-Caveat Lector-

Slick Hillie Should Resign

Now, with Mr. Clinton stripped of the power and protection of
the Presidency, his supporters see him exactly as he is. And
the image that presents itself is terrifyingly close to the
caricature his enemies drew of him. They were right, after
all. Mr. Clinton was, in fact, an untrustworthy low-life who
used people for his own purposes and then discarded them. How
could they have been fooled so badly? ...

Pro-Clinton commentators and colleagues now realize just how
much they compromised, just how much they excused, just how
ridiculous they looked in their defense of this corrupt
couple. The end of the Clinton Presidency and the beginning
of another Bush era has inspired a round of reflection, and
Clinton supporters find they can't look at themselves in the
mirror.


<http://www.observer.com/pages/frontpage5.asp>

Wed Feb 28 2001 10:36:27 ET

NEW YORK PAPER CALLS ON HILLARY TO RESIGN

"Had she any shame, she would resign."

With those words Wednesday morning, the New York Observer --
newspaper of record to Manhattan's intelligensia -- became the
first major publication to suggest that the corruption now coming
to light in the Clintons' pardons-for-cash scandal makes it
untenable for Hillary Rodham Clinton to continue serving as New
York State's junior U.S. Senator.

"With the nation and indeed the world watching, we (New Yorkers)
entrusted her with the U.S. Senate seat once held by Robert F.
Kennedy and Daniel Patrick Moynihan," the Observer says in its
scathing editorial this week.

"It is clear now that we have made a terrible mistake, for
Hillary Rodham Clinton is unfit for elective office. Had she any
shame, she would resign. If federal officeholders were subject to
popular recall, she'd be thrown out of office by springtime, the
season of renewal."

The paper warns that the Clintons are banking on the short
memories of the electorate; that even now Bill and Hillary are
plotting their return to respectability -- biding their time till
the latest scandal blows over and they can return to power.

"Only two months ago, serious people believed that Mrs. Clinton
would be a candidate for President in 2004." Now, says the
Observer, even the Clintons' staunchest supporters must realize
those hopes have been "relegated to history's dustbin."

But, the liberal weekly warns, "They have fooled the public
before. They believe they can do so again.... And so it will be
up to New York, finally, to foil the calculations of this coarse
and manipulative couple."

X X X X X

Clinton Corruption Plays Us for Fools - We Won't Forget

Some day soon, public interest in the Clinton administration's
final disgrace will fade, and the former President - if not his
wife, our junior Senator - will retreat from the headlines. Then,
after an appropriate interval, we will start seeing phony photo
ops and pious public pronouncements. Here and there, the Clintons
will begin their latest rehabilitation: Here is the junior
Senator, hugging inner-city children; there is the former
President, lecturing his successor on the finer points of
statecraft.

Just as surely as Richard Nixon began planning his comeback on
the airplane that took him to San Clemente on Aug. 9, 1974, the
Clintons even now are preparing their future public-relations
assault on the nation's better nature. They assume - regrettably,
not without reason - that the American public in general, and New
York voters in particular, will forget about the pardons and the
denials and the bald-faced lies that have sickened even their
most stalwart apologists.

They assume that disgust will run its course, that salvation will
be found in short attention spans, that the hyperactivity of the
media age will continue to blur collective memory. And if that
doesn't work, well, they figure they can rely on this heavily
Democratic state to swallow whole their claims to political
victimhood. If public memory cannot be manipulated, there's
always the crass pandering that has served them so well in the
past: The former President will walk the length of 125th Street
to remind his putative neighbors that he was, after all, the
first black President; the junior Senator will hold news
conferences to denounce right-wing conspirators. This combination
of cold-blooded racial politics and partisan hatemongering, the
Clintons no doubt believe, will keep New York pliant. And New
York is the key to it all: Without New York, there is no Senate
seat, there is no imperial post-Presidency, there is no access to
the courtiers who can, with words, actions and money, douse the
dealings of grifters with the perfume of public service.

So the Clintons are playing New Yorkers for fools. Although they
surely know by now that their actions and their words have
offended even their own supporters in the state they laughingly
call home, they see no reason to panic. Mrs. Clinton is in the
first weeks of a six-year term of office; in 2006, they believe,
who in New York will remember Marc Rich or Hugh Rodham? Who will
remember the White House furniture that found its way to their
living room in Chappaqua?

And so it will be up to New York, finally, to foil the
calculations of this coarse and manipulative couple. New Yorkers
now have an obligation, not only to themselves but to the nation:
They must remember. They must remember exactly how they feel
about the Clintons at this moment, exactly how they felt when
their junior Senator claimed she didn't know that her own brother
was bidding for pardons from her husband. They must remember how
their stomachs turned when their junior Senator professed to be
"heartbroken" about her brother's rancid involvement in the great
pardon auction. They must remember their astonishment when Mrs.
Clinton claimed to know nothing about the Rich pardon, even
though his ex-wife Denise donated more than $100,000 to the
former First Lady's Senate campaign - not to mention the $1.1
million that Ms. Rich has given the national Democratic Party,
and the $450,000 she gave to the Clinton Presidential Library.

