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On November 22, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a distraught mob-connected nightclub owner from Chicago named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and did more to set off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, Kennedy’s assassination was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm, which gives him the odd distinction of being the only president to ever be the subject of a SnuffFilm.[[note]]Lee Harvey Oswald himself is also the only (accused) presidential assassin to be the subject of a snuff film, as his murder took place during a jail transfer on live television.[[/note]]

to:

On November 22, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a distraught mob-connected nightclub owner from Chicago named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and did more to set off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, Kennedy’s assassination was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm, which gives him the odd distinction of being the only president to ever be the subject of a SnuffFilm.[[note]]Lee Harvey Oswald himself is also the only (accused) presidential assassin to be the subject of a snuff film, as his murder took place during a jail transfer on live television.[[/note]]
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On November 22, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a mob-connected nightclub owner named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and setting off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, his death was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.[[note]]Oswald himself is also the only (accused) presidential assassin to be the subject of a snuff film, as his murder took place during a jail transfer on live television.[[/note]]

to:

On November 22, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a distraught mob-connected nightclub owner from Chicago named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and setting did more to set off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, his death Kennedy’s assassination was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.[[note]]Oswald UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm, which gives him the odd distinction of being the only president to ever be the subject of a SnuffFilm.[[note]]Lee Harvey Oswald himself is also the only (accused) presidential assassin to be the subject of a snuff film, as his murder took place during a jail transfer on live television.[[/note]]
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century[[note]]As measured by term in office. Of the five presidents who succeeded JFK, four were already alive when he was born, with UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter the only exception.[[/note]] and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting less formal setting, he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century[[note]]As measured by term in office. Of the five presidents who succeeded JFK, four were already alive when he was born, with UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter the only exception.[[/note]] and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
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A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]], a two-week standoff between the US and USSR that, in hindsight, is widely considered the closest humanity has come to a nuclear war. Meanwhile, similar to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

Kennedy was in truth a HandicappedBadass on par with (and possibly even surpassing) FDR, and a {{Determinator}} on the same scale, as he [[https://drzebra.com/prez/g35.htm possibly suffered from an autoimmune disorder]].[[note]] Now hypothesized to be Type-2 Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome, known for short as APS-2, a symptom of which is Addison's Disease, with which he struggled as an adult[[/note]] He was incredibly sick as a child and frequently hospitalized, which continued through his adolescence and into adulthood. This, coupled with chronic lower-back problems and being permanently underweight, led to his being medically disqualified when he attempted to enroll in the US Army's Officer Candidate School. However -- thanks to his father’s connections and a grueling, months-long exercise regimen to strengthen his back -- he managed to join the US Naval Reserve in 1941, a few months prior to Pearl Harbor. Ultimately he would serve aboard a handful of Motor Torpedo Boats in the Navy, most famously aboard PT-109, due to his successful effort to rescue his crew after that vessel was rammed and broken in twain by the Japanese Destroyer [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_destroyer_Amagiri_(1930) Amagiri]]. The ramming killed two crew but Kennedy managed to get all the surviving hands to an island, including one he had to tow while swimming with a life-jacket strap clenched between his teeth. He re-injured his back while performing that rescue. He later underwent spinal fusion surgery as a Senator in order to continue walking, almost dying from an infection afterwards. In the White House he needed a rocking chair in the Oval Office to deal with the pain, as well as a DrFeelgood pharmaceutical regimen, and he could not bend over to pick up his own children.[[note]] In a MathematiciansAnswer, having to wear a back brace due to the steroids he took to treat Addison's Disease causing issues with the bones in his back is exactly the explanation to why JFK died in Dallas — it meant he was quite literally a sitting target who couldn't ''duck''— or even crumple forward — after Oswald's first shot.[[/note]] There is a good bit of modern speculation as to just how long JFK would have lived, and/or been able to cope with the rest of his presidency and a potential second term, had he not been assassinated — his health was ''that'' bad. His Catholicism illustrates [[NearDeathExperience just how often he danced with death]] — he was [[https://www.cbc.ca/radio/undertheinfluence/john-f-kennedy-was-given-last-rites-5-different-times-1.6362855 given the Last Rites]] four times prior to Dallas.

to:

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]], a two-week standoff between the US and USSR that, in hindsight, is widely considered to be the closest humanity has come to a nuclear war. Meanwhile, similar and similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since -- the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

