During a speech here in Cleveland yesterday Vice President Joe Biden was heckled. Biden lost his cool and responded inappropriately.
Dan Roberts, reporting in ‘My friends died,’ heckler shouts. ‘So did my son,’ Joe Biden shoots back for The Guardian (no mention of the incident that I can find so far in local media), writes:
It was a retort perhaps only one American politician could have produced, and one that silenced the room.
Faced with a determined heckler during a campaign rally for Hillary Clinton, Joe Biden reached for a very personal response in Cleveland on Thursday.
“My friends died, my American friends,” the heckler was shouting, remonstrating with the vice-president over US policy in Syria.
“My friend died,” he repeated, challenging Biden to explain his recent demand that Kurdish allies withdraw from captured Isis territory.
Interrupted again while trying to explain the complex Middle East policy, something snapped on stage after the third shout of “my friend died”.
“Will you listen? So did my son, OK?” shot back the vice-president, instantly silencing both the heckler and those in the crowd who had been trying to drown out the disruption by shouting: “Hillary, Hillary.”
Biden’s son Beau, an Iraq war veteran and former attorney general of Delaware, died of cancer last year at the age of 46.
I get that Biden was frustrated. I get that he is a man who has lost a wife, a daughter and a son. We’re not supposed to outlive our children, let alone our entire family. The death of Beau Biden was a personal tragedy for his father, but we all have lost people we loved.
That loss is not the equivalent of that of the man in the audience. Biden, by virtue of his position as the person a heartbeat away from being the most powerful person in the world, is culpable in the death of that man’s friend.
People die in wars and politicians—as well as those of us who elected them, or failed to prevent their election—are responsible for those deaths. We have their blood on our hands. We can pretend that that is not the case, but we can’t change the reality.
Sorry Joe, you, and we, owe that man an apology for your false equivalency.
Perhaps, I hope, that is what happened backstage after the speech.