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Teddy Showed One Hillary Supporter The Way Home


This former Hillary supporter and never-ending defender of his junior senator had a bit of a catharsis last night.  I don't usually post my own blogs because it's too much work.  But I want my friends to know that Teddy Kennedy reminded me what November is all about, and I felt some love last night.  

At the threshhold, let me confess that the evening did not start out that well.  Jesse Jackson Jr. was the first person I saw speaking  and he makes me ill.  He needs, I think, to apologize to Hillary Clinton for making the most vile, race-baiting comment of the campaign, when he spoke of Hillary's tears and her lack of empathy towards our brothers and sisters in New Orleans.  Absent an apology, G-d willing, Jesse Jackson, Jr. will fester in the mire of House gridlock for the remainder of his Daddy-boosted cheesy political career.   He is no friend of mine.

But I digress.  Teddy made me weep and reminded me why I am who I am, why I do what I do, what direction this country needs to go, and why it is an imperative that Senator Obama be elected in November.   He is, indeed, a lion, a throwback who nonetheless understands and communicates the necessity of moving forward.  He inspired last night with his ability to come to Denver and speak despite his precarious health, but to me he has always inspired.  Last night, he did a good thing, and for the first time in this campaign I began to feel that maybe I don't have to be an outsider in my own Party anymore.

I know folks like to talk about the disunity, and it's not the fault of the MSM.  People around here eat up the continuing rift between Clinton and Obama folks.  To me, it has been torture to have felt "othered" over the past couple of months in the political party I have always been loyal to.  Teddy Kennedy pushed all of that out of the way, and reminded this guy that health insurance for all is what it's all about.  All this other stuff is just plain stupid and, for guys like me, a bit narcissistic.

Things are coming together.  The president of my biggest client, a staunch Hillary delegate from New York, is out there and when I spoke with him he was saying all the "right" things.  The grown-ups, beginning with Teddy Kennedy, know what to do, and they're bringing it home.  I stuck with Teddy in 1980, perhaps too long, but he was my guy.  He's still my guy, and I'm sticking with him and I'm committed to Obama, and I even started to feel some love last night.

It was a good night to be a Democrat, and it was a good night to be an American.  Just thought I'd let y'all in on that before I go back to my crotchety, contrarian self. 

Peace.

Bruce


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Aw, Bruce. You can borrow my flying unity pony anytime.

Bruce, welcome to the big Obama tent. I too was moved by Teddy last nite, you can see my post on that.

We cannot have any more of the last 8 years and we need all of us working together. Hillary needs to help lead this charge from the Senate and the bully pulpit she commands for her career.

Once we all come together after Denver the polls will jump and McCain's lame ass campaign will only get more desperate.

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John:

Thank you, but respectfully, maybe it was my bad in the way I wrote the post. I need no welcome to Senator Obama's tent. I have always intended to vote for him, or at least since I knew Hillary wasn't going to win. That's not my point; that's not my point at all. I'm sorry if I wasn' clear.

Bruce

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Well said, sir.

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The big tent really is bigger than Obama.

But there is no doubt he opened a new door for those who wanted in, yet felt like outsiders.

Democrats from the 90's need to understnd this fact. As a lifelond Dem, I perceive that the old guard melts into the new guard more every day. But both "sides" need to relent in their attcks against each other, or that big tent will have two camps huddling at opposite ends, peering suspiciously at one another.

The Time Has Come For REAL Unity. Old bald-headed Dems need to embrace spike-haired young Dems, and likewise, business-suited young Dems need to embrace old hippy Dems. The rifts need infilling.

Our children and their children need us to rise above our differences. It is the only way we will be able to salvage the future from the Bush/McCain mess we watched growing, so malignantly and perniciously, over the past ten years.

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I don't buy into that old and new thing, except to the extent that in this particular campaign more young people have gravitated to Senator Obama than they did to Hillary. But the divide in the Party, which I think is real notwithstanding my warm and fuzzy feelings right now, is not between young and old. Many as old as me and older hear everything that our kids have heard, and we even know what they feel.