Kennedy was in truth a HandicappedBadass on par with (and possibly even surpassing) FDR, and a {{Determinator}} on the same scale, as he [[https://drzebra.com/prez/g35.htm possibly suffered from an autoimmune disorder]].[[note]] Now hypothesized to be Type-2 Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome, known for short as APS-2, a symptom of which is Addison's Disease, with which he struggled as an adult[[/note]] He was incredibly sick as a child and frequently hospitalized, which continued through his adolescence and into adulthood. This, coupled with chronic lower-back problems and being permanently underweight, led to his being medically disqualified when he attempted to enroll in the US Army's Officer Candidate School. However -- thanks to his father’s connections and a grueling, months-long exercise regimen to strengthen his back -- he managed to join the US Naval Reserve in 1941, a few months prior to Pearl Harbor. Ultimately he would serve aboard a handful of Motor Torpedo Boats in the Navy, most famously aboard PT-109, due to his successful effort to rescue his crew after that vessel was rammed and broken in twain by the Japanese Destroyer [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_destroyer_Amagiri_(1930) Amagiri]]. The ramming killed two crew but Kennedy managed to get all the surviving hands to an island, including one he had to tow while swimming with a life-jacket strap clenched between his teeth. He re-injured his back while performing that rescue. He later underwent spinal fusion surgery as a Senator in order to continue walking, almost dying from an infection afterwards. In the White House he needed a rocking chair in the Oval Office to deal with the pain, as well as a DrFeelgood pharmaceutical regimen, and he could not bend over to pick up his own children.[[note]] In a MathematiciansAnswer, having to wear a back brace due to the steroids he took to treat Addison's Disease causing issues with the bones in his back is exactly the explanation to why JFK died in Dallas -- it meant he was quite literally a sitting target who couldn't ''duck''— or even crumple forward -- after Oswald's first shot.[[/note]] There is a good bit of modern speculation as to just how long JFK would have lived, and/or been able to cope with the rest of his presidency and a potential second term, had he not been assassinated -- his health was ''that'' bad. His Catholicism illustrates [[NearDeathExperience just how often he danced with death]] -- he was [[https://www.cbc.ca/radio/undertheinfluence/john-f-kennedy-was-given-last-rites-5-different-times-1.6362855 given the Last Rites]] four times prior to Dallas.
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century[[note]]As measured by term in office. Of the following five presidents, four were already alive when JFK was born, with UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter the only exception.[[/note]] and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century[[note]]As measured by term in office. Of the following five presidents, presidents who succeeded JFK, four were already alive when JFK he was born, with UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter the only exception.[[/note]] and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
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JFK was the first president born in the 20th century by term of office... but four of his five immediate successors were already alive when he was born.


John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century century[[note]]As measured by term in office. Of the following five presidents, four were already alive when JFK was born, with UsefulNotes/JimmyCarter the only exception.[[/note]] and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


On November 22, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a mob-connected nightclub owner named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and setting off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, his death was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.

to:

On November 22, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a mob-connected nightclub owner named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and setting off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, his death was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.
UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.[[note]]Oswald himself is also the only (accused) presidential assassin to be the subject of a snuff film, as his murder took place during a jail transfer on live television.[[/note]]

Added: 367

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* ''Film/{{PT 109}}'' tells the story about Kennedy's rescue of his men during the Second World War, and was released in 1963, while he was still in office. The film is also notable for starring Creator/CliffRobertson as Kennedy, while NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent, and doubly notable since Kennedy signed off on Robertson's casting, essentially picking him himself.



* ''Film/{{PT109}}'' tells the story about Kennedy's rescue of his men during the Second World War, and was released in 1963, while he was still in office. The film is also notable for starring Creator/CliffRobertson as Kennedy, who was NotEvenBotheringWithTheAccent.
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, [[WhoShotJFK which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories theories]] -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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On November 22, 1963, Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a mob-connected nightclub owner named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and setting off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, his death was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.

to:

On November 22, 1963, 1963[[note]]Aldous Huxley and Creator/CSLewis died on the same day.[[/note]], Kennedy visited Dallas, Texas as part of campaigning for his upcoming run for re-election. As his motorcade passed the Texas Book Depository at Dealey Plaza, shots were fired; Kennedy was hit in the head and torso, and rushed to hospital where he was later pronounced dead. Although a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald, was later arrested and identified as the main suspect of the assassination, numerous irregularities in the record -- not to mention Oswald's ''own'' murder two days later, by a mob-connected nightclub owner named Jack Ruby -- soon gave rise to numerous conspiracy theories about who had ''really'' killed Kennedy, and setting off unanswered questions. Meanwhile, his death was recorded in what is known as the UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm.
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None


* Webcomic/HarkAVagrant manages to accurately portray the male Kennedy dynamics with a young JFK, his dad, and his brothers, in just [[http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=214 a couple of panels]].

