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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tom Clarke who wrote (4511)8/8/2003 12:39:13 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793640
 
Arnold and Teddy. The first of many stories. Have fun writing your own headline for this one.

A Barbarian At the Gate Of Camelot
Kennedy Dynasty Braces For Arnold the Republican

By Ann Gerhart
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, August 8, 2003; Page C01

Now we find out whether America's best-known political dynasty can embrace diversity in its midst.

The distance to be covered isn't trivial. There is the Kennedy clarion call to service, as sounded by the Camelot president: "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."

And then there is the Terminator's explanation, offered up with a big-jawed grin on the "Tonight" show Wednesday: "It's the most difficult [decision] I've made in my entire life, except the one I made in 1978 when I decided to get a bikini wax." (Ah, Ted Sorensen, where have you gone?)

Many Kennedys have taken the oath of office in the decades between those two declarations, and they all have been Democrats. Kennedys have always been Democrats, back to the lace-curtain Irish days in Boston. As a sprawling clan, they have overcome the very worst tragedies, divorces, flagrant affairs, plane crashes, drug addictions. Never before have they had to bear one of their own as a Republican gunning for office.

And not just any office -- some spot in the House of Delegates somewhere or a starter job like county council -- but governor of California, the nation's most populous state. And not just any normal election, with an exploratory committee and hand-shaking and countless town hall meetings, but a spectacularly peculiar and unprecedented election, which could be won with, say, 12 percent of the vote.

And, to add insult to injury, the Terminator further showcases the grave disarray of the Democrat Party: When the only Kennedy who might get elected governor is a Republican, the party may be worse off than a mere $200 million gap in fundraising might suggest.

Let's run through the lineage again: Arnold Schwarzenegger, the Austrian immigrant who arrives in America with nothing but the lats on his back, marries Maria Shriver, daughter of Peace Corps founder Sargent Shriver and his wife, Eunice, who is the sister of President John F. Kennedy and the senior senator from Massachusetts, Edward M. Kennedy.

The senator is the surrogate father of the family, and its political leader, so he issues yesterday's statement: "I like and respect Arnold, and I've been impressed with his efforts to promote after-school education in California and his willingness to come to Congress and the administration to fight for that program.

"But" -- and you knew the "but" was coming, right? -- "I'm a Democrat, and I don't support the recall effort."

About 49 other Kennedys were called, including Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.), who has turned into a prodigious fundraiser on behalf of House Democrats, and Kathleen Kennedy Townsend, who in November lost Democrats their Maryland governorship for the first time in three decades. None of them seem interested in commenting on this bizarre development, except Mark Shriver, Maria's brother, a member of the Maryland House of Delegates who lost a primary contest for Congress last year. "I'm not talking," says Shriver. "He's my brother-in-law and I'm supporting him and that's all."

As for Maria, now a potential first-lady-in-waiting, yesterday she asked for an unpaid leave from her position as an NBC reporter. It was granted. She wasn't talking, either.

This breakdown in party discipline in the Kennedy family started a long time ago, of course, with the 1986 nuptials of Maria and Arnold. A People magazine account of their wedding in Hyannisport noted the union produced an odd lot of ushers: "The dark-haired Shriver brothers, Bobby, Anthony, Timothy and Mark, seemed slight next to such Schwarzenegger bodybuilding buddies as Sven-Ole Thorsen, a massive Swede stuffed into a size-54 cutaway, and the short, powerfully built best man, Franco Columbu, a Mr. Universe-turned-chiropractor who was Arnold's bricklaying partner in less heady days."

The blending of two traditions began that weekend. Maid of honor Caroline Kennedy gave the bridesmaids' gifts to Maria, a sterling silver comb, brush and mirror set with a matching silver tray, and Maria, in turn, gave each of her bridesmaids a black lacquered box adorned with a hand-painted rendering of Rose Kennedy's house. Former U.N. secretary general Kurt Waldheim presented the couple with a larger-than-life sculpture of themselves, featuring Arnold smiling in lederhosen, hoisting a dirndl-skirted Maria into the air.

Over time, as is often the case with married couples, Shriver grew more fit and Schwarzenegger became more interested in helping others. Kennedy family biographer Laurence Leamer yesterday played down the actor's Republican identity in a tribe of staunch Democrats.

"Arnold is a liberal Republican, which, in terms of ideology, isn't that much different from John F. Kennedy as a moderate Democrat," said Leamer, who has just finished an examination of this Kennedy generation called "Sons of Camelot."

