Prais said:
Scott said; Yes, Ted Kennedy did an awful thing 40 years ago, and even if he escaped criminal punishment for it, he paid the price for the rest of his life. There's not one obituary of the man that doesn't have Chappaquiddick as an early and important factor in his life.
Scott, with all due respect, WOW - a historic fact is in his obit. That's not exactly "punishment." Omitting that all together would get too much flack from some of us.
Must not have really been too (your word) "important" as he got away with MURDER! Now, that's (your word) CIVILITY."
I've been watching stuff on Biography this afternoon about the gangster Lucky Luciano. Though he "owned" lots of police, the Feds deported him for his racketeering.
I guess when you are "connected in the government" they let the murder go unpunished.
You believe he "got away with murder," and apparently the headline you'd prefer to have awoken to on Friday morning would have read something like, "Killer Kennedy Escapes Scot-Free to Afterlife at 77" or somesuch. So be it.
It bears noting that no reputable media outlet - not even the New York Post or Fox News - played it that way...and if anyone has a right to bear a grudge against Ted Kennedy, it would surely be Rupert Murdoch, who battled fiercely with Kennedy over his ownership of newspaper/broadcast combinations in Boston and New York. Yet the Post obituary, which I'm looking at right now, refers to Chappaquiddick as "a black mark" on Kennedy's record, in a paragraph near the bottom.
The facts are that Kennedy's case was brought before a judge, who chose not to issue a warrant for his arrest, and before a grand jury, which chose not to indict.
The facts are also that Kennedy's employers, the people of Massachusetts, given the opportunity to vote Kennedy out of office the next year, chose not to do so - and went on to re-elect him six more times after that.
And furthermore, the facts are that Kennedy, despite the wealth and family connections he inherited and despite the political power he built on his own, was never able after Chappaquiddick to even win his own party's presidential nomination, much less to be elected president.
You or I, without his "name" couldn't get away with that, could we?
I'm glad you're so certain of that.
In my time as a TV reporter, I covered a lot of trials. The one I spent the most time on, and which remains most memorable a decade later, involved someone who could only be described as a "nobody" - no money in the family, no connections, no political power...just a lawyer who's one of the best in town. The guy even confessed at one point early in the investigation into the case, in which he was accused of murdering the husband of the woman with whom he had been having an affair. After two hung juries, he walked free, in a case where the evidence was (IMHO) far more clear-cut than that against Kennedy at Chappaquiddick.
Why is he a free man now, while the two daughters of the man he was accused of killing now have to grow up without a father? Certainly not because he had a "name" to get him out of trouble.
I'd suggest that life isn't always as black-and-white as some would make it out to be.
It's over. May God rest his soul.
It seems to me that many of us are quick to profess our belief in religions that preach redemption from sin...but far less quick to acknowledge the possibility of that redemption when there's political hay to be made.
I'm not big on organized religion, myself, nor am I much of a believer in an afterlife. I think we're judged ultimately by what we do when we're here on earth. And I think that Ted Kennedy worked very hard for much of his life, especially the last couple of decades, to do what he believed was right for his country and his constituents, especially those who lacked the "name" that he was born with.
Many of your neighbors - and pretty much everyone who ever worked with the man - seem to believe that work counted for something, maybe even enough to help outweigh what he did 40 years ago at Chappaquiddick. Is it not possible that they're seeing something you're not?