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(Testimony of George S. De Mohrenschildt Resumed)Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Yes; I did not even know that. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Very much so. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Exactly. His mind was of a man with exceedingly poor background, who read rather advanced books, and did not understand even the words in them. He read complicated economical treatises and just picked up difficult words out of what he has read, and loved to display them. He loved to use the difficult words, because it was to impress one. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. He did not understand the words--he just used them. So how can you take seriously a person like that? You just laugh at him. But there was always an element of pity I had, and my wife had, for him. We realized that he was sort of a forlorn individual, groping for something. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. I never would believe that any government would be stupid enough to trust Lee with anything important. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Well, again, as I said, an unstable individual, mixed-up individual, uneducated individual, without background. What government would give him any confidential work? No government would. Even the government of Ghana would not give him any job of any type. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Well, instability--his life is an example of his instability. He switched allegiance from one country to another, and then back again, disappointed in this, disappointed in that, tried various jobs. But he did it, you see, without the enjoyment of adventure like some other people would do in the United States, a new job is a new adventure, new opportunities. For him it was a gruesome deal. He hated his jobs. He switched all the time. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Well, frankly, if I--you always base your opinion on your own experience. If I had my own country since my childbirth, and my government, I would remain faithful to it for the rest of my life. He had a chance to be a marine. Here was a perfect life for him--this was my point of view. He was a man without education, in the Marines--why didn't he stay in the Marines all his life? You don't need a high degree of intelligence to be a marine corporal or a soldier. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. That was my idea. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. That is right. Well, instead of that he disliked it and switched to something else. I do not know the details of all his jobs, you see, .but I certainly can evaluate people just by looking at them--because I have met so many people in my profession--you have to evaluate them by just looking at them and saying a few words. Mr. DE MOHRENSCHILDT. Of course, he was that. The fact that we took his
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