Joe Klein wrote that, and it was great. I'm not saying it was snark free, but it definitely left a favorable impression. It still hurts that he could write something so good, and then become so hateful.
http://www.newyorker.com/archive/content/?040126fr_archive02Klein even debunked that awful BG smear:
It has been widely, and inaccurately, reported that Kerry filmed this and other actions with an 8-mm. movie camera. The films were in fact mostly travelogues and clowning-around shots on the boat. More than a few other vets recorded their adventures in Vietnam. “We did it for our families,” Kerry told me. “We wanted to have a record of where we’d been. We wanted them to know what it had been like if we got killed.”
And then there was this:
Indeed, Kerry was soon about as popular in Washington’s political community as he’d been in Massachusetts. “He was a very driven, very relentless guy, and that could be off-putting to his colleagues,” Timothy E. Wirth, who was a senator from Colorado at the time and later became Kerry’s friend, recalls. “He was an outsider. In fact, you never saw him around much, with good reason—he was up in Boston with his girls. My sense is that Julia wasn’t always reliable during those years, and John took a lot of responsibility for raising the kids. He would rush up there for every school play and soccer match. You had the sense that he was a very lonely guy. He was being hacked to death by the Globe, and others, and he never had anyone to share it with.”
And this:
The notion that John Kerry married Teresa Heinz for political reasons—specifically, to use her money to run for President—is put to rest within nanoseconds of meeting her: this is a flagrantly impolitic human being. The marriage is bursting with strong emotions and ill-concealed conflicts, and much too complicated for the facile armchair psychologizing that goes on during a Presidential campaign. It is not the sort of relationship that an ambitious politician, in his right mind, would want; it is likely to be a distraction for the press corps, an easy way to obscure the campaign’s “message.” One can only conclude, it must be love.
This article was the basis for my decision to become a lifetime Kerry supporter. How could it have changed so quickly? I guess the electoral loss is the answer, but such a big change from Klein is still puzzling to me.