I think I like it here...
Thanks, Bernard, for inviting me in!
I just checked my original posting at eCommunities (Epilepsy Foundation's site) and though lots of folks read my post, only about 7 of them responded: with the "why should he tell anybody" stuff. One person actually suggested that I was writing all of what I wrote because Roberts is a Bush apointee... Hmmm.
My own politics are my own business. The only thing I believe in is a secret ballot, and 1 person, 1 vote! This is the one thing I do not have to share with anyone.
But there is something in this discussion left to address: the importance of a public person taking the opportunity to speak about E. You know, E. isn't like cancer, Alzheimer's, stroke, HIV/AIDS. Those problems
people are willing to talk about in the open. In each case, however, there was a time when this simply wasn't true. People feared admitting they had cancer. They feared losing their job, friends, housing, etc., if they revealed it. The stigma of cancer was terrible to behold---and then, things began to change. President Nixon instituted a war against cancer, people began to mention it on the television, radio and in print ads. Folks began to admit to having it and today we think of cancer as a routine part of life.
Getting over the stigma of HIV/AIDS was quicker than it was for cancer. From the time it was first recognized till present day has only been about 30 years. We talk about AIDS, we fear it, sure, but it is out in the open.
Having lived my life alone with E., knowing no one with this same ailment, feeling ostracized from even my own family, I want things to change for all of us. I have made myself an advocate for this end. I hope to see it happen for us.

So, to tell me it is OK for a public figure to side-step the issue altogether, to hint around about it, to say nothing, stinks to me. I don't want the guy to have it, I just want the guy to realize how significant it could be to our society if he would say "Yes, I have epilepsy" or "No, I do not have epilepsy" and let us all off the hook
Noblesse oblige: the obligation of the nobility to act for the ignoble. I guess I still feel that those with greater visibility should use that visibility to help those of us that no one will ever see or know.
Does any of this make sense? Or is it time for my nap now...