Posted on 09/19/2004 5:02:25 AM PDT by islander-11
John Kerry may be sinking in the polls, but even if he goes down with the ship Nov. 2, he'll still have his own little flotilla to return to back here in Massachusetts.
According to a check of state and U.S. Coast Guard records, he and his ``family'' own almost as many high-end boats as they do mansions and SUVs. Since Liveshot married the Widow Heinz, he's been on a nautical buying spree. Excuse me, let me clarify that last statement: His elderly second wife's first husband's grandfather's trust fund has been on a nautical buying spree on behalf of Gigolo John.
Here is the fleet:
The Scaramouche, a 42-foot, $1 million 2001 Hinckley power boat, currently in the Witness Protection Program for boats down in Rhode Island until after the election.
A 35-foot, 1998-model Contender, presently unregistered with the state. According to unreliable but official state documents, that boat - known lately as ``the Dan Rather'' - is moored in Abington, a landlocked satellite of Brockton where you would be much more likely to stash a body than a boat.
A 27-foot 1998-model Contender, registered to the stepson, Chris Heinz.
An 18-foot, 2001 Novurania, MS0057TT. You get the 57 reference, and the TT means ``Tender to'' - in other words, it's the Scaramouche's dinghy.
A 17-foot 1994 Boston Whaler, owned by Teresa.
The odd thing is, with all these fine vessels at his disposal, Gigolo John is only rarely photographed these days at the helm of a boat. Perhaps all nautical vessels now remind him of . . . swift boats.
As for the name of Kerry's flagship, that could be another problem out there in the blue states. According to Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase & Fable, before it became famous in a hit song for Queen, Scaramouche was ``a stock character in Italian farce. . . . a braggart and a fool, very valiant in words, but a POLTROON.''
Benet's Readers Encyclopedia goes even further, describing Scaramouche as a ``braggart soldier.''
Unfortunately, other than the Scaramouche, I don't have the names of the ships in the Heinz Navy. They're not listed in Jane's Non-Fighting Ships, and state regulations don't require identification by name. A call was placed to the Kerry campaign seeking information about all the boats, including the whereabouts of the Scaramouche and why it's put in less time on the water this summer than the SS Minnow. The call was not returned.
And I hope that Teresa's Whaler is the Lovey, John's term of affection for her that he borrowed from Thurston Howell III.
The only real question about the fleet concerns the 35-foot yacht that is supposedly in Abington - the SS Dan Rather, I like to call it, after Kerry's greatest supporter in the media. Is the Dan Rather really in Abington? I asked a spokesman for the Massachusetts Environmental Police.
``It's probably a clerical error from when we switched systems a couple of years ago,'' Felix Brown said. ``We don't show it presently registered, so it could either be in dry dock, or registered with the feds, which you can do if it's over 26 feet.''
Or perhaps the Dan Rather is resting at a mooring on the East River in Manhattan, to provide its namesake with a quick means of escape when he finally has to confess to his part in the ``60 Minutes'' hoax. After what Dan Rather tried to do for John Kerry [related, bio], letting Dan Rather flee in the Dan Rather seems the least that one braggart soldier could do for a ruined anchorman.
You can't make this stuff up! Well done, Cap'n!
poltroon: a spiritless coward
(websters)
love it
Oh the fun we canhave with the name of John Faux Kerry's vessel.
Scaramouche: braggart soldier
or
Scarcely-more-than-a-mooch
And the Dems are trying to convince voters that it's Bush who has all of the money???? Laughable.
Wow! Howie is definitely on a literary tear with this one! How hilarious that JF'nK's boat is named after a "braggart soldier", and that his use of the term "Lovey" for Mrs. Heinz (what she called herself until this election disaster campaign) is revealed.
I have said before, sKerry is the gift that keeps on giving for the GOP! LOLOL!
Excuse me, let me clarify that last statement: His elderly second wife's first husband's grandfather's trust fund has been on a nautical buying spree on behalf of Gigolo John.
Oh boy.....is Howie going to get told! Probably something about naked idiots shoving things!
This guy is just a poor cousin of the Forbes', who paid for his education, thereby doing their duty to his mother.
The 35-foot Contender is a saltwater fishing boat. It has berths, but it isn't exactly a "yacht", in the sense that Carr means it.
The real eye-opener here is the 42-foot Hinckley. I didn't know Hinckley made a 42-footer. That would be like having a 42-foot Rolls Royce.
Anybody who owns a Hinckley is a Thurston-Howell-the-third type.
Remember in 1992, the constant photos of Bush the elder in his speedboat, calculated to show us he was "out of touch"?
Funny we don't see the MSM doing that with Kerry... ;-)
Mebbe Kerry thought they said "pontoon" and figured it meant something nautical?
In my state, registering with the feds does not take the place of registering with the state.
Defeat the Skerry Armada and his host of SeaDogs!!
from the OED-
poltroon
[a. F. poltron (also in 16th c. poultron) a knaue, rascall..; dastard, coward; sluggard, lazie-backe, base idle fellow (Cotgr.), ad. It. poltrone a poltron, an idle fellow, a base coward, a lazie, lither or slothfull sluggard, a lout (Florio 1611), whence also med.L. pultro, -onem (S. Francis c 1220, Du Cange), Sp. poltron, Pg. poltrão; f. It. poltro sluggard, idle, lazie, slothfull (Florio) + -one: see -OON. The 16th c. spelling may have been influenced by med.L. Originally stressed pultron; poltroon (after Fr.) appears in 1664.
It. poltro adj. was app. from poltro couch, bed (Florio): cf. Milanese polter, Romagn. pultar resting-place, Venet. poltrona couch, Pg. poltrona large arm-chair, and It. poltrare, poltrire, beside poltronare, poltroneggiare to play the poltron,..to loll and wallow in sloth and idlenesse, to lye lazilie in bed as a sluggard (Florio). Poltro, polter, pultar, are referred by Diez to OHG. polstar pillow, bolster. The fantastic conjecture of the derivation of poltron from L. pollice truncus, maimed or mutilated in the thumb (scil. in order to shirk military service), was offered by Salmasius, and long passed current as an etymology; it prob. gave rise in the 18th c. to the use in Falconry (sense 2).]
1. A spiritless coward; a mean-spirited, worthless wretch; a craven.
Anyone that would actually name a boat after this character,.......says something about HIS own self-image. WOW what a dumb dum, advertising his own short comings
ping
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