-Caveat Lector-

-----Original Message-----
From: Gary Cruse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Newsgroups: alt.current-events.clinton.whitewater
Date: Saturday, January 30, 1999 11:35 PM
Subject: The Secret Sex Addict Speech Dick Morris Offered Clinton-


>
>
>
>The New York Observer
>1/29/99 by Philip Weiss
>
>The Secret Sex Addict Speech Dick Morris Offered Clinton
>
>by Philip Weiss
>
>Like all addictions, impeachment has 12 steps toward
>emotional clarity. These were mine:
>
>1. Is Hillary Depressed? Hillary Rodham Clinton is scheduled
>to speak to the National Abortion and Reproductive
>Rights Action League on the 26th anniversary of Roe v. Wade.
>It is at the same time that the question-and-answer phase of
>the impeachment trial is to begin in the Senate, and I
>choose Hillary.
>    The First Lady wears a gray suit and is obviously
>depressed. She may as well be speaking to a funeral. Her
>voice is a monotone. She does not move her body at all for
>more than 30 minutes, merely moves her head in a practiced
>manner from one side of the audience to another. Dip to the
>lectern to get a line of text. Look up left. Look right.
>Open eyes to make some sort of connection. Dip back to
>lectern.
>
>Her text is laced with bitterness about men. She speaks with
>anger of visiting pregnant girls who have been abandoned by
>the fathers, of the stories these young lied-to women told
>her about their men—"with a straight face," she says
>cuttingly. If only boys and men would think about what they
>are doing before they had sex, Hillary says, then goes on to
>denounce the preoccupation with "sexual prowess" in the
>media and among sports figures. The speech seems somewhat
>castrating.
>
>The 2,000 people in the audience, mostly women, absorb the
>depth of her feeling. The applause is subdued. No one calls
>out for her to run for Senate.
>
>2. Z-z-z-z-z-z-z. Later, as I enter the Senate periodical
>gallery, the guard at the door takes my elbow. "Do me a
>favor, wake that guy up." He points at a tall reporter in
>the second row. Not relishing the assignment, I say, "Is he
>asleep?" A second guard comes over to confer. "I don’t think
>he’s sleeping, I just saw his jaw move."
>
>I sit next to the reporter, who is in fact sound asleep, and
>pretend not to notice him as I watch the President’s
>private lawyer, David Kendall, speak, soporifically, on the
>floor. The guard must come down and, squeezing in
>front of a row of people to get to us, rouse the man. The
>reporter denies that he was asleep. They argue and the
>guard retreats. The reporter spends the next half-hour
>trying to win the argument retroactively by maintaining his
>sleepy posture even as he mocks attentiveness.
>
>3. Oedipus at the Senate. Rumpled, cerebral, white-haired
>Senator Carl Levin of Michigan reminds me of my father,
>and I get into an argument with him during a little press
>conference he gives outside the Senate floor.
>
>He says that the House managers have misrepresented Vernon
>Jordan’s motives for finding a job for Monica
>Lewinsky. He has uncovered a fact that contradicts one of
>their points.
>
>I break in. "Let’s say you’re right. They got this point
>wrong. Still, what is a reasonable person supposed to
>conclude, that this was routine? How often have you called
>the chairman of General Motors?"
>
>My Oedipal outburst frightens old Senator Levin. He raises
>his hand and becomes flustered, then goes on, ignoring me.
>Under his arm are stacks of photocopies of the critical
>documents. Pathetically, he hands them out to the reporters.
>
>
>It is simply obvious that Vernon Jordan was putting out
>supreme effort for Monica Lewinsky. Ronald Perelman
>testified that in Mr. Jordan’s 12 years on Revlon Inc.’s
>board, he only called him once on behalf of a job
>candidate: a "terrific young girl," Monica Lewinsky. Mr.
>Jordan’s call to Mr. Perelman came immediately after a
>five-minute conversation with Ms. Lewinsky, who called him
>from the residence of her mother’s then-fiancé in
>New York, at about the time that she was filing her false
>affidavit in the Paula Jones case.
