Author Topic: Robert C. Byrd is dead  (Read 1999 times)

Yes, my favorite senator is dead.  And as his position of demi-god, with his relative immortality protecting the U. S. of A., we may now consider the apocalypse to have formally begun.  Get your shotguns, your wives, and run for the hills, by God!

-Article starts here-

Robert C. Byrd, , a conservative West Virginia Democrat who became the longest-serving member of Congress in history and used his masterful knowledge of the institution to shape the federal budget, protect the procedural rules of the Senate and, above all else, tend to the interests of his state, died at 3 a.m. Monday at Inova Fairfax Hospital, his office said.

Mr. Byrd had been hospitalized last week with what was thought to be heat exhaustion, but more serious issues were discovered, aides said Sunday. No formal cause of death was given.

Starting in 1958, Mr. Byrd was elected to the Senate an unprecedented nine times. He wrote a four-volume history of the body, was majority leader twice and chaired the powerful Appropriations Committee, controlling the nation's purse strings, and yet the positions of influence he held did not convey the astonishing arc of his life.

A child of the West Virginia coal fields, Mr. Byrd rose from the grinding poverty that has plagued his state since before the Great Depression, overcame an early and ugly association with the Ku Klux Klan, worked his way through night school and by force of will, determination and iron discipline made himself a person of authority and influence in Washington.

Although he mined extraordinary amounts of federal largesse for his perennially impoverished state, his reach extended beyond the bounds of the Mountain State.

As chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on the District from 1961 to 1969, he reveled in his role as scourge, grilling city officials at marathon hearings and railing against unemployed black men and unwed mothers on welfare.

He was known for his stentorian orations seasoned with biblical and classical allusions and took pride in being the Senate's resident constitutional scholar, keeping a copy of the Constitution in his breast pocket. He saw himself both as institutional memory and as guardian of the Senate's prerogatives.

Most West Virginians had more immediate concerns, and Mr. Byrd strove to address them. On the Appropriations Committee, he pumped billions of dollars worth of jobs, programs and projects into a state that ranked near the bottom of nearly every economic indicator when he began his political career as a state legislator in the late 1940s. Countless congressional earmarks later, West Virginia is home to prisons, technology center, laboratories and Navy and Coast Guard offices (despite being a landlocked state).

Critics mocked him as the "prince of pork," but West Virginians expressed their gratitude by naming countless roads and buildings after him. He also was the only West Virginian to be elected to both houses of the state legislature and both houses of Congress.

As a young man, Mr. Byrd was an "exalted cyclops" of the Ku Klux Klan, and although he apologized numerous times for what he considered a youthful indiscretion, his early votes in Congress reflected similar views -- notably a filibuster against the 1964 Civil Rights Act. As those views moderated, Mr. Byrd rose in the party hierarchy.

A lifelong autodidact and a firm believer in continuing education -- vocational schools, community colleges, adult education -- Mr. Byrd practiced what he preached. While in the U.S. House from 1953 to 1959, he took night classes at law schools. He received a law degree from American University in 1963 and is the only member of Congress to put himself through law school while in office.

In addition to his multivolume history of the Senate, he was author of a 770-page memoir as well as "Losing America: Confronting a Reckless and Arrogant Presidency" (2004), a well-received and stinging critique of what he considered President George W. Bush's rush to war with Iraq.


Source:  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/28/AR2010062801241.html?hpid=topnews

I never knew of the man before now. From the sounds of that article, despite the problems he had with discrimination, he seemed to greatly better the lives of his constituents from West Virginia*. It seems many politicians forget that they are in office to serve the people that put them there, not to flesh out their own selfish ideologies. Good-bye Robert C. Byrd

Cleaned up the topic for you.


Oh thanks Ephi. <3

Robert C. Byrd.
Discuss.

Im from West Virginia and we wouldnt have roads for him we all mourn of his death :-(

Im from West Virginia and we wouldnt have roads for him we all mourn of his death :-(
What county?

OH MY GOD LARRY BIRD DIED

rip basketball.....

Man Bird was like the king of hoops, rest his weary soul, may he keep dunkin in heaven

OH MY GOD LARRY BIRD DIED

rip basketball.....
He was my favorite white basketball player :'(

Man I hope Magic Johnson is coping well with this loss of a great ball player. Hoops will never be the same.

Man Bird was like the king of hoops, rest his weary soul, may he keep dunkin in heaven
It's alright, we go play hoop.

Man I hope Magic Johnson is coping well with this loss of a great ball player. Hoops will never be the same.
It's alright, we go play hoop.
congratulations on 11000th post

congratulations on 11000th post
Bitter sweet victory...

It's sad I'm so ignorant to think for a minute that a member of the band, The Byrds died.