I should hardly think that Chappaquidick was just an innuendo!
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-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]

Date: Sun, 30 Aug 2009 06:36:35 
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: [ChurchillChat] Re: WSC and EMK


I do suppose that Teddy Kennedy had an occasional nip, but I don't recall that 
ever having an effect on him in his work so I would regard that as irrelevant.  
Booze does not seem to have been a problem for him.  I know there are 
innuendos, but I prefer to stick to hard facts.
 
 According to his own accounts, WSC could imbibe heroic quantities of the sauce 
at dinner and then go on to work magnificently until all hours of the morning.  
One can be pardoned for a bit of skepticism.  I do believe he may have been 
just a tad embroidering the actuality.
 
 It's interesting in a way that all this comes up.  In more enlightened times, 
as long as there were no adverse public effects, issues like this were not 
considered anyones' business.
 
 Jonathan Hayes
 -------------- Original message from "[email protected]" <[email protected]>: 
-------------- 
 
 
 I do not find a comparison beyond the facts of their alcoholism and that they 
were men of their houses.
 In his personal life, Churchill was energetic, heroic and, although eccentric, 
above reproach .  Kennedy had his position given to him and lived a life that 
was thoroughly disgusting.  Churchill's alcoholism was just the way he worked.  
Kennedy followed it to debauchery.
 It is true that they both recovered from early mistakes, but Churchill's were, 
if they were mistakes at all,  ones of judgment in the governmental arena.  
Kennedy's mistakes were of personal morality and criminal misconduct.  While we 
remember Mary Jo, do not forget the student he paid to take a test for him.
 Kennedy apparently had a talent of putting together coalitions to pass 
particular bills.  He apparently was liked and, in a way, respected by other 
senators.  He led by fitting the pieces together to complete the puzzle.
 Churchill, by contrast, from my reading, was not as well liked personally, and 
did not excel in putting together coalitions, but in leading by the strength of 
his personality and the compelling nature of his policies.  When men saw 
Churchill, they just had to follow.
 While both traveled impressive legislative careers, there paths were very 
dissimilar.
 Jim Gallen
 
 ---------- Original Message ----------
 From: "Stan A. Orchard" <[email protected]>
 To: <[email protected]>
 Subject: [ChurchillChat] Re: WSC and EMK
 Date: Sat, 29 Aug 2009 12:58:00 -0700
 
 
 Churchill and Kennedy were both political survivors who forged long and highly 
successful careers with the spectre of past, and potentially career destroying, 
early mistakes/misdeeds hanging over their heads.  With one or two exceptions 
they maintained friendly personal relationships with fellow politicians of all 
persuasions to the benefit of their political influence and legislative 
initiatives.  Both had a charismatic presence, in part, coloured by ancestry 
and family history and sustained by their own powerful personalities, personal 
convictions and productivity.  Both affected people on a profound personal and 
emotional level, hence both were mourned and paid tribute to upon their deaths 
by a wide range of influential political friends and foes.  It is hard for me 
to imagine Churchill thriving in the American political system or for Kennedy 
to have reached such heights in British politics - but both reached and 
sustained high levels of success and impact within their respective 
systems.     
 
 Grave dancing on this discussion list is rather unseemly and isn't very 
Churchillian.  
 
 Stan
 
                 
 ----- Original Message ----- 
 From: Geoff Zimmerman 
 To: [email protected] 
 Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2009 11:54 AM
 Subject: [ChurchillChat] Re: WSC and EMK
 
 
 Yes. Forgetting about politics, Kennedy throughout his life was a man of low 
character. At Chappaquiddick he behaved as a coward. I don't see any basis for 
comparing him to Churchill.
  
 Geoff Zimmerman
 [email protected] 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
 To: [email protected]
 Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2009 11:17:06 AM
 Subject: [ChurchillChat] Re: WSC and EMK
 
 
 I will not bring politics into the discussion.  But I refuse to believe that 
WSC would ever have acted as despicably as the late Senator Kennedy did at 
Chappaquiddick.  Had he not been a Kennedy in Massachusetts, he would have 
spent a goodly number of years in the slammer.
 
 The media has been eager to sweep Mary Jo Kopechne  under the rug.  She should 
not be forgotten.
 
 Jonathan Hayes
 -------------- Original message from "Joe Hern" <[email protected]>: 
-------------- 
 
 
 > 
 > A new thread: Edward Moore Kennedy and Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill 
 > 
 > As a Churchillian, and a man from Massachusetts who proudly wears a PT 109 
 > tie clasp, I can't help but see parallels between my late senator for most 
 > of my life and WSC. 
 > 
 > The scenes at the JFK Library in Boston of ordinary folk waiting in line 
 > over three hours to pass the bier are reminiscent of 1965. Due to popular 
 > demand, viewing was extended past the scheduled time; another parallel. 
 > 
 > I hear that the British and the Irish P.M.s are to attend Senator Kennedy's 
 > rites tomorrow, as are the current U.S. president (whose election owes a 
 > great deal to the endorsements of Senator Kennedy and his niece Caroline) 
 > and three out of four living ex-presidents. 
 > 
 > I was privileged to witness yesterday the cortege drive through the streets 
 > of Boston - the Kennedy stronghold - and to sail today close to the John F. 
 > Kennedy Library (coming about before the posted Coast Guard pickets could 
 > challenge us!). 
 > 
 > The most striking parallel is that EMK was the master of, and a great lover 
 > of, the U.S. Senate just as WSC was the master of the House of Commons. 
 > Today's New York Times reports an example of this: that Senator Kennedy 
 > arranged for Robert Caro, the LBJ biographer, to address senators about the 
 > traditions of the Senate. But for the equally esteemed Senator Byrd, 
 > Senator Kennedy would be known as the father of the Senate. 
 > 
 > I invite commentary not on Senator Kennedy's politics but on his role as a 
 > parliamentarian, a lover of his legislative house and his obsequies, vis a 
 > vis those characteristics in Winston Churchill. 
 > 
 > 
 > 
 
 
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