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Thursday, May 14, 2015

President of the United States?


As First Lady, Hillary Clinton assumed authority over Health Care Reform, a process that cost the taxpayers over $13 million. She told Bill Bradley and Pat Moynahan, key votes needed to pass her legislation, she would "demonize" anyone who opposed it.  But, it was so opposed she couldn't get it to a vote in a Congress controlled by Democrats.  In the next election, her party lost both the House and Senate.

Hillary assumed authority over selecting a female Attorney General.  Her first two recommendations, Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood, were forced to withdraw their names. Then she chose Janet Reno who was eventually described by Bill as "my worst mistake."

Hillary recommended Lani Guanier to head the Civil Rights Commission. When Guanier's radical views emerged, her name had to be withdrawn.

Hillary recommended her former law partners, Web Hubbell, Vince Foster, and William Kennedy for positions in the Justice Department, White House staff, and the Treasury, respectively.  Hubbell later went to prison,

Vince Foster committed suicide, and Kennedy was forced to resign.

Hillary recommended a close friend of the Clintons, Craig Livingstone, for the position of director of White House security.  When Livingstone was investigated for the improper access of up to 900 FBI files of Clinton enemies, "Filegate," and the use of drugs by White House staff, both Hillary and Bill denied knowing him.  FBI agent Dennis Sculimbrene confirmed in a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in 1996 both the drug use and Hillary's involvement in hiring Livingstone. After that, the FBI closed its White House Liaison Office, after serving seven presidents for over thirty years.

In order to open positions in the White House for friends the Harry Thomasons, to whom millions of Dollars in travel contracts could be awarded, Hillary had the entire staff of the White House Travel Office fired. She reported to the FBI it was for "gross mismanagement" and their reputations were ruined. After a thirty-month investigation, only one, Billy Dale, was charged with a crime, mixing personal money with White House funds when he cashed checks. The jury acquitted him in less than two hours.

Another of Hillary's assumed duties was directing the "Bimbo Eruption Squad and Scandal Defense Unit," BESSDU, she urged her husband not to settle the Paula Jones lawsuit, but they had to settle later more expensively and PR awkwardly.

She refused to release the Whitewater documents, which led to the appointment of Ken Starr as Special Prosecutor. After $80 million dollars of taxpayer money, Starr's investigation chanced on Monica Lewinsky and Bill lying about it only to later admit to his affairs with her.

Bill then lost his law license for lying under oath to the grand jury and was impeached by the House.  Hillary was nearly indicted for perjury and obstruction of justice avoiding it only by repeating, "I do not recall," "I have no recollection," and "I don't know" 56 times under oath.  Anyone else would have been indicted and tried.

Hillary accepted the traditional First Lady's role of decorator of the White House at Christmas, but in her Hillary way.  In 1994 The First Lady's Tree in the Blue Room was decorated with drug paraphernalia, sex toys, and pornographic ornaments, all personally approved by Hillary as the invited artists' depictions of the theme, "The Twelve Days of Christmas."

Hillary wrote "It Takes a Village," promoting socialist principles and only after getting a publisher to quash an earlier book with the same title, fortunately written by a liberal Democrat who dared not complain.  

Hillary decided to seek election to the Senate in a state in which she had never lived.  Her husband pardoned FALN terrorists to get Latino support and the New Square Hassidim to get Jewish support. Hillary also had Bill pardon her brother's clients, for a fee as the money talks to the Clintons.

When Hillary left the White House, she had to return $200,000 in White House furniture, china, and artwork she had stolen.  No major media carried this story.  In the campaign for the Senate, Hillary played the "woman card" by portraying her opponent, Victor Lazio, as a bully picking on her after he dared to approach her podium during a debate.

Bill further protected her by asking the National Archives to withhold from the public until 2012 many records of their time in the White House, including much of Hillary's correspondence and her calendars. There are ongoing lawsuits to force the release of those records, but they have not been released.

As the junior Senator from New York , Hillary passed no major legislation. She deferred to her senior Senator, Charles Schumer, to tend to the needs of New Yorkers, including the medical problems of workers involved in the cleanup of Ground Zero after 9/11.  She just could not be bothered.

Hillary's one notable vote, supporting the plan to invade Iraq , she has since disavowed and now this woman wants to be the President of the United States?

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Contributed by Bill Stanley and "Sue."   Edited by Adrian Vance

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