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Douglas Caddy

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  1. New York Times book review of October 28, 2020 CATCHING THE WIND Edward Kennedy and the Liberal Hour By Neal Gabler By the time Edward Kennedy died, in August 2009, he had represented Massachusetts in the United States Senate for nearly 47 years — longer than any of his brothers had lived. He was eulogized as one of the most important legislators in American history, an assessment reflecting not only the affection he enjoyed on both sides of the aisle, but also genuine awe at his achievements. Over the course of five decades, Ted Kennedy had sponsored nearly 700 bills that became law, and left his imprint on scores of others. The Voting Rights Act of 1965; the Immigration and Nationality Act of that same year; the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990; the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 — all bore his influence or were advanced by his efforts. None of this was foreordained — or even all that likely. He was a Kennedy, of course, and Kennedys were born to advantage; but as a child and young man, he was seen within the family not merely as the last of the Kennedy brothers, but the least: the least talented, serious, capable, promising. The press, initially, saw him that way, too. During his first campaign for the Senate, at the age of 30 in 1962, he was derided as President John F. Kennedy’s callow kid brother — a man so obviously unqualified that his election, in the view of The New York Times, could only demean “the dignity of the Senate and the democratic process.” Kennedy won that race, and set to work defying expectations. Still, the long, consequential career that followed would to the end remain, in profound ways, a struggle — against the fates, the tides of history and, in no small part, his own failings. That struggle and its significance are the subjects of “Catching the Wind,” the first installment of a two-volume treatment by Neal Gabler, the author of well-regarded books on Walt Disney and Walter Winchell. Kennedy’s expansive life has yielded no shortage of biographies, but Gabler’s is on its way toward becoming the most complete and ambitious. As a character study it is rich and insightful, frank in its judgments but deeply sympathetic to the man Gabler regards as “the most complex of the Kennedys.” The story of Ted’s brother Bobby is typically written in two acts: before and after the assassination of President Kennedy in November 1963. Ted’s time at center stage, so much longer than Bobby’s, was more varied, consisting of numerous acts, twists, turns and apparent endings — less a linear progression than, as Gabler describes it, a “cycle of sin and expiation,” loss and renewal. Within weeks of entering office, Kennedy talked about staying there the rest of his life. He adored the Senate’s traditions; he adapted quickly to its rhythms and norms. And, to the surprise of many, he was willing to work. John Kennedy had served eight years in the Senate without ever investing much of himself in it; he was — often visibly — bored by its slow-moving machinery. But Ted Kennedy relished it: the pressing of levers, the working of gears, the intricate business of cutting a deal. No less important, as Gabler writes, “there was a joy in him, a great love of people.” He drew them in — whether voters back home or the Southern septuagenarians who ran the Senate — won them over, made them willing, even eager, to support him. He was the most natural politician in his family, a close match in temperament to his grandfather John “Honey Fitz” Fitzgerald, who had taught him, Gabler notes, “what empathy meant.” “Catching the Wind” lends a cinematic sweep to Kennedy’s legislative crusades — for example, his failed if noble campaign in 1965 to ban use of the poll tax, that old, racist roadblock to the African-American vote, in state elections. (The 24th Amendment, ratified in 1964, had prohibited its use in federal elections. The year after Kennedy’s effort foundered, the Supreme Court ruled the poll tax unconstitutional at the state level.) Gabler makes these battles