To be sure, after suffering two seizures over the weekend, Kennedy (76) is now fighting for his life. After all, doctors have diagnosed him with a malignant brain tumor called glioma that experts say will kill him within “one or five years…or more.”
And I have no doubt that some of the emotional outpouring from his colleagues was genuinely felt. Indeed, how can one not be moved by the sight of wheelchair-bound, 90-year old Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W.Va) – the only senator who has served longer than Kennedy – crying uncontrollably as he prayed on the floor of the US Senate:
My dear, dear friend, dear friend, Ted Kennedy. Keep Ted here for us and for America…Ted, Ted, my dear friend, I love you and I miss you.
Moreover, there’s no denying that he will be missed – given his role as the champion of such worthy causes as health care, minimum wage and immigration reform during his 45 years in the Senate.
But, as a student of American history, I am mindful of the many things that make Kennedy, like so many others in his family, a tragic hero. After all, this is a man who was born into the wealth and privilege his father Joe amassed through various business and stock-trading schemes of doubtful legality, including reportedly peddling booze during Prohibition. Yet his life is noted more for its tragedies than for his accomplishments.
Not to mention the untimely deaths of two of his nephews: Michael in a skiing accident in 1997 and JFK Jr in a plane crash in 1999; or the notorious Palm Beach rape trial of yet another, William Kennedy Smith, which stemmed from a night of boozing with “Uncle Ted” and at which he was compelled to testify as the star witness for the defense.
Then, of course, there are the alcohol-fueled tragedies of his own making, most notably, causing the death of one of his young campaign workers in 1969 when he drove his car off a bridge to Chappaquiddick island (in Massachusetts), then fled the scene and did not call for help until the next day. (He got off by wearing a neck brace and pleading guilty to leaving the scene of an accident, for which he received an indulgent two-month suspended jail sentence.)
All the same, my personal feelings about Kennedy can be summed up as follows:
This “liberal lion” and champion of civil rights was purportedly so disgusted by the way the Clintons were playing the race card in this year’s presidential campaign that he felt morally compelled to endorse Barack Obama. Yet this is the same man who called a black female judge, Janice Rogers, an ape (a Neanderthal) because he deemed her judicial opinions too conservative.
Then there’s the fact that he cared so little about party unity that he challenged a sitting Democratic president, Jimmy Carter, in 1980. And when he ended up in Hillary’s current position (as the vanquished Democratic nominee), he not only refused to get out of the race but even refused to shake Carter’s hand at the convention after Carter was declared the nominee.
Yet this is the same man who is now calling on Hillary to do the right thing by getting out of the race before the convention while insinuating that Obama should not even consider her as a running mate in the interest of party unity….
But despite it all, this is a man whose commitment to public service is is every bit as legend as the manor to which he was born.
Get well Ted….
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