R.I.P Ted Kennedy

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.
Apr 25, 2002
10,848
198
0
39
No, it's Ironic that I've been fucking your sister, and you think that I am gay. Talk about irony you allanis moresette ass mother fucker.
you mad, and you're probably a closet homosexaul casue you started calling me somethin you probably fear being and it's somethin that bothers YOU,don't hide behind the fact you've father children either you guys do that shit all the time


take your own advice like you said in the east co. co. forum and grow the fuck up

GOD BLESS
 
Nov 27, 2006
5,648
21
0
36
90% of the people in this thread are fucking retarded. Theres no arguing with ignorant people. Your all welcome to have ur own opinion but the way some of you are talking is just ignorant and straight dumb. Heaven forbid anyone in your family has to suffer through brain cancer. Yall think its so cool and hard to say fuck him and blah blah, but wutever, your all the type of people who like to complain about everything but never do anything to change things.

No one in the history of the Senate did more to help the underprivileged people of this country or got more things done then Teddy Kennedy.

Respect and props to everyone in here who showed him respect and are actually intelligent and understand what this man has meant to our country.
 
Nov 27, 2006
5,648
21
0
36
i know most of you wont read this, but this is a perfect example of the type of person Teddy was

Littlest refusenik' on Kennedy: 'He saved my life'

BOSTON, Massachusetts (CNN) -- She was called "the littlest refusenik," one of the many Soviet Jews denied permission to leave the Soviet Union because her father had been exposed to government secrets.

But the case of Jessica Katz was special because she was a baby born with a nutritional deficiency that stopped her from growing. She was a tiny baby dying in a Moscow hospital, getting weaker by the day.

It was U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy who, her parents say, eventually saved her life.

Jessica was born in Moscow in 1977 with malabsorption syndrome, which prevented her from digesting food or milk properly. All she needed was baby formula, but it wasn't available in the Soviet Union.

The Soviet doctors couldn't save her. Jessica's parents, Boris and Natalya, were desperate.

Jessica's grandmother had immigrated to Boston, Massachusetts, with two of her sons and was campaigning to get her baby granddaughter out of the Soviet Union.

At first she helped urge American tourists to take baby formula to Moscow for the Katz family, and for a little while, it worked. It seemed to bring Jessica back from the brink.
But it wasn't enough. The Katz family knew they needed a permanent solution -- access to doctors in the West.

Eventually, the grandmother's campaign reached Kennedy's office, and the senator decided to step in. In September 1978, Kennedy traveled to Moscow for a meeting with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev to urge him to let the Katz family -- or at the very least, Jessica -- leave the country immediately.

"If not for his intervention, I would have been arrested very soon [afterward] and it would have been too late for him to intervene," said Katz, recalling the fate of many of his Jewish friends. "So he saved Jessica, he saved me, he saved the rest our family."

The first the Katzes knew of it was late one night when they got a mysterious phone call. The caller invited Boris Katz to a midnight meeting with an unnamed guest -- and in Soviet Russia, Katz didn't dare ask who it was.

"You know in the Soviet Union not to ask too many questions over the phone," he said.

Katz arrived at the meeting and, much to his shock, in walked Kennedy.

"A bunch of KGB men came with him into the room and he just turned around and told the KGB men, 'Go away,'" Katz recalled. "This was clearly the first [time] ever I witnessed something like this. Here the all-powerful KGB men wanted to be at the meeting and the senator just told them to go away, and they looked at each other and just left. And that was, again, a powerful scene."

Kennedy spoke to other refuseniks already gathered in the room before pulling Katz aside.

"He said that earlier he had a meeting in the Kremlin with the Soviet leaders and that he specifically asked to allow us to leave the country for medical reasons," Katz said. "He said that they said yes."


At first, Katz said, he didn't believe him, sure that the Soviet authorities would find a way to scupper the plans. Katz went home and told his wife, who also didn't believe it, he said.

The next morning, a friend called Katz to say he heard Kennedy on the Voice of America radio network listing the names of people leaving the Soviet Union. The Katz family was on the list, the friend said.

Despite the report, however, the Soviet authorities denied it, Katz recalls.

"'We are telling you that this is not the case,'" he remembers them saying. "But this was just part of the game that they played."

About three weeks later, with no fanfare, a card arrived in the mail telling the Katz family to pick up their visa. They now had their ticket out of the country.