exciting, though at times he seems intent on making everything exciting; scenes are often over-egged, amped up by incantation: “And then Ted quoted at length, great length, from a speech, a remarkable speech,” reads a typical passage. “Richard Nixon was wounded now, badly wounded, wounded and reeling from his wounds,” begins another. The reader needs no such prodding; the drama, as it develops, is real enough. The swiftness with which Ted Kennedy went from being teased by Republicans as “Little Brother” to becoming the patriarch of a political dynasty — the bearer, as he himself put it, of his martyred brothers’ “fallen standard” — is unfathomable, however familiar the story remains. In 1968, when Robert was killed in Los Angeles while running for president, Ted was only 36. The pressure upon him to carry forward the campaign was instantaneous: One of Bobby’s aides cornered Ted on the flight that carried his brother’s body back to New York, pleading, “You gotta run.” Kennedy knew himself well enough not to accept a draft — he was deeply depressed, immobilized by grief. But he had lost control over himself and his future. Tragedy begat tragedy, and Los Angeles led, in some indirect but inexorable fashion, to Chappaquiddick in July 1969. The death of Mary Jo Kopechne in Kennedy’s car was, as Gabler writes, “indelible — a stain he bore that no amount of penance could erase.” And Gabler suggests it was more than that. Because Kennedy, he writes, was “the face and the voice of modern liberalism,” Chappaquiddick cost liberalism its moral authority — at a time, the end of the ’60s, when that authority was already waning. “Catching the Wind” is presented as something of a parable — “This book,” Gabler states, “is about political morality” — but the concept never quite coheres. By “political morality,” the author seems to mean, exclusively, a concern for the “voiceless and powerless,” as Kennedy often put it. There is no discussion of its conservative counterpoint, that system of belief that saw abortion and homosexuality, for example, as morally intolerable and the death penalty as defensible. Instead, Kennedy’s foil, in Gabler’s account, is the amoral Nixon and his politics of resentment and racial division. This is accurate enough in itself, but less than the full story that the book aims to tell. The decline of liberalism, in any event, had at least as much to do with economic stagnation as it did with moral authority or the imperfections of liberal apostles. Kennedy, for his part, felt the winds shifting. In the wake of Bobby’s death and Chappaquiddick, as the book describes, he redoubled his commitment to be “the senator of all those in need.” Yet the book ends with Kennedy on the run from a rock-throwing mob in his own hometown of Boston, which, in 1974, had exploded over the busing of Black students into overwhelmingly white school districts. “You’re a disgrace to the Irish!” a protester shouted, one of the milder comments that day. Never mind that Kennedy was not a particularly strong proponent of busing; what the crowd made clear, as Gabler writes in a powerful closing, was that “he was no longer one of them.” To the white working class from which the Kennedys had risen, Ted was now “just another condescending liberal who favored minority rights over their rights.” As Gabler’s next volume will no doubt describe, Kennedy’s response was not to change course. He would simply sail harder.
  2. Fox News threw in the towel on Trump and now the Wall Street Journal does the same. Chaotic’ Trump has only himself to blame for impending re-election loss: Wall Street Journal https://www.rawstory.com/2020/10/chaotic-trump-has-only-himself-to-blame-for-impending-re-election-loss-wall-street-journal/
  3. FOX NEWS POLL Biden leads of 8 points, https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/523722-biden-leads-trump-by-8-points-nationally-poll
  4. Biden could win this election by campaigning from his front porch. His present campaign realizes this. The successful presidential campaigns of James A. Garfield in 1880, Benjamin Harrison in 1888, and William McKinley in 1896 are perhaps the best-known front porch campaigns.
