Wednesday, August 26, 2009

The LION Lives on!!!

http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2009/8/26/772954/-A-Special-Tribute-by-Editorial-Cartoonists:-The-Dream-Lives-On-

A Special Tribute by Editorial Cartoonists: "The Dream Lives On"

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Wed Aug 26, 2009 at 08:54:08 PM PDT

An Incomparable Record of Achievement


R.J. Matson, St. Louis Post Dispatch

Senator Edward Moore Kennedy was a man of incredible decency and good manners. Always true to his political convictions and beliefs, he, nonetheless, treated opponents in the same considerate and graceful manner as he did his friends, staff, and allies.

The youngest of nine children and born into privilege, Senator Kennedy had what his mother Rose called the "9th child sense" of trying to survive and thrive in a large family. It was perhaps in that environment that he mastered the art of reconciliation, a trait that would serve him exceptionally well throughout his remarkable and long legislative career.

Editorial Cartoonist Chan Lowe of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel is grateful that Senator Kennedy was never apologetic about calling himself a proud liberal when many others shied away from that label


Chan Lowe, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

:: ::

It has become fashionable in the last couple of decades to hurl the term "liberal" around as an epithet.

Those who do so -- and they tend to be those who do not even understand how they and their loved ones have benefited from so-called "liberal" policies -- use the term as an amalgam of "communist," "degenerate," and "unpatriotic."

Ted Kennedy wore the label with pride.

Whatever your politics, you should acknowledge that Ted Kennedy was a giant. If you don't, it says more about you than it does about him.


Nate Beeler, Washington Examiner


Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette

In the United States Senate, he spent his entire career trying to make life a bit more bearable and a lot more livable for millions of minorities as well as the dispossessed and underprivileged in this country. In that respect, he largely succeeded. A "liberal icon" his entire life -- and more so than scions of wealthy families who enter public service -- his unlimited capacity for compassion and empathy ensured that all of us -- the real beneficiaries of his legacy -- live in a society made fairer by this giant of a man.


J.D. Crowe, Mobile Register


Lalo Alcaraz, L.A. Weekly

Cartoonist Ed Stein -- who used to draw for the now-defunct Rocky Mountain News and is a freelancer now -- wrote this in his blog


Ed Stein, edsteinink.com

:: ::

Ted Kennedy, the third longest-serving senator in history, left behind an unmatched legislative legacy. He helped craft some of the most important bills of the last half century, and his influence changed this country for the better. Medicare, voting rights, family leave, civil rights, immigration reform, greater access for the disabled, all bear his mark. He particularly embraced the cause of the little guy, the under-represented, the disabled, the poor, the elderly. Despite being the favorite liberal whipping boy of the far right, he was adept at reaching across the aisle to achieve a bipartisan consensus on many of his landmark achievements....

Still, it is proper to recognize his great success as a senator, and to celebrate the ways in which he made this country a better place for so many of its citizens.

Senator Kennedy was blessed with one advantage over four of his older siblings: the gift of longer life. Jack was 46 years, Bobby 42 years, Joe, Jr. 29 years, and sister Kathleen only 28 years old when their lives ended abruptly and violently. Those tragedies and many others in the Kennedy Family would have diminished a lesser person. Not Senator Kennedy. Instead, he embraced service to family and country as not only his duty but sacred trust. In doing so, he epitomized and prolonged memories of the era the country simply remembers as "Camelot."


Steve Greenberg, Freelance Cartoonist


David Fitzsimmons, Arizona Star


Jim Day, Las Vegas Review-Journal

Editorial Cartoonist Bob Englehart of the Hartford Courant was present at Madison Square Garden for Kennedy's memorable and passionate speech at the 1980 Democratic National Convention


Bob Englehart, Hartford Courant

:: ::

I was sitting in the press section behind the podium next to Jane Pauley. She was wearing a short skirt that showed off her very pretty, tanned knees. When I was able to intermittently focus on Kennedy's speech, I had to agree that it was a real stemwinder.

From where we were sitting, we could only see the back of Teddy's massive head, but his voice was loud and clear and we watched him on TV monitors. When he finished to thunderous applause, he turned around to leave the podium. He had the most pained smile I've ever seen on anyone before or since. His face was as red as a strawberry pie. I thought his head would explode. I even stopped thinking about Jane Pauley's knees for a couple seconds.

I never had the pleasure of meeting Senator Kennedy but every time I saw him on television or read about him, I instinctively felt that I knew him. He was that rare political figure who engendered admiration and respect from strangers and an instant personal connection with average, ordinary Americans. In that sense, he was quite unique.


Jimmy Margulies, New Jersey Record


Kerry Waghorn, Kerrywaghorn.com


Dave Granlund, Politicalcartoons.com

So, Senator Kennedy, thank you for making our lives a bit better over the years. You did good by your family, friends, and, most importantly, your country.

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