Hanoi John Kerry Time Warped Brain. Hanoi John Kerry Hates America.
February 27, 2004, 8:11 a.m.
John Kerry's Time Warp
For the Democratic candidate, it's always 1969.
Why does Sen. John Kerry (D., Mass.) talk incessantly about Vietnam?
Obviously, it has given him a great political advantage in past
campaigns and he hopes it will do the same in his race for the White
House. But there might be another reason. Perhaps more than any other
presidential candidate in recent memory, Kerry seems to be living in
another time, playing a movie of Vietnam over and over in his mind.
In fact, he is often playing an actual movie of Vietnam over and over
on his television. Consider this scene from a remarkable profile of
Kerry published in the Boston Globe in October 1996, when Kerry was in
a tough reelection battle:
Kerry told reporter Charles Sennott the oft-repeated story of the
February 1969 firefight in which Kerry attacked the Viet Cong who
ambushed his Swift boat. Kerry won the Silver Star, as well as a
Purple Heart, for his efforts. But the story wasn't just the firefight
itself. It was also Kerry's reaction to it.
The future senator was so "focused on his future ambitions," Sennott
reported, that not long after the fight, he bought a Super-8 movie
camera, returned to the scene, and reenacted the skirmish on film.
During their interview, Kerry played the tape for Sennott.
"I'll show you where they shot from. See? That's the hole covered up
with reeds," Kerry said as he ran the tape in slow motion.
Kerry told Sennott that his decision to reenact the fight on film was
no big deal - "just something I did, no great meaning to it." But it's
clear that the old movie is a huge deal. "Through hours of watching
the films in the den of his newly renovated Beacon Hill mansion, it
becomes apparent that these are memories and footage he returns to
often," Sennott wrote.
"Kerry jumps repeatedly from the couch to adjust the Sony large screen
TV in his home entertainment center, making sure the picture is clear,
the color correct. He fast forwards, rewinds and freeze frames the
footage. His running commentary - vivid, sometimes touching, sometimes
self-serving - never misses a beat."
In John Kerry's home-entertainment center, it's always 1969.
It's sometimes that way in his campaign, too. Is Kerry's the only
campaign to play Jimi Hendrix - specifically, "Fire" from the 1967
album Are You Experienced? - at rallies? Other candidates - like John
Edwards, with his theme song, John Mellencamp's "Small Town" - aren't
exactly cutting edge, but they have chosen somewhat newer stuff.
And what about the music on Kerry's bus? Before the Iowa caucuses,
Washington Post reporter Ceci Connelly described the candidate hanging
out on the bus with Peter Yarrow, his old friend from Peter, Paul, and
Mary. "Pedro, sing us a song," Kerry ordered one day. Yarrow picked up
a guitar and began to play and sing - and later waxed nostalgic about
the antiwar rallies he attended way back when with Kerry and Eugene
McCarthy.
Earlier, Connelly wrote, when Yarrow sang "Puff the Magic Dragon" at
an event in a private home in Ames, Iowa, "Kerry lifted his fingers to
his mouth for a quick toke on an imaginary joint. You can almost see
his thick mane of silver hair returning to the shaggy brown do of
those days."
Even Kerry's latest soundbite, the speech in Ohio Tuesday in which he
described President Bush as a "walking contradiction," was apparently
a reference to the old days. In this case, it was Kris Kristofferson's
"The Pilgrim, Chapter 33, " from 1970, with its line, "He's a walking
contradiction, partly truth and partly fiction."
This man is living in a time warp. No wonder Kerry sees any conflict -
Gulf War I, Afghanistan, Gulf War II - as a potential Vietnam. In
Kerry's world, Vietnam is running on a continuous loop on that big
screen TV - with Jimi, Kris, and Peter, Paul, and Mary singing in the
background.
Some people become stuck in the time period in which they had their
most intense experiences. Others, perhaps with more mental or
emotional flexibility, move on. Kerry seems to be one of the former.
At 60 years old, he appears obsessed with the past in ways that the 57
year-old George W. Bush isn't. And Kerry seems far older than, say,
the 71 year-old Donald Rumsfeld - a man who is always moving ahead,
not inclined to lecture about the way things were 30 or 40 years ago.
Kerry's penchant for looking back would not be a good trait in a
president who will have to deal with a distinctly 21st century,
post-9/11 world. America faces threats that were unheard of in Kerry's
formative years. While those threats build, Kerry is turning on
Hendrix, toking on an imaginary joint, and telling you about Vietnam.
And just imagine the inauguration. The new president delivers his
speech, waves to the crowd, and cries..."Pedro, sing us a song!"
-- Byron York is also a columnist for The Hill, where a version of
this first appeared.
.
|