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* Webcomic/HarkAVagrant ''Webcomic/HarkAVagrant'' manages to accurately portray the male Kennedy dynamics with a young JFK, his dad, and his brothers, in just [[http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=214 a couple of panels]].
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A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]], a two-week standoff between the US and USSR that, in hindsight, is widely considered the closest humanity ever got to WorldWarIII. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

to:

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]], a two-week standoff between the US and USSR that, in hindsight, is widely considered the closest humanity ever got has come to WorldWarIII. a nuclear war. Meanwhile, similarly similar to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

to:

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]].Crisis]], a two-week standoff between the US and USSR that, in hindsight, is widely considered the closest humanity ever got to WorldWarIII. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Creator/FrankSinatra pointed out [[https://youtu.be/QCd_fuOyuA8 in a 1960 campaign song]], and as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] to (to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die or be killed in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43 was eleven years younger than the average median age for an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" "Theatre/{{Camelot}}" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

Added: 225

Changed: 8

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* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporalWater a confused young Kennedy who isn't president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send back at the end of the episode.

to:

* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporalWater a confused young Kennedy who isn't president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send being sent back at the end of the episode.episode.
* ''Series/GodfatherOfHarlem'': Kennedy's assassination is a major part of the backdrop in the Season 1 finale. The theory that the Chicago and New Orleans mobs arranged it is discussed by characters on both sides of the law.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
He's mentioned as the youngest elected just a few sentences before.


John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]John F. Kennedy at 43, was the yougest elected president, eleven years younger than the average median age for a United States president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president President was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

A youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]John F. Kennedy [[labelnote:*]]Kennedy at 43, 43 was the yougest elected president, eleven years younger than the average median age for a United States an American president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive intelligent, attractive, and stylish wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their two young family children -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Well, 11 years is a lot (for instance LBJ was 9 years older, and looked much more old) . Only Teddy Roosevelt was younger, but he wasn't elected. https://www.statista.com/statistics/1035542/age-incumbent-us-presidents-first-taking-office/


A youthful[[labelnote:*]]John F. Kennedy was 43 when elected president which is well into middle age and is only eleven years younger than the average median age for a United States president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

to:

A youthful[[labelnote:*]]John youthful-looking [[labelnote:*]]John F. Kennedy at 43, was 43 when the yougest elected president which is well into middle age and is only president, eleven years younger than the average median age for a United States president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


A youthful, glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

to:

A youthful, youthful[[labelnote:*]]John F. Kennedy was 43 when elected president which is well into middle age and is only eleven years younger than the average median age for a United States president[[/labelnote]], glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK[[labelnote:*]] to his friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories conspiracy theories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In ''VideoGame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope'', an AlternateHistoryNaziVictory mod for ''VideoGame/HeartsOfIronIV'', Kennedy is Vice President under the Richard Nixon administration who ascends to the Presidential office after Nixon resigns in the face of impeachment. [[spoiler: Kennedy's presidency lasts mere months before he is assassinated by a Guyanese nationalist in retaliation for the American invasion of Guyana]].

to:

* In ''VideoGame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope'', an AlternateHistoryNaziVictory mod for ''VideoGame/HeartsOfIronIV'', Kennedy is Vice President under the Richard Nixon administration who ascends to the Presidential office after Nixon resigns in the face of impeachment. [[spoiler: Kennedy's presidency lasts mere months weeks before he is assassinated by a white supremacist (a Guyanese nationalist nationalist, in retaliation for the American invasion of Guyana]].older versions)]].
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None


** Somewhat interestingly in this alternate timeline, the major political party realignment in the 20th Century[[note]]In which the Democratic Party switched from being a largely Southern party to a largely Northern one and vice versa for the GOP[[/note]] never happens, so in the 1960 election, Kennedy is the ''Republican'' candidate while Nixon is the Democrat.

to:

** Somewhat interestingly in this alternate timeline, the major political party realignment in the 20th Century[[note]]In which the Democratic Party switched from being a largely Southern conservative party to a largely Northern liberal one and vice versa for the GOP[[/note]] never happens, so in the 1960 election, Kennedy is the ''Republican'' candidate while Nixon is the Democrat.
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* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporalWater a confused young Kennedy who isn´t president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send back at the end of the episode.