  5. What the Talmud can teach Amy Coney Barrett about ‘Originalism’ https://forward.com/opinion/457188/what-the-rabbis-of-the-talmud-could-teach-amy-coney-barrett-about/?utm_source=PostUp&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily Newsletter USE THIS ONE&utm_maildate=10/27/2020
  6. The Republican Party's Supreme Court https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/26/opinion/amy-coney-barrett-supreme-court.html
  7. JFK Assassination - Gaeton Fonzi interviews Vincent Salandria July 1966 History conspiracy podcast History Listen on Apple Podcasts link to full transcript - https://ourhiddenhistory.org/entry/vincent-salandria-and-gaeton-fonzi-discuss-problems-with-the-warren-commission-report-philadelpha-1966 Vincent Salandria and Gaeton Fonzi Discuss Problems with the Warren Commission Report, Philadelphia (1966) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/art-mcdermott/support
  8. https://www.dallasnews.com/news/2018/11/20/john-connally-jfk-shared-a-complicated-history-before-assassination/?fbclid=IwAR1kQc-Ob4z9Apg0vYipvzqPn288jgtKcri1vNgZT2Qh1BpeE7mdYLyirMw
  9. Gorbachev Exits on a Kennedy Theme https://www.nytimes.com/1992/05/16/world/gorbachev-exits-on-a-kennedy-theme.html
  10. Here’s Every Time Donald Trump And Ghislaine Maxwell Have Been Photographed Together Lisette Voytko Forbes Staff Business Wealth Reporter https://www.forbes.com/sites/lisettevoytko/2020/07/21/heres-every-time-donald-trump-and-ghislaine-maxwell-have-been-photographed-together/?fbclid=IwAR0aQiiCoqUrXaQORlERNx5gPruOVWAANU9cGoq7RalIYgQclBCTi6imUBo#5811cb96183d
  11. Interview with James Fox and Marc Barasch, Director and Writer of Runaway Hit Film The Phenomenon Do not miss this. Full of new information and revelations. https://www.unknowncountry.com/dreamland/james-fox-and-marc-barasch-director-and-writer-of-runaway-hit-film-the-phenomenon/
  12. Interview with James Fox and Marc Barasch, Director and Writer of Runaway Hit Film The Phenomenon Do not miss this. Full of new information and revelations. https://www.unknowncountry.com/dreamland/james-fox-and-marc-barasch-director-and-writer-of-runaway-hit-film-the-phenomenon/
  13. FIVE PENCE STAFF MEMBERS TEST POSITIVE FOR VIRUS. PENCE IS HEAD OF ANTI-VIRUS COMMISSION! https://www.mediaite.com/news/new-pence-chief-of-staff-marc-short-tests-positive-for-coronavirus/
  14. John Newman posted the following on Facebook today (Oct. 24, 2020): Just three weeks to go before the 2020 Global JFK Virtual Research Conference convenes. My presentation (on 14 November) will be "The CIA, the Army, and the Pentagon: The Veciana Misdirection 3.0." The attached FBI documents (in my briefing) come from Veciana's best friends and undermine the claims he made to Gaeton Fonzi and in his book "Trained to Kill." I will present conclusive evidence showing how Army Intelligence joined Veciana's 1976 campaign of misdirection and--under oath to the Church Committee's Senator Schweiker--backstopped Veciana's claim that in 1962-1963 he worked for the CIA and not for the Army. Presentations--whether virtual or in the flesh--are just hors d'oeuvres, while legal battles are under way behind the scenes. The entre is coming in Volume IV--Armageddon
  15. New York Times Editorial: R.I.P., G.O.P. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/24/opinion/sunday/trump-republican-party.html
  16. Forbes Estimates China Paid Trump At Least $5.4 Million Since He Took Office, Via Mysterious Trump Tower Lease https://www.forbes.com/sites/danalexander/2020/10/23/forbes-estimates-china-paid-trump-at-least-54-million-since-he-took-office-via-mysterious-trump-tower-lease/
  17. Trump issues executive order that could destroy incoming Biden Administration https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/trump-executive-order-civil-service-biden-election-schedule-f-b1255692.html?fbclid=IwAR3D_wTFN9y8gHNd1sOAGCtwh28W1J8YmUUaihfgnymx7uwyyT0_WgFPRSc
  18. Senator McConnell has severe health problems https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8870433/Mitch-McConnell-DENIES-health-problems-amid-speculation-hands-bruised.html
  19. How It Started / How It’s Going: Trump Edition What have we learned about the President and his associates these last four years? https://gregolear.substack.com/p/how-it-started-how-its-going-trump?token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo5NTk5NDEyLCJwb3N0X2lkIjoxMzU5MDI4NywiXyI6IjJKSDNNIiwiaWF0IjoxNjAzNDYzOTM2LCJleHAiOjE2MDM0Njc1MzYsImlzcyI6InB1Yi0yMDY5NSIsInN1YiI6InBvc3QtcmVhY3Rpb24ifQ.sEyErjjUn_Dj5Xg1ojKcqpHErItd7C0UQL357OwvkZU
  20. What Does Amy Coney Barrett Mean for the Supreme Court? We know who her allies are, and we know how to read what she’s written or signed. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/22/opinion/supreme-court-amy-coney-barrett.html
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