Friday, August 28, 2009

Redemption

I was hoping no one would bring up Chappaquiddick, but it was inevitable. A number of blogs and plenty of commenters attacked Ted Kennedy for what he did. Seems to me the last 24 hours were a good time to lay off this subject.

What interests me more, in a man bites dog sort of way, is some of his defenders brought it up. I guess the best defense is a good offense.

For instance, we have Joyce Carol Oates in The Guardian:

Yet if one weighs the life of a single young woman against the accomplishments of the man President Obama has called the greatest Democratic senator in history, what is one to think?

The poet John Berryman once wondered: "Is wickedness soluble in art?". One might rephrase, in a vocabulary more suitable for our politicized era: "Is wickedness soluble in good deeds?"

This paradox lies at the heart of so much of public life: individuals of dubious character and cruel deeds may redeem themselves in selfless actions. Fidelity to a personal code of morality would seem to fade in significance as the public sphere, like an enormous sun, blinds us to all else.

There are a lot of things you could say, but I'll try to keep it short.

In general, I agree that the personal morality of a politician (or a novelist, for that matter) doesn't really matter. Not to me, anyway. Politicians are hired hands, and while it might be better if they had sterling personal lives, what I care about, ultimately, is what they do in their professional capacity. I'm not voting them in to reward them for their virtue, and I see very little correlation between personal goodness and good politics.

But how far does this sentiment go? Would it be okay if I found out a politician was a serial rapist? And what if his badness is more closely related to his politics--say, he blackmails other politicians so they'll vote his way. I obviously don't approve of the means, but do the ends make me vote for him rather than his nicer opponent who votes the wrong way, or is ineffective? Does greatness excuse everything? Does size excuse smaller problems?

More troublesome, it's easy to take Oates in a more partisan manner. It's easy to read her as saying as long as you're a powerful politicians Oates approves of, you can do whatever you want. I guess just having the right politics in general will get you off for minor peccadilloes. Then there's the corollary--even if you're wonderful to your family and friends, if you vote for bad things, like wars Oates doesn't support, you're a bad person.

I have less to say about Melissa Lafsky in the Huffington Post:

Mary Jo [Kopechne] wasn't a right-wing talking point or a negative campaign slogan. She was a dedicated civil rights activist and political talent with a bright future [....] she got in a car driven by a 36-year-old senator with an alcohol problem and a cauldron full of demons, and wound up a controversial footnote in a dynasty.

We don't know how much Kennedy was affected by her death, or what she'd have thought about arguably being a catalyst for the most successful Senate career in history. [....]

Who knows -- maybe she'd feel it was worth it.

Actually, I have nothing to say.

3 Comments:

Anonymous Denver Guy said...

Currently, pres. Obama's popularity and job approval numbers are sinking to near sub 50% levels. Many liberals are wringing their hands, trying to understand how this could happen. I think the answer lies in the near universal disdain for politicians in the US - the least respected profession, even below lawyers. It has taken Obama less than 6 months to show himself to be primarily another politician, and his polls have sunk accordingly.

So, once you get beyond the moniker "politician" in describing Kennedy, then you can discuss his relative greatness. No politician of the modern era is a "great person" along the lines of an Albert Schweizer or Mother Theresa. Kennedy was a disgusting person, and it seems a bastard to deal with in the Senate. The policies he promoted were either good or bad, depending on your political reference point, but most everyone can agree that he was "great" at what he did (signified by his longevity in office - the primary measure of political success).

Partisans, then, will measure their favorite politician by his or her political accomplishments. That Bill Clinton and Ted Kennedy have been terrible womanizers, objectifiers of women, harrassers of females within their power, etc., is entirely forgiveable by the feminist left, because they fought for feminist objectives and were successful at it in the political arena. Respect for Kennedy's political prowess is as indicitive of his personal worth as the award of an oscar to a hollywood star. After all, Roman Polanski has made some remarkable films.

8:20 AM, August 28, 2009  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Obama's swift drop in popularity is because he's tried to force unpopular policies down the throat of the American public. It didn't help that the economy was in a mess. The public thought they were getting a responsble steward, not a far left tax-and-spend type. He still has the press on his side and if he'd "reform" he could be popular again.

9:55 AM, August 28, 2009  
Anonymous Lawrence King said...

I'd be more impressed by Kennedy's "life changing" experience if it weren't for his vicious slander of Robert Bork. Or the evening in 1985 that Kennedy and Chris Dodd sexually attacked a waitress in a manner that Kennedy's feminist allies would have considered tantamout to rape if it had been done by someone who wasn't a political ally.

I too am frustrated by all the adulation, and yet I agree with you that now is not a good time to criticize him.

Jerry Pournelle, on his blog, said it best. He wrote:

Ted Kennedy, RIP.
de mortuis nil nisi bonum dicendum est


and then wrote absolutely nothing else. Subtle and yet to the point.

1:38 PM, August 28, 2009  

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