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Aquarian
Weekly 9/2/09
REALITY CHECK
EDWARD
MOORE KENNEDY -- 1932 - 2009
It
is a good thing Ted Kennedy is Irish Catholic. He is going to
heaven. That's how it works. No matter what kind of sham your
life is, what type of negligent homicide you're guilty of, scores
of hypocrisy you've dabbled in, and the fraudulent legacy you
leave behind, the slate is clean. They bring a priest in, throw
some incense on you and you're fast-tracked to the pearly gates.
And if there's something akin to the heaven the Kennedy's believe
in, then Mary Jo Kopechne will be waiting there to greet him;
the beautiful, young Boiler Room Girl with bouncy blonde locks
and a dazzling New England smile standing across from the ravaged,
wrinkled, cancer-ridden shell of the man who left her to drown
in a dark inlet at Chappaquiddick 40 years ago.
And
if there is a God, she will kick him squarely in the testicles.
Twice.
It
is a heartwarming story worthy of Revelation; the part of the
Holy Bible where it all comes to pass -- the shit rain, the seven-headed
beasts, bottomless chasms, and the torture of the unrepentant.
Humanity, in a phrase, is "kicked in the testicles". Twice.
It
is a book Ted Kennedy knew well. Every Kennedy knew Revelation
backwards and forwards. Mother Rose insisted on it. She made them
read it aloud every night before cookies and milk, later admitting
it was a veiled attempt to wipe away the terrible iniquities of
her husband, the racist bootlegger, who after visiting 1930s'
Germany framed the Jewish slaughter in Europe this way: "They
brought it on themselves." Later, the patriarch became a master
at fixing elections, buying off laws, and hosting Senator Joseph
McCarthy and his loving family up at Martha's Vineyard for weekend
detentes on how to "strip Commie Jew bastards of their rights".
But
despite the insanity of their parents and the ill-gotten fortune
they would exploit to power, three of the four Kennedy boys became
victims; the eldest, Joseph Jr. in World War II, and Jack and
Robert to assassins' bullets two decades later. Not baby, boy,
Ted. He was a survivor. He was the one Kennedy that understood
the lessons of Revelation. The Big Bad Senator had to look out
for Number One. And this philosophy served him well for 47 years
of public service.
Edward
M. Kennedy was the genetic run-off of America's Royal Family;
a boorish toad of a man with the scruples of a desperate crack
addict and the brains of a dung beetle. Everything he stood for
or achieved was bought for him, handed down from the crimes of
greater men and far more accomplished cretins. He was a failure
and a geek and caused so much family embarrassment he was repeatedly
sent on beer runs during the famous shirtless Kennedy football
games. He was booted from Harvard as a dumb ass jock and stumbled
into the Senate in a cesspool's sludge of nepotism.
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Edward
M. Kennedy was the genetic run-off of America's Royal Family;
a boorish toad of a man with the scruples of a desperate
crack addict and the brains of a dung beetle. Everything
he stood for or achieved was bought for him, handed down
from the crimes of greater men and far more accomplished
cretins.
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His
professional career consisted of manic bluster on inconsistent
drivel, including flip-flopping on abortion whenever it benefited
him. He personally screwed two Democratic presidential candidates
by stringing the party along like a coquettish debutante; leaving
the doomed George McGovern to choose a shock-treatment patient
for vice president during a cantankerous convention the Kennedy
Camp ignited. Four years later, Kennedy blew his best chance at
the White House when his shameless behavior of six years earlier
-- leaving a girl to die on a drunken night of lunacy with his
pregnant wife convalescing at home -- forced him to back out.
Four years hence, he and his cronies haunted the weakened incumbent
in a nasty primary race, all-but sealing the fate of an embattled
Jimmy Carter. Minutes before the death rattle, Kennedy ignored
party diplomacy and snubbed the president on the convention stage,
symbolically hoarding his delegates and creating what later would
become the Reagan Democrats.
Kennedy
wasn't even a decent drunk; surpassed by his first wife, Virginia
Joan Bennett's Herculean consumption of barbiturates and vodka.
Mrs. Kennedy's lasting comment on living with Teddy was she eventually
had to check into several rehab stints after trying to drive her
car off a cliff in a botched escape scheme. But escape she did
in 1978, separating from Kennedy, but inconceivably remaining
married to aid his botched1980 presidential run before divorcing
him outright the next year.
Even
from the grave Teddy remains a survivor. Just this week, on his
deathbed, Kennedy lobbied to strike a 2004 law he championed to
let the naming of his successor fall into the hands of the governor
rather than the previous law, which handed it over to a special
election, a process that could drag on for months and leave a
crucial Democratic seat open for the eventual vote on Health Care
Reform; his lifelong political objective.
It was a seamy, partisan, almost mean-spirited move, but summed
up what Ted Kennedy, like any servable political survivor excels
at. And no one clinging to this ragged democracy should begrudge
him. Ted's problem was that he could never keep his mouth shut
when the other side pulled the same treacherous chicanery. He
flew into a rage upon the pardoning of Richard Nixon in 1974,
only four years after his Chappaquiddick fiasco, mustering the
gall to comment, "Do we operate under a system of equal justice
under law? Or is there one system for the average citizen and
another for the high and mighty?"
Kennedy's
spectacular exercise in hypocrisy was also on display during his
vocal attacks on Supreme Court nominees Robert Bork in 1986 and
Clarence Thomas in 1991, the latter of which he had to slink away
due to its "sexual harassment" theme, something the Kennedy boys,
and most assuredly Teddy Boy turned into an art form. In fact,
only weeks before the hearings, the senator's nephew, William
Kennedy Smith was arrested on rape charges, allegedly meeting
the victim at a bar with his soused uncle.
I
am proud to say in the wake of his passing, having thrown words
down for public consumption over 20 years and in this space for
a dozen now, I have never, ever written a single positive thing
about Ted Kennedy.
Until
now.
He
was no Jesse Helms.
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