Chuck Norris: An Affair to Remember

Chuck Norris An Affair to Remember
By Chuck Norris

Now that John Edwards has admitted to his affair with 42-year-old Rielle Hunter, the big test looms again before the American public: Do we care? Do we think it matters? Do we believe that there should be any code of conduct or moral standard for those in public office, even if it is the highest one in the land?

Justifications for political improprieties abound. There are historical ones: “Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, John F. Kennedy, Bill Clinton, etc. had moral failures, so what’s the big deal?” There are also personal ones: “We shouldn’t judge. No one is perfect. Who are we to point fingers?”
Don’t misunderstand me. I believe in personal redemption. I myself have experienced it, as I wrote about in the chapter “A sin that became a blessing” in my autobiography, “Against All Odds,” in which I discuss an adulterous one-night stand in the early ’60s that resulted in my wonderful daughter Dina. That is why I hope, as he says, John Edwards truly has asked God and his wife for forgiveness, and I pray for their restoration and the long road that results from it.

But then again, John Edwards continues to minimize his culpability by playing linguistic and moral dodge ball. He lied to his closest colleagues and the public for nearly two years about the affair. And even in his confession last week, he doesn’t call it a “lie,” a “sin,” an “affair” or “adultery.” Rather, he repeatedly calls it merely a “mistake” or a “serious error in judgment.” Is that all it is?
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