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I wasn't clear... I meant the rift between the new arrivals (whatever age) and the long-timers (whatever their age).

The newcomers are predominantly younger voters, but there's a lot of greybeards and silver-haired ladies joining the conga-line entering via that new door Obama opened up.

We aren't in disagreement, bslev, we are on the same page. Literally...

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Well let's toast to this first JEP. :)

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How awesome was that video tribute to Teddy? They did such a great job with it. I heard Ken Burns produced it.

As an older white woman I am having a hard time fathoming the depth of resentment and anger it would take to vote for John McCain and all that he represents. Talk about a betrayal of self. I can't understand the connection. Even if they resent something Obama did to cause Clinton to lose, I can't understand how that would do anything other than keep them from voting... not make the leap to voting for the enemy. And if you think enemy is too hard a word to describe John McCain to all that progressives believe in, then you are simply NOT paying attention.

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Jane:

Give people time. What won't work is telling people who are angry that they should not be angry because x, y or z. Time heals better.

Bruce

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Well said, Bruce, both on the less-is-more comment and in your leadoff post.

An awful lot of both Hillary and Barack fans can--and did last night--unite in honoring Ted Kennedy's greatness. His appearance illustrated the stakes in the election as the appearance of no other single individual could have done. His lifelong dedication and commitment to the pursuit of America's better ideals once his pursuit of the presidency was over is a shining example of good character.

Pretty much anyone who is the Big Cheese can be committed to taking the job seriously and giving it their all. Leadership comes from many sources and without it the person nominally at the top cannot get anything done. It isn't a zero sum phenomenon.

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Bev. Why do you feel that way? There is so much to be frustrated about, but I can't believe that you really don't care. I just don't.

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Meant for Bev below.

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I'm just tired of the triviality of it all and an overwhelming knowledge that nothing is going to change. In my opinion, the corruption is systemic and until we rout it out, it will just be more of the same.

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AD:

Thanks for your kind words. I know you follow this thing closely with an open mind and a recognized passion.

Bruce

The refractory 5% of the Hillary idolators are luxuriating in a sense of deep and burning injustice instead of lamenting HRC's obvious incompetence in campaigning. Some of them will never get well.

And I never forgave Edward the Lesser for what he did to Carter in 1980.

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I can't bring myself to even care anymore.

I think that eddy pointed to one key issue that will bring about unity:

Health care

TK worked his whole life fighting for health care. I think he's worked on 12 bills for national health care over his 46 years in the Senate.

This is Hillary's dream too and her greatest failure.

If the Democrats must do one thing, it is create national health care. Do or die.

I have always found you willing to listen to opposing views without rancor and it inspired me to change my own tone more than once. The Teddy I have for my icon isn't the only one I admire. Great post.

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You are a gentleman Jason, thank you.

There are those who talk and talk about courage, and those who actually show it by the way they live their lives, and the way they face down adversity with grace and dignity.

Teddy's speech last night put him firmly in the latter category, in my book.

It wasn't so much what he said (the words themselves were more of a "Teddy's greatest hits" than anything new) but the fact that he came forward to speak, under the circumstances.

remind the hilllary supporters that if McCain wins, it will be the end of safe, legal abortions in USA.
thousands of women will suffer at the hands of back-street abortionists, many will die.

think Supreme Court!

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Respectfully, I don't think most Hillary folks need to be reminded about why they are life-long Democrats. I think most Hillary folks will come to figure things out for themselves, and I think it is wrong and absolutely counterproductive to presume that people who remain embittered by the campaign will change how they feel based upon being presented with a laundry list of issues they already are very much familiar with.

Thanks for this and rec'd.

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Honored to please a fellow NYer, transplanted or otherwise.

Nice, Bruce. I'm glad you got what you needed last night! Thanks for sharing your experience with us.

--Laura

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Wait, Laura. How did you know I got what I needed last night? :) But seriously folks. . .couldn't resist that set-up. Thanks Laura.

Nicely written post, Bruce. ;-)

Teddy didn't make me cry, but it was good to see him standing strong in spite of his illness.

