Hum...
1 posted on
01/08/2003 12:38:44 PM PST by
vannrox
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To: vannrox
2 posted on
01/08/2003 12:40:51 PM PST by
mikeb704
To: vannrox
Mary Jo Kopechne family have any thoughts on this?
3 posted on
01/08/2003 12:42:34 PM PST by
Drango
To: vannrox
4 posted on
01/08/2003 12:42:44 PM PST by
pabianice
To: vannrox
Drunk.
Felon.
To: vannrox
is Kennedy admitting that Dubya used him for a photo op?
6 posted on
01/08/2003 12:43:30 PM PST by
linn37
To: vannrox
Edward M. Kennedy has transcended the family mythology and become his own man. From that photo, he appears to have become about 2 or 3 men.
7 posted on
01/08/2003 12:45:24 PM PST by
Inyokern
To: vannrox
Shouldn't we make Teddy President Pro Tem of the Senate or something, and take the title away from that old KKK racist Robert Byrd. Then hook him up on an intravenous supply of Chivas Regal, pair his vote with, say, Trent Lott, and let him embalm himself until sainthood may be proclaimed. Of course, that may take centuries, but what the h*ll, Massachusetts will surely keep him in office.
To: vannrox
"Kennedy Unbound"
I thought he was always pretty "tight".
The brother of a loser womanizer, another brother a "snot-nosed brat", and a father who was a pro-Nazi bootlegger.
What can one expect of him?
9 posted on
01/08/2003 12:46:59 PM PST by
ZULU
To: vannrox
January 3, Hyannisport, MA: Senator Ted Kennedy Admitted
to a Boston Area Hospital Following an "Unidentified Health Incident."
10 posted on
01/08/2003 12:48:28 PM PST by
South40
To: vannrox
And that's the key. That's how you survive what he's survived. That's how you move forward, one step after another, even though your name is Edward Moore Kennedy. You work, always, as though your name were Edward Moore. If she had lived, Mary Jo Kopechne would be 62 years old. Through his tireless work as a legislator, Edward Kennedy would have brought comfort to her in her old age.
This makes my want to puk.....
12 posted on
01/08/2003 12:52:34 PM PST by
Honcho
To: vannrox
The sycophantic Boston
Glob got one thing right:
if his name were Edward Moore, he would have done time.
So what makes this guy so great? That he avoided prison? I guess in Democrat morality, that makes Kennedy one of the greatest senators of all time.
13 posted on
01/08/2003 12:53:43 PM PST by
mountaineer
(I was 13 in 9th grade, by the way)
To: vannrox
After 40 years in the US Senate, Edward M. Kennedy has transcended the family mythology and become his own man.
Oh boy, our Teddy has finally decided to act like a man.
Seventy years is a hell of a long childhood.
14 posted on
01/08/2003 12:54:02 PM PST by
dead
To: vannrox
IMHO he's the "greatest senator" purely based on time served. He's still in the senate because
1. He couldn't get himself elected president
2. He can have his Massachusetts senate seat as long as he wants it - which has nothing to do with achievment or ability.
I think the conviction of Skakel has gone a very long ways in revealing the family for what they are. In that sense, the bloom has come off the rose, and recently.
I think based on Kennedy's lifetime habits he may not be all that long for this world and he knows it and the writer of this article knows it. It reads pretty much like an obituary and Kennedy seems largely incoherent most of the time.
So JFK got the grand prize, RFK got the consolation prize, and now folks want to award Ted the booby prize - as in "He got to the Senate and stayed there". And if there were any justice, he wouldn't even have that. Yawn.
To: vannrox
And what of the dead woman?
Oh that old nobody she was never a Kennedy.
17 posted on
01/08/2003 12:56:59 PM PST by
dead
To: vannrox
Normally I wouldn't waste a moment of time on any article with keywords like 'Boston', 'Democrat', 'Liberal', 'Kennedy' but this one was fairly interesting and I did get a new slant on Sen. Walrus with his kid's comment:
He learned to plod, because soaring made him look ridiculous. "It's really 3 yards and a cloud of dust with him," says his son Patrick.
It reminded me immediately of Charles Schulz's character, "PIGPEN'!
21 posted on
01/08/2003 1:01:50 PM PST by
JimVT
To: vannrox
To: vannrox
"And what of the dead woman? On July 18, 1969, on the weekend that man first walked on the moon, a 28-year-old named Mary Jo Kopechne drowned in his automobile. Plutocrats' justice and an implausible (but effective) coverup ensued." If Kennedy was a Republican, his political career would have been over. Demonrats would have crucified him and showed him no mercy. Why did powerful Republicans allow him to get away with murder?
To: vannrox
There's this popular series of book(let)s which is evidently becoming a TV series. "The Worst-Case Situation Survival Handbook."
Written by "experts", each meticulously listed, on subjects such as "How to deal with a charging bull" (step one: "Do Not Antagonize the Bull"), "How to leap from a speeding train," etc.
One of the "scenarios" is "How to escape from a submerged car," and of course I expected the "expert" to be Teddy. Imagine my disappointment...
--Boris
29 posted on
01/08/2003 2:05:26 PM PST by
boris
To: vannrox
Senator Edward M. Kennedy's car at the site of the July 18, 1969, crash on Chappaquiddick Island, Martha's Vineyard, that claimed the life of Mary Jo Kopechne. Because of the tragedy, and its aftermath, Kennedy's political life - if not his destiny - was forever altered. More likley, being a scumbag drunken loser was his destiny to begin with.
31 posted on
01/08/2003 2:33:42 PM PST by
Rodney King
(No, we can't all just get along.)
To: vannrox
Frankly, the cynical cat thinks that being the "best senator ever" is a kind of dubious achievement to begin with. What are this professional politician's real world accomplishments anyway?
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