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Please discuss how Act 3, Scene 2 of Shakespeare's "Julius Caeser" might apply to the death of Ted Kennedy.?

Update:

Theatre Doc asks "Why?" which is not really an answer to which I respond "Why ask any questions or post any answers here at all?" I was just reading Marc Antony's speeches about JC and lo and behold, one of our greatest senators bites it. So I thought I'd pose the question, that's all.

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    I don't think it does actually.

    Because Cesar was betrayed but his betrayor was convinced that he was helping the country by killing him.

    Unless you're trying to say that Kennedy, who like Cesar was getting too full of himself, was betrayed by his body, Brutus. Then, in that case, yes.

    Actually, I don't remember what happend in Act 3, Scene 2. :(

    Source(s): "Et tu, Brute?" "Yes. Yes, indeed."
  • 1 decade ago

    Why?

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