, dates. Every single aspect of Oswald’s existence has been
investigated in depth for over forty years and still hardly a single piece of it
fits together.
Like Marilyn Monroe and Adolf Hitler, we have to deal with Oswald in terms of
images. As three of the greatest performers of all time -as human beings plus
something else¬ - all three defeated factual makeup. They stepped out of shorn
snakeskin and onto a world stage to become a pure media matrix of
advertisements, suggestions, rehearsals, image displays and performances. The
use of the past tense here is significant, for all three still stalk the
midnight battlements of Elsinore, so to speak.
Each of their ghosts tells us that the borders of life and death are obscure.
Certainly offstage of the world or studio - and in our Entertainment State the
two are now virtually the same - neither Oswald nor Monroe had a strong physical
presence. They lacked all cerebral substance, they had no educational dimension,
and, factually speaking, they were such waifs and strays as to be almost of no
substance to speak of. But once they were lit up and produced, they became
powerful management systems for mounting and processing endless series of
performance-states, leaving the much vaunted intellectual faculty far behind in
the Darwinian culture dish of evolving images.
Like Michael Jackson, both Oswald and Monroe were shaman-figures. When such
figures leave the stage ¬lights and cameras, only courts, prisons, disaster,
corruption and death await them. They fall and die like mayflies, fluttering
their wings as darkness comes. But once on stage again - once reborn within the
cycles of shamanistic regeneration- Dionysus returns, and transcendental stuff
gets into action.
In vein do we try to scale such figures down; to make into them into ordinary
folk who happened merely to undertake pathways that ended in evil or good. Such
psychic scaling, like endemic skepticism, is of course concept-control. As with
Hitler, we try to turn Oswald into an ordinary dolt, but he won't be contained
by our attempts to reduce him to mundane proportions.
In the sense meant by Charles Fort, such concept-control architecture is built
of explanations. This structure evolves according to prevailing conditions.
Human beings have to reduce and simplify these explanations for control
purposes. We navigate mentally and construct what we call the "real" by
reducing states of information to abstractions. This means that we are required
to strip situations of all rich complexity, ambiguity and paradox until we reach
the stage where our mundane equations become operational. Then, we have a
theory that "works." We can equate this system to what we term the "real."
In this sense we reduce a right -angled triangle of fried sausages, say, to
abstract lines in order to get the theorem of Pythagoras to "work." Such are the
roots of skeptical objectivity. Fried sausages, of
course, are far too complicated things for mathematics to deal with. This
stripped-down “real” continues to satisfy until it grows old and dies,
shot-through with anomalies. It is then put on the shelf in the museum of all
historical curiosities, along with the horn of a unicorn, a bottled mermaid, and
a two-headed penis.
But star stuff cannot be put on a shelf. It is not made of railway timetables,
Baedekers full of facts, conserved momentum, pushes and pulls, or the
nail-biting input-output equalisations of Mechanical Person. The more noise in a
star system the better the signal. Star stuff forms in the area where finite
flesh and blood transform into pure information. This is a border area where
human beings become signalling systems, image clusters, or dialogues networked
between symbols and metaphors.
Perhaps we should place more trust in metaphors than facts. Facts will not tell
us that the Oswald region and the Kennedy region - both made of our star stuff -
were two politico-Camelot systems approaching one another like battle fleets.
Impossible Cartoon Journey
In the Marines, Oswald began his impossible cartoon journey. He became a
hands-on radar operator with scores of lives and millions of dollars of aircraft
weaponry in his hands, and nuclear weaponry, at that! Despite his loud
pro-Communist views, he was given job guiding top-secret U-2 reconnaissance
aircraft. Anyone who has seen the two-inch ¬thick manuals of intensive military
electronics courses looks again at Oswald's wan milk-bar waiter face and
wonders.
In vain would our simple minds like an Agatha Christie-Sherlock Holmes
"solution," but our times are very different: the butlers have gone, and the
potting sheds are now infinite in extent, full of fast-breeder media events
which do not belong to finite or enclosed systems. We inhabit a very different
cosmos where the more information we gather, the more complex the situation
becomes. Unlike the Victorian railway station, we catch a Matrix train and we
are likely to end up anywhere. Neither Agatha Christie nor Sherlock Holmes would
have liked this situation. They would perhaps like to stay with the predictable
courses of the pre-Relativistic billiard ¬ball atoms, a fixed social structure,
and the idea of a Nature that lay still whilst being examined.
Oswald worries us, not because he might have attempted to kill Kennedy, but
because he denies that which is fundamental to our preconceived ideas about the
"correct" operation of modern consciousness. If, after Newton, Darwin, Einstein
and Freud, it turns out that the cosmos "works" by rules which have
absolutely
nothing to do with the work of any of these men, we have a problem with the very
forward motion of our consciousness as regards technical advance, moral
improvement, and just about everything else.
From the point of view of core cultural politics, we would like to "explain"
Oswald as a confused early 1960s young man, a victim of home, circumstance and
various aspects of American society; perhaps, a kind of James Dean wannabee.
Once so explained we have him pinioned; a struggling fly dying on the very small
tabletop of our superficial satisfactions. In this sense “explanations” are pure
war, and far more important than guns, tanks or bombs. They are part of a
struggle to change the software of the great Imagination (such being also the
main objective of the kind of Dark Rider agendas encountered in Ufology).
