"Fifty years ago this week, two major events in American history occurred within 48 hours of each other.
The second one, an American astronaut walking on the Moon, drew focus away from the first one: Chappaquiddick.
On the night of July 18, 1969, Ted Kennedy drove his car off a bridge and left Mary Jo Kopechne to die.
And he got away with it, in part because just two days later, the whole world was looking up at the sky and not at Ted's fake neck brace.
Of course, Ted was a good liberal and a member of a fervently worshipped political dynasty, and he said all the things Democrats wanted to hear.
So for half a century, our moral, ethical, and intellectual betters in the media have done everything they can to diminish and dismiss his actions.
Sure, a woman was killed, but Ted never got to fulfill his destiny as president of the United States.
And besides, he'd already suffered the horror of his two brothers being assassinated.
Wasn't that punishment enough?
Do we really need to keep rehashing minor little details about the distant past?
So for half a century, our moral, ethical, and intellectual betters in the media have done everything they can to diminish and dismiss his actions.
Sure, a woman was killed, but Ted never got to fulfill his destiny as president of the United States.
And besides, he'd already suffered the horror of his two brothers being assassinated.
Wasn't that punishment enough?
Do we really need to keep rehashing minor little details about the distant past?
Which is why we still see things like this:
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