Mr. De Mohrenschildt. You are more than welcome. I have never been an agent of any government, never been in the pay of any government, except the American Government, the ICA. And except being in the Polish Army—$5 a month.
Well, maybe I made a mistake. Maybe I am working for the Haitian Government now. It is a contract. But it has no political affiliations.
Mr. Jenner. Subject to that.
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Again, no political angle to it.
Mr. Jenner. What I am driving at—whether you work for a foreign government or not, whether you ever have in your lifetime—have you at any time had any position, which I will call political, in the capital P sense, in which you sought to advance the interests of a movement or a government or even a group against a government?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Never have. Never was even a Mason. Never part of any political group.
Mr. Jenner. And any views you have expressed during your rather colorful life have been your personal views?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. Personal views; yes.
Mr. Jenner. Not induced or fed or nurtured by any political interests, with a capital P, on behalf of any group?
Mr. De Mohrenschildt. That is right. Sometimes I criticize things, like in Texas—I criticize the lack of freedoms that the Mexicans have, the discrimination, and things like that. But nobody pays me for that. I say what I think.