The etiquette of celebrity death brings the usual talking head tributes to Ted Kennedy but largely unseen is Joe Biden with an authentic outpouring of human grief.
In an era when empathy is an accusation, the Vice President is an anachronism–a politician often demeaned right and left for speaking his mind and heart, exposing himself to political ridicule.
Yesterday morning, in a routine appearance at the Department of Energy, Biden could not suppress tears along with memories of a friendship that endured for decades:
“He stood with me when my wife and daughter were killed in an accident. He was on the phone with me literally every day in the hospital, my two children were attempting, and, God willing, thankfully survived very serious injuries. I’d turn around and there would be some specialist from Massachusetts, a doc I never even asked for, literally sitting in the room with me.”
Biden was 29 when he came to the Senate, Kennedy had been 30. “He and I were talking after his diagnosis,” the Vice President recalled. “And I said, I think you’re the only other person I’ve met who…is more optimistic, more enthusiastic, more idealistic, sees greater possibilities after 36 years.”
















