RIP Charles Kennedy
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostImo he really belonged to the period 1945-1975 when we were assured capitalism offered a sustainable peaceful future, politics seemed more consensual, and interviewers had time for answers to their questions, regardless.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostImo he really belonged to the period 1945-1975 when we were assured capitalism offered a sustainable peaceful future, politics seemed more consensual, and interviewers had time for answers to their questions, regardless.
Enormous amount of cant and piety in the air (and airwaves) this morning. Plus cha small change.
Interviewers? I still miss the bow ties and the curtsey.
BN.
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Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View PostI was born in 1946. I obviously spent my first thirty years asleep then. Who was this "we"? The Vietnamese?
Enormous amount of cant and piety in the air (and airwaves) this morning. Plus cha small change.
Interviewers? I still miss the bow ties and the curtsey.
BN.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Post
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I just feel profoundly sad at this tragic loss. I was still awake when the news was flashed early this morning and I found myself in tears.
As a personality he was hugely likeable. Always intelligent and always with both feet planted firmly on the ground, an air of ease and often self-deprecation never far away.
As a politician he really came across as having that rare gift of true integrity and when there was an issue on which I was unclear his voice was very much one I would want to hear.
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Originally posted by Stanfordian View PostRIP Charles. I hope you are now at peace from your demons. I have worked for twenty years in the field of alcohol addiction and it was shame to see a talented political brain gradually going downhill and gradually getting worse. Over the years it was awful seeing Charles in TV interviews and appearing on Question Time when he looked under the influence of drink. I’m not sure that being able to function in spite of his alcohol problems was actually helpful to any possible recovery. He hadn’t lost his job, he hadn’t lost his family and he was still being voted in as M.P and was still being invited to appear on prestigious programmes such as Question time, so things couldn’t be all that bad could they! Often when the alcohol dependency actually starts taking tangible things away from an individual it might then create a climate that they really need to do something radical about it. Only aged 55 it feels such a terrible waste of a life.
This was impressive too, I thought:
When I say that Charles was a lovely man and a talented politician, I mean it with all my heart. Having heard the news from a friend of Charles who knew he and I spoke and saw each other regularly, and who had found the body yesterday, I finally got to bed at three o'clock this morning, and was awake before 6, feeling shell-shocked and saddened to the core.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Stillhomewardbound View PostI just feel profoundly sad at this tragic loss. I was still awake when the news was flashed early this morning and I found myself in tears.
As a personality he was hugely likeable. Always intelligent and always with both feet planted firmly on the ground, an air of ease and often self-deprecation never far away.
As a politician he really came across as having that rare gift of true integrity and when there was an issue on which I was unclear his voice was very much one I would want to hear.
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Indeed.
Thanks for the Huffington link, Caliban. A very genuine tribute from one who knew CK intimately.Last edited by Stillhomewardbound; 02-06-15, 16:15.
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I don't think there was much hypocritical cant around today - he was genuinely liked . His death is terribly sad , he leaves a young son for heavens sake and the first time I have shed a tear at the demise of a politician since the death of John Smith . He was right about the Iraq war and as the general election showed absolutely right in opposing the coalition. The new Lib Dem leader will do well to return the party to what it stood for under Kennedy and then it might have a chance of recovery.
So often it seems in politics we lose those whose intelligence and integrity we can do with too young .
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI don't think there was much hypocritical cant around today - he was genuinely liked . His death is terribly sad and the first time I have shed a tear at the demise of a politician since the death of John Smith . He was right about the Iraq war and as the general election showed absolutely right in opposing the coalition. The new Lib Dem leader will do well to return the party to what it stood for under Kennedy and then it might have a chance of recovery.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI agree.
BN.
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StephenO
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI don't think there was much hypocritical cant around today - he was genuinely liked . His death is terribly sad , he leaves a young son for heavens sake and the first time I have shed a tear at the demise of a politician since the death of John Smith . He was right about the Iraq war and as the general election showed absolutely right in opposing the coalition. The new Lib Dem leader will do well to return the party to what it stood for under Kennedy and then it might have a chance of recovery.
So often it seems in politics we lose those whose intelligence and integrity we can do with too young .
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