Category Archives: People of Note

Roger Ebert: The Essential Man – Esquire

brilliant interview and story on a guy I am increasingly in admiration of. If you are on Twitter, please add him to your follow list.

And here is Ebert’s response – or at least thoughts – on the article.

You really wish the guy hadn’t gone through the hell he has, not to mention that his friend passed so painfully and quickly. Then again, those things made him the man he is today, for better or worse.

Goodbye Howard Zinn

More on the recent passing of Howard Zinn, including some videos clip on this page plus an excerpt from his latest – and last – book.

“What we choose to emphasize in this complex history will determine our lives. If we see only the worst, it destroys our capacity to do something. If we remember those times and places-and there are so many-where people have behaved magnificently, it energizes us to act, and raises at least the possibility of sending this spinning top of a world in a different direction. And if we do act, in however small a way, we don’t have to wait for some grand utopian future. The future is an infinite succession of presents, and to live now as we think human beings should live, in defiance of all that is bad around us, is itself a marvelous victory.”

Bob Herbert wrote a very good article on Zinn. It really should be read as a personal homage to the man.

I have some more articles at home I’m hoping to link to. Hopefully I’ll remember to do that soon.

Personal Hero: Senator Ted Kennedy Dies At 77

Tis a sad day for me, and a passing of an era for America. I woke up this morning to the news that Ted Kennedy passed.

I am not sure how many of you know that my first name comes from my dad’s respect for JFK. So, even though I never lived in the time of John, or even Robert, I’ve always been intrigued by the Kennedy family. So, my only real ties to them – tenuous as they are – are watching Teddy do his thing in the Senate through the years.

The Boston Globe is carrying much of the news related to his life and passing, starting here with his obituary.

Time covers his career and hits the highlights of his legislative legacy:

Everybody was wrong. Ted Kennedy would never reach the White House….But his failure to get to the presidency opened the way to the true fulfillment of his gifts, which was to become one of the greatest legislators in American history….

Because Kennedy never made it to the finish line, he never had to endure a post-presidential twilight. Instead, by the time of his death on Aug. 25 in Hyannis Port at the age of 77, he had 46 working years in Congress, time enough to leave his imprint on everything from the Voting Rights Act of 1965 to the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act of 2009, a law that expands support for national community-service programs. Over the years, Kennedy was a force behind the Freedom of Information Act, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, and the Americans with Disabilities Act. He helped Soviet dissidents and fought apartheid. Above all, he conducted a four-decade crusade for universal health coverage, a poignant one toward the end as the country watched a struggle with a brain tumor. But along the way, he vastly expanded the network of neighborhood clinics, virtually invented the COBRA system for portable insurance and helped create the laws that provide Medicare prescriptions and family leave.

Whether you’re a proud Democrat or the most ignorant Rethug, you’re life has been bettered by Ted Kennedy’s work. And yes, the hatemongers are talking. But I refuse to focus on them today. Let their hate be ignored and shunned by all good people who have respect, even for someone they didn’t agree with. I remember my dad popping me a good one when Nixon died. You have to have respect for the dead, I was told. He was right then. He was right when Reagan passed.

Hopefully somewhere Republican fathers are teaching their children the same lesson today.

A lot of people are saying great things about our lost leader. None have done so better than Joe Biden did this morning:

That said, Harry Reid stepped up today, and I’m proud to have him represent me for at least these words:

“Because of Ted Kennedy, more young children could afford to become healthy. More young adults could afford to become students. More of our oldest citizens and our poorest citizens could get the care they need to live longer, fuller lives. More minorities, women and immigrants could realize the rights our founding documents promised them. And more Americans could be proud of their country.”

“Killing Machine”

One of the oddities of the online world is that Brandon Bird’s painting, as seen above, spawned a meme that Bea Arthur is humanity’s greatest weapon against the dreaded velociraptor threat. Obviously, yes, there are no velociraptors anymore (but don’t tell these guys). That said, since Bea Arthur passed away yesterday, should you feel any less safe than the day before?

They could be among us now, plotting behind the scenes and waiting to undermine us from within. I mean, we just had Evil Muppet Dick Cheney turn America into a Torture State. Stranger things HAVE happened.

We already have a Nazi Pope. Don’t be surprised if you have to take Communion from this guy soon.

Bea, you will be missed.