to:

* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporalWater a confused young Kennedy who isn´t isn't president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send back at the end of the episode.
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* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporaryWater a confused young Kennedy who isn´t president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send back at the end of the episode.

to:

* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporaryWater [[FishOutOfTemporalWater a confused young Kennedy who isn´t president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send back at the end of the episode.
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Added DiffLines:

* ''Series/{{Timeless}}'': Season 2, Episode 5 is called "The Kennedy Curse" and shows [[FishOutOfTemporaryWater a confused young Kennedy who isn´t president yet stranded in the 21st century]] before send back at the end of the episode.
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of '''JFK''' (to his friends and family, he was '''Jack Kennedy''', as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988), was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of '''JFK''' (to JFK[[labelnote:*]] to his friends and friends, family, and in any less-formal setting he was '''Jack Kennedy''', "Jack", as Lloyd Bentsen [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988), 1988)[[/labelnote]], was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
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Similarly, the press had a "gentleman's agreement" not to mention Kennedy's rampant womanizing, as it wasn't considered to be in the public interest at the time. Suffice it to say that being handsome, witty, charming and death-defying ''before'' getting elected President, JFK ReallyGotAround his whole life long, and only partly due to the steroids he took later. Kennedy's most famous extramarital affair was probably with Creator/MarilynMonroe.

to:

Similarly, the press had a "gentleman's agreement" not to mention Kennedy's rampant womanizing, as it wasn't considered to be in the public interest at the time. (To illustrate the strength of the agreement, consider: JFK once told ''White House press pool reporters'' that he wasn't "done" with a woman until he'd had her "three different ways.") Suffice it to say that being handsome, witty, charming and death-defying ''before'' getting elected President, JFK ReallyGotAround his whole life long, and only partly due to the steroids he took later. Kennedy's most famous extramarital affair was probably with Creator/MarilynMonroe.
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John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of '''JFK''' (to his friends and family, he was '''Jack Kennedy''' as Lloyd Bentsen [[WannabeDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988), was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of '''JFK''' (to his friends and family, he was '''Jack Kennedy''' Kennedy''', as Lloyd Bentsen [[WannabeDiss [[PretenderDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988), was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK, was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]

to:

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917 – November 22, 1963), often referred to by his initials of JFK, '''JFK''' (to his friends and family, he was '''Jack Kennedy''' as Lloyd Bentsen [[WannabeDiss memorably reminded]] UsefulNotes/DanQuayle in 1988), was the 35th President of the United States ([[TheSixties 1961–63]]), succeeding UsefulNotes/DwightDEisenhower and followed in office -- after his assassination, which gave rise to a million UsefulNotes/ConspiracyTheories -- by UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson. The first president to be born in the 20th century and the 12th from the Democratic Party, he was known for his particularly inspirational turns-of-phrase in his speeches and overseeing an era of American history rife with social and political turmoil. Kennedy was not only the youngest-elected president, at the age of 43 (the youngest to ''become'' president was UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, who was 42 at the time), but also the first Irish-American and the first Roman Catholic to hold the office (and the only one until UsefulNotes/JoeBiden, just over 57 years later), as well as the last US president (thus far) to die in office. His presidency lasted for just over one thousand days.[[note]]1,036. Although a book by historian Arthur Schlesinger chronicles it as ''A Thousand Days''.[[/note]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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A youthful, glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to hide and cope with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

Kennedy was in truth a HandicappedBadass on par with (and possibly even surpassing) FDR, and a {{Determinator}} on the same scale, as he [[https://drzebra.com/prez/g35.htm possibly suffered from an autoimmune disorder]].[[note]] Now hypothesized to be Type-2 Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome, known for short as APS-2, a symptom of which is Addison's Disease, with which he struggled as an adult[[/note]] He was incredibly sick as a child and frequently hospitalized, which continued through his adolescence and into adulthood. This, coupled with chronic lower-back problems and being permanently underweight, led to his being medically disqualified when he attempted to enroll in the US Army's Officer Candidate School. However -- thanks to his father’s connections and a grueling, months-long exercise regimen to strengthen his back -- he managed to join the US Naval Reserve in 1941, a few months prior to Pearl Harbor. Ultimately he would serve aboard a handful of Motor Torpedo Boats in the Navy, most famously aboard PT-109, due to his successful effort to rescue his crew after that vessel was rammed and broken in twain by the Japanese Destroyer [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_destroyer_Amagiri_(1930) Amagiri]]. The ramming killed two crew but Kennedy managed to get all the surviving hands to an island, including one he had to tow while swimming with their life-jacket strap clenched between his teeth. He re-injured his back while performing that rescue. He later underwent spinal fusion surgery as a Senator in order to continue walking, almost dying from an infection afterwards.[[note]] In a MathematiciansAnswer, having to later wear a back brace due to the steroids he took to treat Addison's Disease causing issues with the bones in his already-weakened back is exactly the explanation to why JFK died in Dallas — it meant he was quite literally a sitting target who couldn't ''duck'' after Oswald's first shot.[[/note]] There is a good bit of modern speculation as to just how long JFK would have lived, and/or been able to cope with the rest of his presidency and a potential second term, had he not been assassinated — his health was ''that'' bad.