>
>After talking to Ron Perelman, Vernon Jordan called Monica
>Lewinsky back to tell her he had made the call. The
>next day, when she got the job, she called him and spent
>seven minutes on the phone with him, celebrating her
>success, then an hour later he called her and they had a
>three-minute conversation in which he says he urged her
>to accept that $40,000 was good pay.
>
>It is one of the great wastes of this process: critical
>minds like Charles Schumer’s and Carl Levin’s turned by the
>Clinton defense into bales of hay.
>
>4. Going Mad With Lindsey Graham. I walk out of the Capitol
>with Lindsey Graham, the Republican House manager. A small
>man from a rural district of South Carolina who wears Brooks
>Brothers ties, he is the Frank Capra figure in the drama,
>soulful, emotional, sincere. People swarm around him, even
>Democrats, to urge him on or to fence with him.
>Representative Graham has a pastoral air. He talks about
>"the sins you carry and the sins I carry." He offers moral
>instruction.
>
>"Listen up now. Listen to what I’m trying to say," he says,
>putting his foot up on a marble sill. "Our President
>engaged in serious criminal wrongdoing. And to doubt that
>that occurred is devastating to the people of the
>country."
>
>I walk to the Longworth Building with Mr. Graham. I say, "I
>told a friend how disturbed I am about the fact that
>Clinton called Monica Lewinsky a ‘stalker,’ and he said,
>‘Yeah, that’s the right wing’s ace in the hole.’ And I was
>shocked by that. I don’t understand why it isn’t a liberal’s
>ace in the hole."
>
>"Yeah, he turned on a consensual lover," Mr. Graham says,
>shaking his head. "It was the meanest thing he did."
>
>Lindsay Graham and I have become maddened.
>
>5. Girl Talk With My Mother-in-Law. My in-laws have tickets
>to see the impeachment, and that night I meet them
>back at the hotel. My father-in-law is lying on the bed, my
>mother-in-law is watching the news. My in-laws are
>unimpressed by the Senate décor. My mother-in-law says it
>reminds her of just another men’s club.
>
>I tell her my sense that Hillary is depressed. "Did you
>notice at the State of the Union that Hillary didn’t have
>her hair done?" she says. "It was odd to me that for a big
>night like that, she wouldn’t have put herself together. I
>agree with you."
>
>We go out to dinner and get back to the hotel at 10. On
>C-Span 2, Hillary is giving her speech again, and I call
>down to my in-laws’ room. The camera picks up stuff I hadn’t
>seen in the hall. When Hillary is finished, she turns
>from the microphone and gives a big short sigh before
>embracing Kate Michelman, president of the National
>Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League. "Kate, I put
>your glasses there," Hillary says, motioning at a
>shelf on the lectern, and saying that, she opens her mouth
>with joy. It is her only gesture of pure pleasure.
>
>I wonder whether maybe Hillary has hit bottom. That she is
>doing a spiritual inventory of all the lies, not so
>different from Lindsey Graham’s spiritual inventory.
>
>6. I Wake Up in Anger. In the morning, I compose a mental
>list of the issues that have maddened me, thinking to
>reel them off to my mother-in-law, a liberal:
>
>• Why, in the Nixon era, it was a glory to be on his
>"enemies list." While to be against Bill Clinton is to be
>classed a "hater" and vilified in polite society;
>
>• Why it was a heroic thing that the law firm Williams &
>Connolly and The Washington Post teamed up on
>Watergate, but that when conservative newspaperman Richard
>Mellon Scaife underwrites investigations of a
>President he doesn’t like, it’s a conspiracy;
>
>• Why right-wing reporter Christopher Ruddy can be harassed
>by the Internal Revenue Service under Mr. Clinton
>and no one but The Wall Street Journal even notices;
>
>• Why the passive media treat the 900 F.B.I. files as a
>joke—accepting Mr. Clinton’s "bureaucratic snafu"
>explanation—even as Linda Tripp testifies that some of the
>files were apparently used against the fired Travel
>Office employees in 1993, and Dick Morris testifies that
>they are evidence of a paranoid style in the White House,
>statements that go wholly unexamined in the press;
>
>• How it is that a House committee report accused Cheryl
>Mills, the White House deputy counsel, of perjury for
>false statements to the committee about the White House
>database of contributors, and in questioning Ms. Mills
>last summer, Mr. Starr’s deputies all but suggested she had
>lied to them about when she first learned about the
>Lewinsky situation, from her close friend Vernon Jordan, yet
>these issues are only raised by The Washington
>Times, while Newsweek celebrates Ms. Mills as a "rising
>star."
