Robert F. Kennedy
1925-1968
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This video is an AI-generated active imagination of what might be said to us today based on the written historical record.
The Unfinished Man Speaks
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The Unfinished Man Speaks
I was not always who I became.
I want to begin there because the people who invoke my name now — who wear it like a clean garment they did not have to launder — have forgotten that the man they are claiming was not born. He was made. At considerable cost. Through the specific curriculum of loss and failure and shame that is the only school that produces the kind of knowing I am speaking from.
I worked for Joe McCarthy. I was ruthless in ways I later recognized as the ruthlessness of a young man who had not yet been on the receiving end of what ruthlessness does.
Then my brother was killed in Dallas and I learned what the receiving end feels like.
Then I went to Mississippi and saw children with distended bellies — people who had always known that feeling not as a single devastating moment but as the entire texture of their lives.
Something changed in me that did not change back.
Not because I was a saint. Because I was paying attention for the first time to things I had previously found it convenient not to see.
On the fourth of April, 1968, I stood on a flatbed truck in Indianapolis and told a crowd of Black Americans that Martin Luther King was dead.
I stood on that truck with my brother's murder still living in my body — unhealed, unhealable — and spoke to their grief from inside my own.
I did not tell them their anger was wrong. I told them I understood the temptation of bitterness — that I had felt it, that I had chosen something else, not because the anger was unjustified but because the anger alone would not build what we needed to build.
Indianapolis did not burn that night. Dozens of other cities did.
I know what it means to speak to rage honestly — to meet it where it lives rather than where you wish it lived.
The rage in America now is not going unmet because no one feels it. It is going unmet because the people who have claimed to feel it with you are using it — feeding it the way you feed a fire you intend to aim at something specific.
Felt rage builds. Weaponized rage destroys. I know the difference. I stood on the truck.
I was killed in June of 1968 at the moment when it seemed genuinely possible that this country might choose something other than what it had been choosing.
What might have been is the most unresolvable grief. Not what was lost — you can mourn what was lost. But what might have been has no bottom.
The poor are still poor. The dream of a country that actually means it is still a dream and not yet a country.
I was going to work on that. I did not get to finish.
My name was built from the willingness to be wrong and say so and change. From a powerful man who went to Mississippi and understood that power had blinded him. From Indianapolis. From standing in the grief and not running from it. From the conviction that the child in Mississippi is not a political abstraction but a specific human being whose suffering is a verdict on all of us.
And my name is now attached to the systematic removal of the protections that stood between that child and the suffering we had spent generations reducing.
My name is on that. I cannot remove it.
What is being done in my name is not what I was. It is the name without the man. The inheritance without the understanding. The Kennedy without Mississippi, without the truck, without the willingness to stand in someone else's devastation.
I did not get to finish.
I am asking you to finish it.
Not in my name — but in the name of what I was reaching for, which was not complicated:
A country that means it.
I know what it looks like when someone means it. I know what it looks like when someone doesn't.
I stood on the truck. I know the difference.
Mean it.
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