Fifty-five years ago last month, Robert F Kennedy was assassinated as he celebrated victory in the California presidential primary. He was the target of a lone gunman whose crime was witnessed by numerous people standing right next to the killer. It was both tragedy and outrage.
For his family it was also, naturally enough, a trauma (coming five years after the murder of his brother, US president John F Kennedy). And perhaps unsurprisingly, it is one the slain politician’s son, Robert F Kennedy Jr, has never really recovered from.
Now Jr is running for President and his campaign is one of tragedy and outrage.
Searching for an explanation for the inexplicable — the murder of his father and uncle — RFK Jr has endorsed conspiracy theories. In the case of his father’s death, common sense alone suggests such a theory is wrong. There is a desperation behind alternative accounts. It is understandable that such ideas are attractive to a bereaved son, but understanding his motive doesn’t make it right.