ABC’s Terry Moran: ‘Happy Warrior’ Kennedy Brought ‘Joy’; Ignores Nasty Bork Speech

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ABC’s Terry Moran on Wednesday spun Ted Kennedy’s political career as one of a "happy warrior" who should be looked to for direction in "these bitter times." However, it’s hard to square this description of Kennedy with the vitriolic speech the Senator made in 1987 condemning Robert Bork’s nomination to the Supreme Court.

Reporting on Kennedy’s death soon after it was announced, Moran noted that Kennedy was a liberal and rhapsodized, "He was in many of those battles a divisive figure because of his beliefs, but never because of his heart. He was a happy warrior." The Nightline anchor closed out his report by cooing, "And in these bitter times when anger and contempt seem to become the language of our politics, maybe it’s the old fashion joy Ted Kennedy brought to politics that we miss the most and need now."

Old fashioned joy? Kennedy certainly sounded bitter and angry when he took to the Senate floor on July 01, 1987 and trashed Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork’s America as a place were "blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters" and "rogue police could break down citizens' doors in midnight raids."

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An excerpt from Kennedy’s speech:

Robert Bork's America is a land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens' doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught about evolution, writers and artists would be censored at the whim of government, and the doors of the federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions of citizens for whom the judiciary is often the only protector of the individual rights that are the heart of our democracy.

America is a better and freer nation than Robert Bork thinks. Yet in the current delicate balance of the Supreme Court, his rigid ideology will tip the scales of justice against the kind of country America is and ought to be.

The damage that President Reagan will do through this nomination, if it is not rejected by the Senate, could live on far beyond the end of his presidential term. President Reagan is still our President. But he should not be able to reach out from the muck of Irangate, reach into the muck of Watergate, and impose his reactionary vision of the Constitution on the Supreme Court and on the next generation of Americans. No justice would be better than this injustice.

Is that a happy warrior, Mr. Moran?

A transcript of Moran’s comments, which aired at 3:05am EDT on August 26, follow:

TERRY MORAN: Ted Kennedy was a liberal and proud of it. He fought for decades for liberal causes he never apologized for or backed down from. Civil rights and social justice for minorities, health care for all Americans, more spending on education and social programs. You might have agreed with him. You might have disagreed with him. He was in many of those battles a divisive figure because of his beliefs, but never because of his heart. He was a happy warrior. And in these bitter times when anger and contempt seem to become the language of our politics, maybe it’s the old fashion joy Ted Kennedy brought to politics that we miss the most and need now.

—Scott Whitlock is a news analyst for the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.


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Kennedy?

I think Kennedy on Tuesday made his greatest contribution to the United States of America........!

Happy warrior?

Maybe he was happy with that Bork speech, but many weren't. I remember hearing it that day on the radio, and reading the full text in the newspaper (remember those? how quaint). Each new sentence brought me a new layer of resentment at him. 

By all accounts, in his personal life he was fun, and even generous most of the time. But that's quite different from saying that his battles were all waged with the same fun and generosity. He could be vicious, as the Bork speech showed. I certainly don't celebrate that viciousness today.

 

Joy? Ted Kennedy brought no such thing

He brought us more socialism, less freedom, reckless and irresponsible government-spending, confiscatory taxes and the misery that comes with them, reams and reams and reams of hideous, job-killing and economy-strangling regulations, a severely weakened US military in the 1970s,  a severely dumbed-downed electorate, millions upon millions of illegal criminal invaders that are wreaking financial havoc all across America, policies and programs (as in hugely expanding nanny-state type stuff) that are quite literally on the brink of bankrupting America, a far lower standard of living for future generations of Americans, lots of embarrassment (waitress sandwiches, etc) and death, too:

40 million unborn children, 2 million Cambodian families, and one young woman who was an only child.

There was a lot of death around Ted Kennedy.

-Dave

Yeah, but I hear he mixed

Yeah, but I hear he mixed one hell of a martini.  /sarc 

"Beauty is only skin deep, but liberal's to the bone." - me

Credit where credit is due...

He was a wonderful example of what I didn't want to be when I grew up. 

"Beware the fury of the patient man." - John Dryden

Er, Ahh - I can't believe I

Er, Ahh - I can't believe I made it to Heaven. What a great place.  I just had drinks with Jack and Bobby at this great bah, and I'm meeting FDR for lunch later.

Er, Ahh - Oh Oh, I just saw Mary Jo looking for me - show me the back door boys...

I envision a bit like

I envision a bit like this...

 As Kennedy arrives at the pearly gates he finds them steadfastly locked. In the distance he sees Saint Peter chatting up a lovely young woman.

Kennedy: "Excuse me." "Hey! You! Can I get a bit of help"

Saint Peter glances over and regrettably excuses himself from his conversation.

Carrying his clipboard, Saint Peter walk to the gates. Looking between the bars of the beautiful golden gates at the man waiting for entrance says: "Ah Yes, Mr Kennedy." Glancing at his notes. "we've been expecting you. It seems we need to discuss a few things before or if we even proceed. I was just having a lovely discussion with Mary Jo. You remember Mary Jo, Don't you?"

Ted Kennedy brought joy? The Kopechne family and...

his ex-wife Joan, may not agree with that crap...

Get a clue, Moran. 

"The problem is not that people are taxed too little...the problem is that government spends too much." ~President Ronald Reagan

Terry Moron is a

Terry Moron is a moran....er, ah....just another Kennedy-butt-kisser.

should not be able to reach out from the muck of Irangate, or

Reach out a helping hand for a drowning girl.

(Lenin called them "useful idiots" I for one have no use for them.)

Old fashioned progressive....huh?

"Ted Kennedy was a liberal and proud of it......maybe it's the old fashion joy...."

Yeah, nothing defines a liberal like old fashioned qualities.

Did you even look at the script before reading it Terry? 

whoa whoa ..wait a minute Terry Moran.

 "And in these bitter times when anger and contempt seem to become the language of our politics, maybe it’s the old fashion joy Ted Kennedy brought to politics that we miss ...

...whoa whoa ..wait a minute Terry Moran.

Ted Kennedy has been right here in the midst of these bitter, angry and contemptuous times, Terry Moran. Where have you been these past many years? That's the question. Now that he's gone, with all of that "ole fashioned joy" (completley subsidized by the weatlh created by the successful capitalist Joseph Kennedy. Oh, all those mob connections and bootlegging money.

(;~/ gary

RIP MJK

40 year old fashioned joy?

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