bymyheart2010-12-09 00:05:40

Washington Post staff

washingtonpost.com
Wednesday, December 8, 2010; 5:28 PM

Elizabeth Edwards died Dec. 7 after stopping cancer treatments the day before. Patricia Sullivan memoralized her:

Ms. Edwards had been a lawyer and formidable force in the political rise of her hu*****and, who went from being a one-term U.S. senator from North Carolina to the Democratic vice presidential candidate in 2004 to a presidential candidate in the 2008 Democratic primaries. She separated from him in January.

Describing herself as the "anti-Barbie" for her real-woman figure and her serious intellect, Ms. Edwards's public stature was greatly defined by how she coped with cancer. She talked about it, wrote about it and managed the conversation in much the same way she managed her hu*****and's political career.

Ezra Klein offered up his own take on Edwards''s legacy:

But Edwards's real impact on health-care reform was much larger than people realize. She pushed her hu*****and to make a comprehensive and universal health-care reform plan the centerpiece of his second presidential campaign. She succeeded. John Edwards was the first of the major Democratic candidates to come out with a universal health-care plan, and his proposal, combined with the warm reception it received from major Democratic interest groups and constituencies, forced both Obama and Clinton to counter with their own universal health-care plans. (Additionally, when Obama flew to North Carolina to court Edwards's endorsement, he got into an argument with Elizabeth over the individual mandate -- an argument that, as you can see from the individual mandate in the health-care law, she eventually won.)

The end result was that the three candidates ended up fighting over who would do more to pass a universal health-care bill the fastest, which meant they made repeated promises that, in Obama's case, he eventually found himself having to keep. Without Elizabeth Edwards's involvement, the Edwards campaign would likely have come out with a more modest effort, and the Obama and Clinton campaigns would have taken a similarly incremental approach, and none of the campaigns would have made as many promises on the subject as they did, and health-care reform might never have passed.

That -- and not marital betrayal, or even cancer -- is Elizabeth Edwards's legacy. It may not be how she's remembered, and it may not be what leads her obituaries, but it's what she did. And as a policy wonk, Edwards knew full well that it's what gets done, not what gets said, that matters. I've met a lot of politicians and presidential candidates since that evening at her house. But looking back, the one I'm proudest to have known was her.

我今天看见这则新闻,心里真是很难过。 Elizabeth 是一个坚强的了不起的女性在人生一系列的摧残打击下仍然尊贵地走完人生最后的历程,为公共卫生事业,奔走呼号。为自己的孩子作好他们的母亲不在了以后的准备,她是一个女人,经历了丧子,癌症,著名的丈夫的婚外恋情和婚外女儿的事实,癌症的复发转移,与丈夫分居。一个人在知道自己将不久于世,仍然不失尊贵,这真让我仰视。这两年她写了好几本书,今天当我听到她自己念书的声音,我觉得她是用母亲的心在给自己的孩子念临睡前的故事·····而我禁不住泪流满面····一个女人,一个母亲,一个了不起的人。



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  • 龙坡居士2010-12-09 00:24:40
    Elizabeth Edwards 是一个非常了不起的女性,我也很敬佩她。“象由心生”,
    加州花坊2010-12-09 00:46:04
    今天1300广播还在讲她48岁丧子马上又勇敢地生了两个孩子,佩服。
    加州花坊2010-12-09 00:51:03
    这是说的有问题。
    bymyheart2010-12-09 02:32:26
    在克灵顿的错误后政客们一个个跟进同样的问题里,不论何种党派,权力地位,金钱名誉都会使最优秀的男人忘乎所以。
    bymyheart2010-12-09 02:41:01
    她的小儿子才十岁,51岁生子付出的代价巨大。恐怕她的乳腺癌都和催产用的荷尔蒙治疗相关。
    史迷2010-12-09 04:23:33
    昨晚听到这个消息后有些伤感,特别是她生命的最后一年.
    加州花坊2010-12-09 06:53:58
    又去看了新闻,她真的是不容易,是一个有担当,刚强,有爱的女人。
    心无2010-12-09 16:37:56
    是了不起。她为什么会这么坚强
    苗青青2010-12-09 17:22:23
    一个女人,能有不依赖老公和儿女的独立价值, 不容易,值得敬佩。
    bymyheart2010-12-09 23:41:25
    同感。
    bymyheart2010-12-09 23:46:24
    她对待生与死的态度让我想起什么是:视死如归,坦然而认真地活着。
    bymyheart2010-12-09 23:48:02
    我觉得是爱和被爱还有信仰的力量。
    bymyheart2010-12-09 23:52:45
    一个女人在经历了爱人的背叛,身体的背叛,治疗的背叛仍旧怀着感激的心情走完生命的最后历程