Oswald's Tricks
It is astonishing that after nearly a half-century of the most intensive
research ever undertaken, humanity still cannot put together in a coherent
framework the hours of a single week in Dallas in 1963. No matter how hard we
try, as in David Lynch's film Eraserhead, the perspectives blur and flicker,
splinter and disintegrate. Proud of our sophisticated rational faculties, we are
disturbed by the idea that the extraordinary life and character of Oswald still
refuse to be brought into rational focus. His life and his actions consist of a
flow of anomalies in which paradoxes, inconsistencies and contradictions follow
one another in an endless stream.
Just look at all those face!
According to the most sober and meticulous
researchers, Oswald is here, there and everywhere at once. He is involved in
inexplicable behavior involving doubles, intercontinental travels, and every
aspect of techno military industrial political and scientific intrigue. He
crosses political, language and cultural lines with ease, and often, it appears,
by default. For a showpiece, he then reverses his journeys as easily as he could
swing from left to right in his political opinions and affiliations; risking
torture, imprisonment and death as he walks through 20th century walls at will.
He defeats American military and civilian intelligence, defeats American
civilian officialdom, and defeats with aplomb the officialdom of the Soviet
Union, a thousand times more fierce.
Oswald enters and leaves the Soviet Union as if it were a holiday camp, waving a
"tourist visa" of all things; a method of entry almost unheard of in those
days. He brings back to the USA a pregnant Russian wife. He then tops this by
obtaining a "no interest flag" from the FBI. Moreover, he is not debriefed,
interrogated, or even interviewed. The paperwork, the monstrous bureaucracies -
the intelligence systems of both the Soviet
Union and the United States-he eats for breakfast. He passes through their
combined nets of informers, filing systems and agents with the same ease as he
slits his wrist in a Moscow hotel a few days after his arrival. The Soviet
authorities - not known for liberal charity - reward him with a well-paid job in
Minsk!
To anyone who is at all familiar with the state of relations between the Soviet
Union and the United States at this time, the appearance of a green-tentacled
alien from a flying saucer would be a less astonishing wonder compared to this
utterly fantastic progress. Oswald's travels between continents and Western
cities with wife and baby, or alone, or with some of the most dangerous
characters around at the time, are a modern mythological journey in which he
encountered perils and initiations worthy of Grail legends, or the 14th century
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
Oswald's tax and social security records make no sense, and neither does his
erratic behaviour in Dallas, Mexico City, New Orleans, or Moscow. There is no
timeline that connects the myriad sighting reports of what appear to be
duplicate Oswalds. As a hat trick, Oswald acquired that unique thing essential
to a proper 20th century identity: a TV and radio interview. True, his fame
didn't last long in mundane time, but stardom and media time are not part of
this perceptual dimension. Like some forms of the most powerful kind of
radiation, the half-life of stardom is very long. Death in such a context
becomes a mere self-healing break in a fabric infinite in extent.
The Oswald Constellation
Perhaps never has there been a human being quite like Lee Harvey Oswald. Every
single piece of his exis¬tence has been investigated in depth for over forty
years and still hardly a single piece of it fits together. Even a theory of
deliberate confusion would never account for such a mess. We still have no
explanatory apparatus to account for the orbit-wobbles of the constellated
ranges of questions and answers concerning Oswald and his life.
Oswald certainly gives conventional psychology some problems. Rather than
having well-understood motivations and conditioning, he appears to be made up
of pure media and dramatic rehearsals of pieces of plays of pieces of other
plays, with no repeated whole performances available. Without thinking, he
could produce coincidences, echoes, synchronicities, salted with his own
confusions and muddled thinking, to create a primal dust in which not even the
stubs of his library tickets quite add up. There is no end to this. His entire
social security record appears to be falsified, and his job applications, visas
and photographs are in doubt.
Yet, there appears to be design - if only in the maximum obscuration at each
intersection of the complex body of the Oswald experience. With detectible
precision, a tailor-made mass of confusions is put exactly in the right place
at the right time, and does what it is designed to do; that is, provide
skunk-smoke for processes and agendas that are using Oswald as a catalyst.
Oswald's actions are always at the seam where the explicit conspiracy meets the
implicit: where the doings of men meet the networking image-plots in symbiosis.
This is not entirely new to us as a thought. In any play of Shakespeare,
whenever there is a character talking alone onstage, there is always present a
second invisible persona: the System. Human beings are always accompanied by a
shadow play of forces of destiny.
This leads to the thought that we may be dealing with a Group Mind that got him
over and under the torpedo nets, so to speak. Though none of them knew one
another, every single one of the major American assassins belonged to a
well-defined group, were subject to the same kind of disturbance and were
probably unconsciously networking.
In this sense, there is always the question of whether Oswald had unconsciously
discovered how to receive and process information in a way that we have
forgotten; in a manner that science has dismissed. On many an occasion he
appears to be half-consciously reading the chatter of countless sub-texts that
protected him, that took him by the hand and led him through 20th century walls.
He had the knack of letting the images within him talk to one another. He
connected them up, gave them a common language. He networked in a manner that
is, at the present time, almost inconceivable to us.
Of course, the acceptance that we are far from being the sum of our finite parts
breaks all the rules of 150 years of modern social psychiatry and classical
psychology from Freud onward. But Oswald would have cared little about that,
even if he had understood what it meant. Oswald lived more in dimensions of
performance and suggestibility than in the physical world. Lee Harvey Oswald
was truly Fortean Man. He lived - and he still lives for us - in a permanently
unstable cosmos.
Charles Fort postulated that our perception always operates on a sliding scale
of fictions - some being strong, and others being so weak that we identify them
with "objective reality." Of course, we know that such ground will slip
eventually from our brief shelter in history and time, and, like the idea of the
"average man," we exist always on either side of some theoretical line
corresponding to the real.
©2007 Colin Bennett.