Posted: April
19, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern
© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com
"On a cool
February day in 1932, little Teddy Kennedy was born. Later that
night, the baby's father, Joe, leaned over the bassinet and kissed
his new son. Because of that kiss, Ted's cheeks still, to this
day, display visible remnants of Gloria Swanson's lipstick."
– Kennedy
family urban legend
Over 70 years
later – through family tragedy, a couple of wives, a tour of duty
in the Chivas navy, an attempt at the presidency, and now support
of John Kerry's attempt to defeat Bush, Ted Kennedy is still going
strong.
Kennedy is now
in his seventh term in the Senate, making him the
second-longest-serving active senator – the longest-serving, if
you happen to catch the Senate on a day when Robert Byrd has gone
away to dedicate another building to himself or to have one of his
old Kleagle hats blocked.
If you've
listened to Ted Kennedy's latest introductions of John Kerry at
campaign rallies, you may have been reminded of a composite of
every bottle dwelling bar babbler you've ever been stuck sitting
next to at one o'clock in the morning. When that happens, you keep
an eye on your wife, a hand on your wallet, and take what they say
with a grain of margarita salt.
Such is
Kennedy's plea to get us to vote for John Kerry – a series of
verbal endorsements that could gain more steam if Ted didn't
always sound like Boris Yeltsin trying to recite the alphabet
backward. If Ted's on the wagon, it must have carried him straight
to the liquor cabinet, because when he gets riled up, his speeches
make you wish Foster Brooks were still around to interpret.
Trying to
figure out what Kennedy is saying at a campaign rally often makes
me appreciative of the skills of Timmy from "Lassie." Where's Jon
Provost when you need him?
"Ahnd ahftah
muthna hahve olll crompushnin Johhhnn..."
"What is it,
boy? Kerry needs our vote?"
"Nithmish nahd
caheforea jah Kreee!"
"Bush must not
be re-elected or there will be global Armageddon? Good boy!"
In addition to
the occasionally comical slurry harangues, Ted can be absolutely
shameless. When Kennedy is endorsing Kerry, he isn't even shy
about touting the fact that Kerry once saved somebody from
drowning – this statement often causes more uneasiness and
suppressed giggles in the room than the time Marilyn Monroe
crawled out from under the podium after a JFK press conference.
Statements
like this are the most telling symptom of Kennedy's ivory tower
induced moral myopia. Ted Kennedy, without batting an eye, can
proudly laud a colleague for saving someone from drowning? This
takes some serious nerve – right up there with Lizzy Borden
praising the skillful hatchet work of Paul Bunyan.
Joe Kennedy
had a daughter lobotomized, and, judging from the incongruous
comments uttered by his son, he apparently forced Ted to undergo
several compunction bypass procedures.
Ted's even got
a dog that he named "Splash." I often wonder if he ever lets
Splash get together with Joe Hazelwood's dog – "Slick" – for a
nice game of Frisbee at "Irony Park."
After the
unintentional humor, the lies start to flow. Now Kennedy is
calling the Iraq fight "George Bush's Vietnam."
Democrats like
Kennedy have spent the better part of the last few years telling
people that Bush avoided Vietnam service by hiding behind his
father's money and power. Using their false portrayal, if this
were indeed "Bush's Vietnam," then, at the very most, the only
current military operation we'd be engaged in would be a gallant
struggle by the Texas Air National Guard to find Weapons of Mass
Destruction in Ann Richards' living room.
Kennedy can't
be blamed much for getting his facts mixed up a bit when it
concerns the Vietnam era. Kerry was serving overseas, Bush was
serving domestically and Kennedy was dripping wet in a Martha's
Vineyard bait shop, desperately rummaging through tackle boxes to
figure out which spinner would work the best to hook an
Oldsmobile.
The real
reason for Kennedy's extreme dislike of George W. Bush isn't as
political as much as it is insane jealously.
Ted sees many
of his blown opportunities and dashed hopes being fulfilled by the
son of a high-powered, financially successful businessman and
politician. In other words, he sees himself – minus the beer gut,
garbled pep talks, dead date, left leanings, exhausted nephews
and, ultimately, occupancy of the Oval Office.
The big
problem John Kerry is facing is that hardly anybody is really
endorsing him – they're endorsing the removal of George W. Bush,
as is the case with Kennedy. At least, I think that's what
Ted's saying.