I don't think anyone was literally suggesting running marathons prevents cancer, just that people who run marathons are typically more health-conscious than your average American. |
+1000 Some of you all are cruel. People are trying to criticize a dying woman telling a personal story for being a nepo baby, for having the temerity to criticize her cousin (when nearly everyone with a brain thinks RFK Jr is a disgrace to our nation's public health system). She's trying to make the world better off for the kids she won't be around to see start elementary school by explaining the problems she see with health care and public policy towards medical research, as a woman dying in the USA. |
I agree--it's terrible for anybody to go through this, Kennedy or not. But I do feel an incredible amount of sadness for her mother. Her father, her brother, her daughter--no one should have to deal with many tragedies in one lifetime. |
Same. I think her stories about her brother and sister were very sweet (and I like Jack, even if he's an online troll, but the bit about him calling every doctor in NY to ask if a half match would be better was cute) but the people I feel worst for in all of this are Ed and Caroline. No one should have to bury a child, certainly not a woman who has already buried her entire family of origin, and publicly at that. |
I don't even think she counts as a nepo baby! Just another example of Gen X and Boomers using words they hear from millennials and zoomers and not using them correctly. Her brother, Jack, is a nepo baby. Running for office and capitalizing on family connections. Tatiana and Rose are not nepo babies. I believe Rose is a movie producer and Tatiana has made a living as a journalist and author...are they just not supposed to work at all? They live out of the public eye; I recall seeing announcements when both girls got married but I didn't know Tatiana had children until I saw a pic of Caroline and Jack with one of them over the summer. I applaud her for her career, short as it was, writing about things that mattered and, as you said, trying to make the world better for children who will barely remember her. This would all be sad and worthy of empathy whether she was a Kennedy or some random woman who grew up in BFE, Iowa. |
Exactly. Her essay was powerful and full of emotion. If anyone one of the DCUM posters had written the same essay, my reaction would have been the same. I can’t believe the lack of understanding and empathy expressed throughout this thread. Some posts were so vitriolic that Jeff had to go on a deletion binge. If you cannot find empathy for this woman and her family, imagine it was your sister going through this, would your response be, so what, a lot of young people die. SMH. |
Indeed! People have become so cruel. Didn't everyone's mom teach them if they can't say something nice about a person ...don't say anything at all. |
it's the fact that she's from a democratic family. People just can't be empathetic towards someone of a different party. |
Too many bots are ruining real civil discourse. |
The only reason she has a platform is because "Kennedy." |
I am a mother to two young children and I was incredibly empathetic for her for the first part of the article. She is an incredible writer. However, it was such a turnoff one she took it in a hyper political direction that I wasn't able to finish it. I wish her the best. |
NP. It is, but it’s extremely dysfunctional nevertheless. p.s.: I’m rooting for her. |
+1. Some of your kids are going to be embarrassed one day about how nasty you are online. It was a beautiful essay by a dying woman sharing her experience with the world. |
I don’t think that is true. She is a gifted writer who beautifully captured a tragic situation. Similar to When Breath Becomes Air, or the Modern Love column about buying a couch when dying of cancer (https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/14/style/modern-love-podcast-kate-winslet.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share). |
She isn’t the elder daughter. |