And Something Less
|
I barely knew Ted Kennedy, though
I had heard him tell the starfish story. My
favorite memory goes back to the early Eighties when he came out to Fire Island
for a fundraiser. It was unheard of – a sitting United States Senator
coming to a community where many of the residents were still hiding from
their co-workers and their families. “The Hamptons,” many of us would
say when asked where we were going for the weekend; or, “Long
Island.” Two enthusiastic young men donned
high heels and aprons and walked backwards sweeping sand from the boardwalk as
the great man approached. Today, of course, lots of folks
swing by here. And we take it for granted that the Chairman of the House
Financial Services (of recent “on what planet do you spend most of your
time” fame) happens to be gay, as are the mayors of Paris and Berlin and
Winnipeg and Providence and, soon, I hope, Houston. Back then, New York had a gay
mayor (and not long before, Great Britain had had a gay prime minister), but
only on the QT. So what possessed Ted Kennedy to
come to Fire Island? Certainly he didn’t need the money – Kennedys
have never had much trouble getting elected in Massachusetts. All I know for
sure is that he did come; that he was hale and upbeat, filled with
encouragement and determination for a better, more equitable future. Even so, a theory was advanced at
dinner last night by a TV journalist who had profiled him and to whom he had
shown a special kindness. “I think it’s because he was a fat
child,” she said . . . who was constantly moving from school to
school – he attended 10 different ones by the time he was 11 – and
constantly having to deal with the taunting and bullying that fat children are
subjected to (especially back then, when fewer children were fat).
“He’d take the abuse and gradually win them over with his humor
– but then have to start all over again at the next school.” The point? He knew what it as
like to be the outcast. And it was from this personal experience, she
suggested, that his empathy and compassion sprang. Yes? Or
maybe it was just in the Kennedy blood. “To see wrong and try to right
it; see suffering and try to heal it; see war, and try to stop it,” as
Teddy so memorably eulogized his brother. From
wherever it sprang, it was genuine. HEALTH
INSURANCE How
genuine are the opponents of health care reform, the cause Ted Kennedy was
fighting for until the end? Mel: “If this Bill Moyers
interview with a former top health insurance executive were played prior to
town hall meetings, the entire tone of these events would change. It’s
as revealing as the 60 Minutes program on 40 years of tobacco company
lies. PLEASE watch it!
Or read
the transcript.” Executive summary: “The
industry is resorting to the same tactics they've used over the years, and
particularly back in the early ‘90s, when they were leading the effort to
kill the Clinton plan.”
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 Andrew Tobias