The exit wasn't straightforward -- the Katzes' second daughter, Gabriella, was born two days before they were due to leave, so they postponed their exit by five days. And they had to stop over in Vienna, Austria, where they were met by a Kennedy aide for the final leg of their trip.

On landing in Boston, Kennedy was the first person they met. They gave each other a big hug, Katz said.

"Jessica certainly would not have made it if not for his contribution, if not for him taking on the case, getting interested in the case, patiently talking to the Soviet authorities," Katz told CNN. "It was lucky for us. It saved the baby's life and created new life for Natalya and me and our children."

Kennedy's help for the family didn't end there. He helped Boris Katz, who had worked with computers, find a job at a computer software company. Today, Katz works at the renowned Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he is the principal research scientist at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

"He did it because he wanted to help," Katz told CNN. "I think that is what he does -- did -- for many other people. I went to a number of events where other people whom he helped gave various speeches and I learned many more cases [where] he helped people because he likes to help people. It is his job to help people."

Today, little Jessica Katz is 31 years old. She got engaged last year, on the same weekend Kennedy's cancer diagnosis was announced to the public.
Health Library

* MayoClinic.com: Health A - Z

Inspired by Kennedy's life of public service, Jessica Katz works at finding housing for the homeless in New York City. She says she has no choice but to look after those less fortunate than she is, because Kennedy proved to her how much it means, and that it can work.

Jessica Katz lacks the cynicism about the government that many others in her generation may have. Kennedy, she said, proved that some politicians have a desire to accomplish good things and fight injustice.

"He saved my life. He could have spent his time doing anything," Jessica Katz said. "He's from the fanciest, most powerful family in Massachusetts, and probably in the country, and he decided to spend his time helping out me and my family."
advertisement

That has instilled in her a deep sense of public service, she said. And that may be the best thing Kennedy has left behind.

"That that would be his largest, biggest part of his legacy -- as someone who cared deeply about people, who felt, I think, very deeply people's suffering and wanted to alleviate it and wanted to help," Jessica Katz said. "And I am pretty confident that this is how he will be remembered. He was an extraordinary individual and this is how he will stay, certainly in our memories and the memories of millions of others."
 

Dana Dane

RIP Vallejo Kid
May 3, 2002
26,982
11,624
113
50
I typed out a long ass reply and my laptop froze up and I lost it all. I hella dont feel like typing it all out again, so to sum it up, a lot of you guys are fucking jerks.
 
May 2, 2002
9,580
17
0
42
I try not to enter threads like this anymore cuz there are always going to be disrespectful pieces of shit celebrating another humans death. un-fuckin-real how uncivilized some people on this board are.
 
Mar 30, 2006
2,969
937
113
41
If you read the rest of my post, you would know how I feel about that situation. Like I said, pay your respects or don't. I have no respect for the dude because of that situation either, but I'm not going to talk about him. This dude and Hitler were polar opposites...Hitler did not have good intentions whatsoever.

EDIT: I don't believe it was an accident. I personally think Teddy killed that chick on purpose...and his ass should have gone to jail for it.
Those are some pretty high standards you got there buddy
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
38,746
159,554
113
44
at the welfare mall
Some of you that are whining about being unsympathetic towards him dying are the same ones quick to make tons of puns when someone else dies or is badly hurt. I'd just like to point that out. Also, I'd like to point I'd said some, not all. So if you think I'm talking about you then you are probably right.

Last I looked this is the open forum on the Siccness and not a political message board or something of the likes. If you are going to make a thread in here know shit like this might, actually, probably is, going to happen. If you don't like it, don't make the thread. By that I don't mean you shouldn't voice your opinion, beliefs, etc by making a thread here but just know that if you do there is the good chance some people are going to disagree with your opinion and some are just going to out right troll your thread.
 
May 9, 2002
37,066
16,282
113
Some of you that are whining about being unsympathetic towards him dying are the same ones quick to make tons of puns when someone else dies or is badly hurt. I'd just like to point that out. Also, I'd like to point I'd said some, not all. So if you think I'm talking about you then you are probably right.
Exactly.

Siccness post: "Forest ranger dies in forest fire"

Siccness poster: "I bet he was real hot headed to learn about the trees being burnt down"

Next siccness poster: "hahahaha"

Hypocrites suck.