to:

A youthful, glamorous and invigorating figure, JFK -- along with his attractive wife [[UsefulNotes/JacquelineKennedy Jacqueline Bouvier]] and their young family -- was seen as introducing a new and liberating era to American political and cultural life after the stifling and stuffy days of TheFifties, and his time in office was dubbed "Camelot" soon after his death. Despite this, his short term was filled with crises and political upheaval, such as the CIA-directed 'Bay of Pigs' invasion of Communist Cuba, which went belly-up. This failed invasion soured relations with Cuba (never that strong to begin with) and eventually led in 1962 to the [[UsefulNotes/HistoryoftheColdWar Cuban Missile Crisis]]. Meanwhile, similarly to UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt's bout with a paralytic illness, JFK was constantly struggling to [[HidingTheHandicap hide and cope cope]] with his Addison's Disease and hypothyroidism, which almost jeopardized his 1960 election campaign. He had his successes as well, such as when he called for the formation of a small maritime unit that would be known as the UsefulNotes/NavySeals. He is the reason US Army special forces wear green berets. Also similarly to FDR, Kennedy was at home talking with the press like almost no other president before or since — the difference being that JFK's weekly press conferences and displays of immense charisma were all [[https://youtu.be/Hn14Wbe1v1Y caught on film]].

Kennedy was in truth a HandicappedBadass on par with (and possibly even surpassing) FDR, and a {{Determinator}} on the same scale, as he [[https://drzebra.com/prez/g35.htm possibly suffered from an autoimmune disorder]].[[note]] Now hypothesized to be Type-2 Autoimmune Polyendocrine Syndrome, known for short as APS-2, a symptom of which is Addison's Disease, with which he struggled as an adult[[/note]] He was incredibly sick as a child and frequently hospitalized, which continued through his adolescence and into adulthood. This, coupled with chronic lower-back problems and being permanently underweight, led to his being medically disqualified when he attempted to enroll in the US Army's Officer Candidate School. However -- thanks to his father’s connections and a grueling, months-long exercise regimen to strengthen his back -- he managed to join the US Naval Reserve in 1941, a few months prior to Pearl Harbor. Ultimately he would serve aboard a handful of Motor Torpedo Boats in the Navy, most famously aboard PT-109, due to his successful effort to rescue his crew after that vessel was rammed and broken in twain by the Japanese Destroyer [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_destroyer_Amagiri_(1930) Amagiri]]. The ramming killed two crew but Kennedy managed to get all the surviving hands to an island, including one he had to tow while swimming with their a life-jacket strap clenched between his teeth. He re-injured his back while performing that rescue. He later underwent spinal fusion surgery as a Senator in order to continue walking, almost dying from an infection afterwards. In the White House he needed a rocking chair in the Oval Office to deal with the pain, as well as a DrFeelgood pharmaceutical regimen, and he could not bend over to pick up his own children.[[note]] In a MathematiciansAnswer, having to later wear a back brace due to the steroids he took to treat Addison's Disease causing issues with the bones in his already-weakened back is exactly the explanation to why JFK died in Dallas — it meant he was quite literally a sitting target who couldn't ''duck'' ''duck''— or even crumple forward — after Oswald's first shot.[[/note]] There is a good bit of modern speculation as to just how long JFK would have lived, and/or been able to cope with the rest of his presidency and a potential second term, had he not been assassinated — his health was ''that'' bad.
bad. His Catholicism illustrates [[NearDeathExperience just how often he danced with death]] — he was [[https://www.cbc.ca/radio/undertheinfluence/john-f-kennedy-was-given-last-rites-5-different-times-1.6362855 given the Last Rites]] four times prior to Dallas.

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