Someone said (actually it was a blogger who ordinarily writes about working terriers) that "Caroline Kennedy has never said this before. It is the kind of thing that you say only once in your life." But not if you are Caroline Kennedy. In 2000, she endorsed Al Gore with just as much canned passion and I would say enthusiasm if you take into consideration that it was Al Gore she was endorsing:
"I know that when my brother, John, and I were growing up, hardly a day went by when someone didn’t come up to us and say, "your father changed my life. I went into public service because he asked me. I take great pride in knowing that one of those that he inspired to enter public service is the next vice president of the United States, Joe Lieberman." — Endorsement Speech for Al Gore at the 2000 Democratic Convention
"Over the years, I’ve been deeply moved by the people who’ve told me they wished they could feel inspired and hopeful about America the way people did when my father was president. This sense is even more profound today. That is why I am supporting a presidential candidate in the Democratic primaries, Barack Obama." — Endorsement of Barack Obama in The New York Times, January 27, 2008
"I was lucky enough to grow up in a world where adults taught by example. They dreamed impossible dreams, yet they fought hard each day to make those dreams come true. They taught us the importance of faith and family and how those values must be woven together into lives of purpose and meaning. That is what my husband Ed and I want for our three children. That is what Al and Tipper Gore want for their children." — Gore in 2000
"I have spent the past five years working in the New York City public schools and have three teenage children of my own. There is a generation coming of age that is hopeful, hard-working, innovative and imaginative. But too many of them are also hopeless, defeated and disengaged. As parents, we have a responsibility to help our children to believe in themselves and in their power to shape their future. Senator Obama is inspiring my children, my parents’ grandchildren, with that sense of possibility." — Obama in 2008
Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg's speech in support of Al Gore was aired in prime time and is remembered, if at all, because she revealed in it that Al Gore's parents had played matchmakers to her parents. In a way, JFK played matchmaker to Obama's parents, since as senator he drafted the legislation that brought Kenyan exchange students to the U.S., including Obama Sr., who met Barack's mother at the University of Hawaii. Caroline's father would no doubt be surprised that his organic heir and continuator is Obama Jr. (or leastwise his second organic heir and continuator).
4 comments:
One franchise every four years.
It's no McDonalds. It's no McDowell's, either...
Unsubstantiated rumor: Bobby Jr. is endorsing Marjorie S. Douglas. He says no one alive could deserve it more.
Tipper Gore is the driving force behind the PMRC from the 80s; the famous Washington Wives who had nothing better to do then to be outraged by the music their children were listening to. Our own Paula Hawkins was involved as well, way back then.
This group pushed for lyrics to be printed on the outside of albums, for album cover art to be censored (Paula Hawkins held up a copy of Def Leppard's Pyromania and said something to the extent of "This is the message we are sending to our children. To burn buildings!"), and for lyrics to reviewed much the same way as movies are.
Thanks to them, we have the parental advisory stickers on albums and for a while, you couldn't get albums that had these unless you were 18 and over. I was managing a record store back then and kids would easily solve this issue by going outside and asking someone to buy it for them.
That was the first time I heard Tipper Gore's name and I never forgot it. Whenever a Democrat opens their mouth about freedoms, my mind races right back to her. She had no problem telling me and my generation what we could or could not listen to. She wasted our money on congressional hearings with John Denver and Dee Snider, basically grilling them about their lyrics and lifestyles.
I am still an avid fan of rock music. Are some of the lyrics objectionable? Of course! That's what rock music is about. But as a mom, the responsibility for what my kid listens to lies with me, not with a bunch of pampered, bored, rich women who have nothing better to do with their time and OUR money.
Censorship is unamerican. If you don't like something, don't buy it. If a particular art exhibit offends you, don't attend it. If you don't want your kids to watch something or hear something, turn it off.
AT:
I remember those hearings. Funny stuff. The first and only time cut-off denim graced a congressional hearing room. Frank Zappa released an album using recording samples from the hearings.
nonee and AT:
Ah, like old times.
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