"He has been mostly influenced by the Shrivers. No family has hit such a grand slam with its five children, where every one of these children is dedicated to good works," said Leamer, and he ran through the list: Sarge started the Peace Corps, and begat Mark, who now works with Save the Children; Tim, who runs Special Olympics; Bobby, who with Bono pushed for billions in debt relief for African nations; and Anthony, who runs the mentoring program Best Buddies. Even Maria donated the proceeds of her children's books to charity, said Leamer.

With his efforts on behalf of after-school education and Special Olympics, Conan the Barbarian became a do-gooder, joining the in-laws in what seems to be a genetic proclivity for public service. In other words, a Kennedy, just one with a different accent -- and a different voter registration card.

washingtonpost.com



To: Tom Clarke who wrote (4511)8/8/2003 3:28:20 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793640
 
Wow! Looks like "The Duke" had good reason to go after "The Commies!"

Gunfight at the Stalinist Corral
Uncle Joe's showdown with the Duke
Charles Paul Freund

It sez right here that Joe Stalin was so incensed by John Wayne's anticommunism that he actually ordered his KGB goons to go kill the star. More remarkable yet, his goons went to Hollywood to do it. British writer Michael Munn has unearthed these surprises, and tells the whole story in considerable detail it in a forthcoming bio, "John Wayne: The Man Behind the Myth."

Should we believe Munn? My opinion is that his story is too good to check. Stalin in his last years was a hopeless loon wielding total power. It's entirely credible that, had he lived long enough, Uncle Joe would have ordered everybody in the world shot, or sent to die in the Gulag, or both. Maybe Wayne was just the next name on Stalin's extremely long list. But why shoot Wayne and not other prominent Hollywood anticommunists? Why not shoot, say, Adolphe Menjou? My working theory is that Stalin did order Menjou shot, along with Ginger Rogers and Elia Kazan, and we're just waiting to learn the details.

On the other hand, Stalin may have been advancing a feverish plan of his own. Maybe he wanted Wayne out of the way to give a much-needed boost to the career of Johnny Weissmuller. Weissmuller, the great Olympic swimmer, was the original movie Tarzan, and Stalin had a thing for Tarzan; he'd sit up all night in the Kremlin's screening room, watching Tarzan and his chimp sidekick triumph in one adventure after the other. Indeed, there's a good case that Tarzan was Stalin's Rosebud. That is, just as Citizen Charles Foster Kane was, despite his power, fixated on his boyhood idyll of sledding, Joseph Stalin was no doubt haunted by an innocence fantasy in which he spent happy days brachiating through the jungle.

Anyway, by midcentury Weissmuller was too old and heavy to play the character anymore, and was relegated to a series of shorts about a fat man, "Jungle Jim," who goes panting around the rain forest floor. Maybe Stalin figured that with Wayne out of the way, Weissmuller could get into the Duke's saddle and rev up his moribund career. If Stalin had a good side, it would have manifested itself in just this way.

Come to think of it, Wayne had something on Stalin, something that might explain the attempted assassination even better. Here's the story: A popular Soviet movie released during Stalin's era was a Western entitled, The Journey Will Be Dangerous. It was about the struggle of American Indians against the expansionist policies of imperialist white settlers. How did the Soviets make such a film? Well, they took a print of John Ford's famous 1939 movie, Stagecoach, they recut it, and they made up a lot of new socialist-realist dialogue that they dubbed in over the original lines.

Now, here's where the plot thickens. Stagecoach is the movie that made John Wayne a big star. You're probably thinking that corrupting Stagecoach might be a reason for Wayne to shoot Stalin, not the other way around. Well, Stalin probably had exactly that thought. The result was that Stalin doubtless ordered Wayne killed in self-defense.

Don't think Wayne's fists, never mind his political rhetoric, weren't a threat to the Soviets. According to the Guardian's account of Munn's book, when the FBI told Wayne that a pair of KGB killers were after him, Wayne "told the FBI to let the men show up and he would deal with them."

Wayne apparently planned to abduct the assassins himself, then frighten them by staging a mock execution. Whatever happened, Munn's understanding is that "the two men stayed in the US to work for the FBI."

Wayne also formed a gang made up of loyal stuntmen, who supposedly infiltrated communist cells in Hollywood on Wayne's behalf. Munn told the Guardian that, at one point, Wayne "gathered all the stuntmen, went to the communist meetings, and had a huge fight." Although Nikita Khushchev is said to have cancelled the Soviet assassination order when he succeeded Stalin, there were to be yet more reported attempts on Wayne's life. One of them occurred in Vietnam, according to Munn, when snipers were ordered to take him out.

"One of the snipers was captured," Munn told the Guardian, "and said there was a price on John's head, put there by Mao Tse Tung."

Why would Mao focus on Wayne? There are some compelling theories to consider, but you'll have to wait for the next slow news day in August to read them here.

Charles Paul Freund is a Reason senior editor.
reason.com