Jesse Jr. is a fraud (and a shockingly bad speaker to boot). I watched him thinking how I can't wait for the day he goes down in flames. It won't be soon enough. He fosters evil thoughts in me, not at all what a true Dem should do, as far as I'm concerned. He's nothing but the idle spawn of old-school liberalism.

Anyhoo, I want to acknowledge this in particular:

To me, it has been torture to have felt "othered" over the past couple of months in the political party I have always been loyal to.

I'd detected this about you long ago and always admired you because you are old-school all the way. We are strangely few on this supposedly progressive site. You are not "other" to me.

Peace.

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Thanks RTBG:

I think you know that the feelings are mutual. Even with the Jackson Jr. thing, see how nice I'm being. His punishment I'm hoping for is that he remain mired in the House of Representatives! Not a bad deal, eh?

Bruce

Uh, he will be, don't worry about it. I lived in Chicago for years and he says WAY too many stupid things to ever get out of the house. Just for the record, even in the heat of the primary when I was on the Obama side of things, I thought what Jackson said was INCREDIBLY STUPID.

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Chicago is literally my second city. My three adult kids have all gone or are going to school there. Great town, and may Jesse continue to represent his portion of it for many years to come. Hee.

bslev--I haven't been around for a while but your post caught my eye. Nice one. If we didn't care so much there wouldn't be so much "disunity." It is a testament to Democrats that we do care so much. Teddy really got to me, too. I hope he fights off this demon called cancer. What will we do without him? He reminds us of what it means to be a Democrat. I think he sees that spark of remembrance in Obama (which is not to take away from Hillary's dedication) and longs for it.

Great post...thanks for sharing your feelings. Sincere posts like this will do far more to unify the party than rants.

Nice OP bslev,

What strikes me about this convention is the coming together of 3 generations of democrats, you have the Kennedy's, the Clinton's, and the Obama's.

Their presence and determination to unite for the greater good and rise above petty differences should be an inspiration to more than just Democrats. Hopefully for our future it will be.

I think you need to write posts more often. As for animosity, perhaps folks are taking that a bit too seriously, I leave you with a famous quote by another truly nice person, Will Rogers:

You've got to be optimist to be a Democrat, and you've got to be a humorist to stay one.

Rec Bwakfat's comment!

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Bwakfat:

I have been admire your comments thank you. As to writing more blogs, I'd rather comment from the peanut gallery. Besides, it's not too often that I write things that win favor with so many, as I apparently did in this case. I hope to see more from you friend.

Bruce

Well said, you crotchety old bastard you.

To all of our good health, brother.

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Ah Quinn:

From one crotchety SOB to another. Cheers.

Bruce

Bruce - excellent post. It was nice watching the convention coverage to put things in persepctive last night - particularly the Teddy Kennedy speech. Good reminder that we are all part of the same Democratic family. I'm looking forward to the tribute to Stephanie Tubbs-Jones on Thursday too. She was such a fighter for progressive causes and will be sorely missed in the Congress.

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Thanks dijamo, one of my soulmates, who likes my posts regardless of what I write! :) Now that is a friend and I appreciate it. I look forward to the tribute for Representative Tubbs-Jones`as well. She now rests in peace. I hope so many of those who attacked her so unfairly for supporting Hillary Clinton were able to make peace with her before her untimely death. She deserved better.

Nice post.

I feel you on what you said as well.

Its time for the grown ups to put the kids to sleep and start handling business.
I came away with a good feeling last night.

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Bruce, please forgive me a discordant note of cynical irony in response to your warm (and welcome) post, but you surely recall the last divisive Democratic convention: 1980 Carter vs. Kennedy. Kennedy and others learned something from that election, and DNC 2008 is not DNC 1980, but I think it's worth noting that Teddy was not always a "grown up" in the sense that you use it here.

Crotch on.

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Genghis:

I grew up along with Teddy since 1980. That year I refused to vote for Jimmy Carter, and I wouldn't go along with Jon Anderson, the 1980 version of the status quo alternative. So I voted for Barry Commoner of the lefty Citizens Party and I wasted my vote and helped elect Ronald Reagan. That was then; no more wasted votes for this guy.

