(CNN) -- Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy, the patriarch of the first family of Democratic politics, died Wednesday at his home in Hyannisport, Massachusetts, after a lengthy battle with brain cancer. He was 77.
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(CNN) -- Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy, the patriarch of the first family of Democratic politics, died Wednesday at his home in Hyannisport, Massachusetts, after a lengthy battle with brain cancer. He was 77.
Oh boy... I really didn't want to get into this.Mikey wrote:...Obviously the man had big no-no's in his personal life...
Conceded. He has done good. None of which makes up for what he did.Mikey wrote:...None of which changes the fact of his work, either.
There are times when I can separate a person's professional life from their personal, but again: how many people who could've turned their life around and done good for society were denied the chance? The only reason he was let loose was because his family had connections. As a reversal of your argument, if Ted Kennedy had done what he did today, would he be charged and convicted and treated the same as the fellow in that article? Maybe. I doubt it, though that might just be my cynicism kicking in.Mikey wrote:...I'm not defending Ted Kennedy's personal life. I'm just saying that it has nothing to do with the positives of his professional life that I mentioned.
My apathy's mostly motivated by lack of anything other than general knowledge about what he's done. I'm sure if I knew more about him I'd feel something, but as it stands I don't.Mikey wrote:Really? Obviously the man had big no-no's in his personal life; but professionally, his career was marked (even more than his brothers, IMHO) by a regard and willingness to fight for the common man quite beyond what one would expect from his blue blood.