Bob Torricelli?
He lives it, so I thought he might have said it.
Btw, if anyone missed it, during one of the hearings on the Clinton Scandals, New Jersey's junior senator claimed that he can remember that Italians were smeared by the Kefauver Hearings on organized crime.
Torricelli claimed he remembered watching the hearings live, as a child, and that it still causes him pain.
Well, NBC's reporter Myers noted that the Kefauver Hearings started before Torricelli was born and ended when he was a few days old!
Get this - Torricelli maintains that Myers was somehow wrong in questioning his lie! Here's the story:
Out of the Mouths of Babes
By DOROTHY RABINOWITZ
It took only a few opening hours of the Senate campaign finance hearings--and just one witness--to bring a verdict: namely, that the show was a bust and wouldn't play. Such, anyway, was the instant response from journalists and commentators, many of whom could be mistaken--as they held forth on the hearings' lack of drama and appeal--for network programmers. Any minute now, we thought, we would hear that this pilot wasn't catching on with the crucial 18-to-49-year-old audience.
In fact, the first day of the proceedings provided at least one performance pregnant with promise, high passion, personal revelation, and childhood trauma disclosed. All this, and more, did Sen. Robert Torricelli, (D., N.J.) deliver when he rose, opening day, to deliver a fervent address on the evils of ethnic stereotyping.
The senator saw, it appears, a disturbing parallel between this Senate Governmental Affairs Committee inquiry starring various Asian donors to the Clinton election campaigns, and the Senate's 1951 Kefauver Committee hearings into organized crime. He had, we learned, searing childhood memories of that investigation years back, into--as the senator put it--the misdeeds of a few individuals. An investigation that had visited great pain on Italian-Americans--pain that he shared, watching, though "it was only on a flickering television screen, but I will never forget it, and even if I tried my family would never allow me."
The senator might have forborne dragging the relatives into this oratorical flight--which would have been asking a lot, to be sure, considering how rare it is to find politicians today capable of uttering more than three consecutive sentences without a reference to family. With or without the family, Sen. Torricelli would have been better off not launching that flight altogether, as it turned out. Or so the senator learned when NBC's Lisa Myers called, with a camera crew, to make inquiries about a point first noted by the Capitol Hill journal, Roll Call--namely, that at the time the Kefauver hearings were being carried on television, Robert Torricelli was a newborn infant. He was five days old, in fact, when the TV hearings described in his senate speech as being among his first memories of government--"the first hearing of the United States Senate I have ever witnessed"--came to an end. Ms. Myers, who knows a story when she sees one, ended up with a memorable, if brief, interview (carried on the NBC Nightly News), in which she asks Sen. Torricelli if he didn't think he might have left the impression he had witnessed the hearings as they occurred.
"I think that the insensitivity that I'm afraid will befall Asian-Americans is exactly what you're exhibiting," the enraged senator now tells Ms. Myers. Here he is, he tells her, raising concerns about racial stereotypes and the journalist is concerned, instead, with these questions about fact.
After this delectable scene, the senator informs Ms. Myers--in a portion of the interview that wasn't aired--that the questions she raised showed that she was not in touch with the concerns of mainstream Americans. The reporter recalls her amazement that her questions about the veracity of a speech could have brought down on her accusations of racial insensitivity. There is in fact nothing astonishing in this, accusations of this nature being in plentiful supply these days. Sen. Torricelli did not, that is, invent demagoguery of this kind--fascinating as this on-air display of it was in its raw purity. interactive.wsj.com |