Mrs. Clinton is heartbroken? She's always either heartbroken or
disappointed. What about her constituents? Doesn't she feel our
shame? After all, her husband felt our pain. Does she not
understand our embarrassment? With the nation and indeed the
world watching, we entrusted her with the U.S. Senate seat once
held by Robert F. Kennedy and Daniel Patrick Moynihan. It is
clear now that we have made a terrible mistake, for Hillary
Rodham Clinton is unfit for elective office. Had she any shame,
she would resign. If federal officeholders were subject to
popular recall, she'd be thrown out of office by springtime, the
season of renewal.

Only two months ago, serious people believed that Mrs. Clinton
would be a candidate for President in 2004. Even true believers -
gathered in Manhattan's few remaining telephone booths - must
admit that the plan to get Mrs. Clinton back into the White House
must now be relegated to history's dustbin, where it will share
space with the proceedings of the ClintonCare commission,
canceled checks to the Whitewater Development Corporation and the
billing records of the Rose Law Firm. Mrs. Clinton's political
viability has come to an end after fewer than eight weeks in
office.

Unlike the tawdry dealings that led to Bill Clinton's
impeachment, the pardon scandal implicates Mrs. Clinton as much
as, and perhaps even more than, her husband. After all, it was
her brother, not his, who accepted $400,000 to lobby for pardons
for a drug kingpin and a swindler. (Hugh Rodham says he'll give
the money back - although he hasn't done it just yet. Even if he
does, the restitution won't make everything right. Just ask a
bank robber.) The Hasidic village in upstate New Square voted en
masse for her, not him, last fall, after she met with the
village's religious leader. The pardons for four felons from the
village who bilked the federal government out of $40 million
raise questions about her campaign, not his. It was her campaign
treasurer, not his, who helped and advised two of those felons
with their pardon applications.

Mrs. Clinton's press conference on Feb. 22 was a masterpiece of
evasion - so much so that she deserves a new (if you'll forgive
us) moniker: "Slick Hillie." She said she knew nothing about the
pardons. She said she knew nothing of her brother's involvement.
No, no - she didn't concern herself with these little matters,
because she was very busy preparing to represent the people of
New York. If we had any questions about the pardons, she said, we
ought to ask him, the "him" in question being her husband.

A move worthy of the Big He himself.

The Clintons have spent the last eight years treating the
American electorate with dismissive contempt. The rage unleashed
in the last few weeks is that of an aggrieved partner who has
wised up at last. The President's supporters in politics and the
press understood all along that they were in a high-risk
relationship, but they had persuaded themselves that, in his
heart, Mr. Clinton loved what they loved. Their devotion only
deepened when they were warned to be wary of him; his enemies
were their enemies, too.

Now, with Mr. Clinton stripped of the power and protection of the
Presidency, his supporters see him exactly as he is. And the
image that presents itself is terrifyingly close to the
caricature his enemies drew of him. They were right, after all.
Mr. Clinton was, in fact, an untrustworthy low-life who used
people for his own purposes and then discarded them. How could
they have been fooled so badly?

Even now, some continue to delude themselves. They attack Mr.
Clinton's actions, but they can't bring themselves to admit that
Senator Hillary also is at fault. Most of us, however, now
realize that she is an equally detestable partner in a scandal
whose sleazy dealings finally have been brought to light.

Conservative critics of the Clintons have been amused to see the
former President's friends writhing in agony on talk shows and in
op-ed columns in recent weeks. They wonder why other Democrats
and liberal commentators are so angry. It's not as though the
Clintons have suddenly become something they're not; they've been
selling their principles to the highest bidder for years. It's
not as though they've betrayed their core values; what core
values did they ever have?

What the critics - understandably satisfied to see their judgment
confirmed yet again - miss is the amount of self-loathing in the
Clinton pile-on. Pro-Clinton commentators and colleagues now
realize just how much they compromised, just how much they
excused, just how ridiculous they looked in their defense of this
corrupt couple. The end of the Clinton Presidency and the
beginning of another Bush era has inspired a round of reflection,
and Clinton supporters find they can't look at themselves in the
mirror.

They are ashamed of themselves, which is a good deal more than
anybody can say of the Clintons. Indeed, they remain smug and
self-righteous, certain that New York will forget the early weeks
of 2001, certain that New York will embrace its junior Senator
once again.

They have fooled the public before. They believe they can do so
again.

Let's hope that this time, they are wrong.


=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:
                     *Michael Spitzer*  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
=================================================================

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