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Niall O'Dowd is founder of Irishcentral.com,Irish America Magazine and Irish Voice newspaper. He specializes in Irish America and American politics and raising hell.
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Kennedy a Name That Inspired Millions
Once there were nine siblings, and now justJean Kennedy Smith is left from the children of Joe and Rose FitzGerald Kennedy, who went on to become the most powerful political family inAmerica. We forgot what the Kennedys accomplished for Irish Americans. They grew up in an era when “No Irish Need Apply” signs were still up in someNew England neighborhoods. The family’s summer house was in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts only because theNewport, Rhode Island snobs would not have Irish Catholic neighbors. By the time John F. Kennedy became president all had changed utterly. He defined an American generation and made Irish American identity a definite plus, especially in politics. After he became president the No Irish Need Apply signs were taken down forever. We can say their names now with a mixture of awe and admiration, starting with the most recently deceased, Senator Edward Kennedy, who championed over 3,000 pieces of legislation, passed over 350 major bills during his time in the Senate and became the voice of the powerless in the most powerful institution on Earth. He could make and break presidents but never became one himself. Barack Obamabecame president in large measure because Kennedy decided to back him at a critical moment in his primary race against Hillary Clinton. Equally, Kennedy’s run against Jimmy Carter in 1980 made it impossible for Carter to be re-elected because of a deeply divided Democratic Party. On Irish terms, his work on the peace process and immigration reform will be his legacy. He was the champion of Ireland on Capitol Hill for a generation and his influence will be deeply missed. His sister Eunice, founder of the Special Olympics predeceased him by two weeks. She too was an extraordinary woman, one who felt strongly about her handicapped sister Rosemary and decided to do something about it. The Special Olympics are her monument, and one can hardly think of anything better.
Robert and John F. Kennedy were the two brightest stars in the firmament. It would have been nice for Obama during his eulogy for Kennedy to acknowledge that he would never have become president but for the civil rights legislation that Jack and Bobby championed back in the 1960s, and that Teddy helped sign into law. JFK, a war hero, will forever be the lost leader, the political giant cut down in his prime. Bobby will always be the leader America never had, a man of rare conscience and commitment who might have been the best president ever. Joe Kennedy, Joe Senior’s oldest son, was killed in World War II after undertaking a bombing mission so dangerous that it was almost inevitable that he would never return. He died a true American hero. On the female side o f the family, tragedy also struck. Kathleen Kennedy married British nobility (her mother did not approve and they became estranged) and was killed in a plane crash when she was just 28. Her sister Rosemary was brain damaged from birth and later had a frontal lobotomy, a treatment for mental illness at the time. Jean Kennedy Smith went on to become ambassador to Ireland, a role she performed extremely well. Patricia Kennedy Lawford became a huge champion of the arts and helped establish the John F. Kennedy library. The Kennedys had an incredible range of talents and achievements. Little doubt that the history of the 20th century in America will be writ large with the name Kennedy. Now that we have lost the last politician, Teddy, the story of the Kennedy family begins to draw to a close. It is one that will inspire future generations to public service and helping the underdog. That will be their legacy for countless America
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You want to talk about Comrad kennedy, ok, we will discuss how he and the Obamination have increased the size of governmetn and done more to promote socialism than his buddy Carter.
I am glad to know that for his actions both public and private, Teddy is rotting in hades with his buddies Dahlmer and Gacy.
JFK had one redeaming factor...he wasnt a commie like his brother Teddy the traitor.
All the Kennedy's were criminals, from Joe to Ted and the world is a better, cleaner place without them.
Please document your assertion that Ted Kennedy's generation "grew up in an era when “No Irish Need Apply” signs were still up in some New England neighborhoods." Remember, that generation of Kennedys (JFK, Teddy, Jean Smith, etc) were born 1910-1931. Your assertion suggests that some New Englanders were discriminating against the Irish in hiring, when other more recent (and non-English speaking, non-Protestant) immigrants from Eastern Europe, Italy, Greece, and Portugal (to mention just a few) were doing quite well obtaining entry level jobs throughout New England at that time!
Even funnier is your insinuation that the silver-spoon environment within which the Kennedys of that generation were raised was one in which each of them may have felt a childhood fear that discrimination against the Irish might damage their adult prospects! Remember that Teddy's boyhood included residence at the US Ambassador's mansion in London and the chance to be introduced to the Royal Family. Some NINA!
Your assertion brings to mind a comment in Tip O'Neill's memoirs. I don't think you would consider Tip any less of a Boston Irish Catholic than any of the Kennedys. Tip recounted how, when growing up in the Irish neighborhoods of Boston in the 1910s and 20s, his older neighbors would lament the Protestant burning of a local convent of Irish nuns. As an adult, he learned that the atrocity they referred to occurred in the 1830s, long before any of them had been born! I think Tip would similarly chuckle at your notion that his childhood and that of the Kennedys was tainted by a NINA environment.
Having read your piece further, please document how the wealthy Ambassador Joseph Kennedy, Sr. was restricted in any way in purchasing premier property in Newport, Rhode Island? Please identify any restrictive covenants which would have prevented him from doing so.
Having recently visited Newport, I bring to your attention that Newport native sons Matthew and Oliver Perry, distinguished American heroes, had Irish blood, a matter well known to their Newport neighbors. I also note that Newport had an Irish Catholic parish, St. Mary's, since the 1830s. Newport's branch of the AOH is now over 130 years old.
Moreover, your ridiculous comment about Newport ignores the fact that JFK's Catholic wife, Jacqueline Bouvier, lived at times in Newport - her Catholic mother married Auchincloss, who owned Hammerschmitt farm on the Newport waterfront, in 1942. JFK and Jackie in fact got married at St. Mary's in Newport, in a ceremony officiated by Cardinal Cushing and attended by over 1,200. In my reading of history, I never saw any report of any anti-Irish Catholic jeering by the "snobs" of Newport at the Kennedy wedding! LOL!
Censorship is an ugly tool Niall when you delete a persons blog and articles - that being mine. (note many of the articles in the blog were not written by me but by other Irish)
But you just keep massaging your fragile ego Niall and your bloated sense of self importance. You are one pathetic Irish man for the world to see online. B A S T ARD