Today we joined Alan and Helen to celebrate their 50th wedding  anniversary.  The article below by Joe Fitzgerald was the main topic of  conversation..  It is a masterpiece.  Enjoy! Anne      Shots at Scott Brown just hurt Elizabeth Warren  By Joe Fitzgerald  | 						  Saturday, August 25, 2012   Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/view.bg?articleid=1061155644     
 Sawed-off shotguns are banned  because they wound indiscriminately, and so do blanket indictments,  which are the sawed-off shotguns of political discourse, hurting anyone  who happens to be in the line of fire when a venomous candidate such as  Elizabeth Warren begins to hurl her vitriol.       If there's anyone who ought to be focusing on issues rather than  demonization, it's this Harvard professor, recruited from obscurity to  pursue a seat in the U.S. Senate.       If she'd remained beneath the radar screen, out of the political  spotlight, she could still be masquerading as Harvard Law School's  "first woman of color." No one, including disappointed sycophants in the  liberal wing of the media, would have searched in vain for any  verification of her claim to having a smidgeon (1/32nd) of Cherokee  blood in her DNA.       Now she's out there grimacing in TV commercials, feigning indignation  over the soaring costs of a college education, prompting industrious  reporters to discover she earned more than $350,000 for teaching one  class twice a week, which could have funded the tuitions of seven  Harvard Law students.       Still, she remains hell-bent on ferreting out flaws and  inconsistencies in her opponent, real or imagined, bringing to mind an  observation made by former Patriotscoach Raymond Berry: "Heat not only builds character; it also reveals character."       The heat of this campaign is revealing a lot about the professor.       Jumping onto the coattails of outrage over Missouri's Todd Akin, the  GOP's U.S. Senate candidate whose thoughts on "legitimate rape" were  universally condemned, Warren wasted no time linking Scott Brown and the  Republican Party to "an agenda that is against women."       In other words, if Akin offended you, Brown should, too.       It's a classic blanket indictment, a sawed-off shotgun blast of vilification.   The professor wants you to look at Akin and see Brown.       Should we then look at Harvard professors and see Timothy Leary?       She wants you to look at Republicans and fear for women.   Should we then look at Democrats and picture Ted Kennedy's lascivious  prowling at the Au Bar in Palm Beach, Fla., or Bill Clinton's lurid  exploitation of Monica Lewinsky in the Oval Office?       Wouldn't that suggest to her that women might trust the leadership of  an experienced office-holder who's happy in his marriage, who's the  much-involved father of two adoring daughters, and who's been serving in  the National Guard since he was 19?       According to Warren, none of that matters because of a nut in Missouri.       Berry was right. The heat of this political season is telling us much about the professor, and it isn't very flattering.  | 
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