Bruce

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I turned 9 the day after that election. My first political memory is of the anger I felt towards Anderson for splitting the Dem vote.

Wow. How prescient!

And what's with the funky symbol? Are you becoming Prince-ified?

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Teddy for VP! He's really old, an experienced Washington hand with name recognition and integrity to boot, why not?

He's got no name recognition. Change that last name to "Qwerty," and I figure he'd be a shoo-in. (Sure is hard to spell though.)

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A shoo-in? Not to resort to type but it's practically a lock-in. :)

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A shoo-in? Not to resort to type but it's practically a lock-in. :) Qs unite!

Bruce,

I'd love to see (I've always wanted to see) more blog-posts from you. Thanks for this one. Beautiful and inspiring.

Peace.

Oh, and slightly off topic...

I am at this moment, eating a nice ham and provolone sandwich. Whole grain bread, a little mayo and seriously hot mustard and some greenery. What kind of greenery? Arugula baby! That's right! I'm an elitist mofo! Proud of it!

Heh-heh!

No swiss?

I know! Fresh out. Very sad.

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Thanks for the kind words Loki. As I've said upthread, it's too hard to write posts. You have to respond and be nice to people. I can't do that all the time; I gotta reputation to maintain you know.

Glad that you put in the work. Nice read.

There are certainly simmering resentments among the rank and file, amplified in the self-reinforcing blogosphere, and much overhyped, as usual, by the talking heads needing to fill airspace with controversy, but real nonetheless. Hopefully, the leaders on both sides will take the cue and do their part to put those tensions to rest. Unity is a two way street.

In that regard, I must say that I am puzzled by the Obama camp's seeming reluctance to embrace Bill Clinton's legacy. With the economy emerging as the most significant issue in the election, why have we not heard anything about the eight year run of relative peace and prosperity we enjoyed pre-Bush? The Republicans managed to turn a deeply flawed Reagan, whose Presidency ended in scandal and who (thankfully) betrayed many of the Conservative principles he championed, into a bona fide American hero. (Needless to say, many of us who lived through that period are sickened by the thought). Republican candidates for the past 20 years have fallen over themselves trying to assume his mantle. Most Americans still believe Clinton, despite his personal failings, to have been an outstanding executive. Yet a substantial portion of Democrats still seeks to portray him as a stumbling (yet shrewdly calculating), out-of-touch racist. Our three most recent candidates have done their best to run away from Bill. In doing so, they give up one of the best contrasts we can draw with the Republicans. They took over a country that most felt was basically on the right track. Look where they took us. Sure, the change theme worked great in the primary with an electorate fed up with a Party that had repeatedly caved in to the Bush administration and was looking for a different direction. But as the campaign has shown thus far, Obama's biggest potential liability is people's unfamiliarity with the candidate and discomfort (fair or unfair) with where he wants to take the country. The selection of Biden was a great move because it signified the endorsement of an old hand and a demographic that Obama will need if he is to win in November. Establishing a connection to the most successful Democratic administration in most of our lifetimes would seem a no brainer.

Since Obama is the candidate, I concentrate on him. On the other side, however, the Clintons must realize that preserving and expanding on their legacy depends in no small measure on Obama being elected. Hillary's "concession" speech began to make the case, but we have yet to hear similar sentiments from Bill. I have little doubt they will express their support for Obama forcefully and begin to draw the contrast with McCain we are so desperately looking for.

In short, if everyone sticks to the Armchair Guerilla script, I will guaranty victory in November.

Now I've gone and messed up your neat little thread with a lengthy and meandering rant, the reason for which I can scarcely recall.

>>>I must say that I am puzzled by the Obama camp's seeming reluctance to embrace Bill Clinton's legacy. Ever heard of the Tar Baby? I don't think you can embrace the legacy without winding up with an armful of very present-day Bubba himself. Which is a tad more problematic.

That said, I expect him to be at his most charming and Barack's best friend on Wednesday. He knows his audience (in this case Obama supporters) and probably couldn't keep himself from playing to it.