>
>• How it came to pass that, following signs of discomfort on
>the Upper West Side over its harsh stance on the President,
>the New York Times editorial page takes a sudden, Pravda-ish
>turn to the conventional liberal position at the end of
>1998, which Sam Donaldson finds a source of amusement on
>This Week, but which goes wholly unexamined in intellectual
>circles;
>
>• Why The Times devotes such investigative resources to the
>continuing examination of how the Paula Jones suit
>flourished, secretly, in a cabal of conservative lawyers,
>while failing to describe to its readers evidence
>contained in the Starr files of potential criminal matters,
>for instance, White House deputy assistant Marsha
>Scott’s patent lies to the grand jury about the
>Administration’s treatment of Webster Hubbell; the numerous
>discrepancies between Vernon Jordan’s sworn testimony and
>Monica Lewinsky’s (we breakfasted at the Park
>Hyatt, she says; we never breakfasted, said he; the
>breakfast turns up on his American Express bill); or the
>release to the media of Linda Tripp’s Pentagon file, matters
>that are only taken up in The American Spectator and
>other journals.
>
>I go down to breakfast at the hotel and decide not to go
>into it. We talk about Hillary’s speech. My mother-in-law
>says, "Did you notice the sigh that Hillary gave when she
>turned away from the microphone? It was as if she was
>saying, ‘Ahhh, that’s over with.’"
>
>7. I Discover Lindsay Graham’s a Lefty. On Saturday, Jan.
>23, the House managers fly Ms. Lewinsky in from Los
>Angeles, and no one is sleeping in the periodical gallery.
>No, it is all but empty as Henry Hyde rises to warn the
>Democrats, "There are issues of transcendent importance that
>you have to be willing to lose your office over."
>
>One of Henry Hyde’s principles is equal justice under the
>law, but another is abortion. This is the problem with
>the radical Republicans’ martyrology, it seems so off the
>rails. Yes, they have taken a moral stand, but they are a
>group of white men associated with a moral cause, abortion,
>that seems to the great majority of Americans so
>morally ambiguous that it must be resolved in favor of a
>woman’s right to privacy, sexual and medical. Have the
>privacy issues of the Clinton case escaped them?
>
>I lean over the sill to look down at the black,
>Nike-swoosh-shaped managers’ table and notice Lindsey
>Graham’s curious way of taking notes. He is a left-hander,
>and turns his cheap legal pad so that the long side is
>parallel to his chest, then writes in a vertical line going
>toward his chest, like Chinese characters. What an
>iconoclast.
>
>Mr. Graham rises to make the wisest statement the House
>managers have made: that if he were a Senator, he
>would have to get down on his knees before deciding that
>these crimes are high crimes.
>
>8. Pity the House Managers. For days after, poor Mr. Graham
>is defensive about his comments. The House managers now
>occupy a free-floating zone of acrid political death. They
>know it but are still in denial. Few reporters come to stake
>them out. The marble halls feel like a sarcophagus in which
>they are slowly dying, becoming martyr statues. In the midst
>of interviews, they suddenly look at you and say, blankly,
>"How did we do today?" with the drained foxhole look of
>death about them. I try to give them chipper answers,
>because their arguments on the facts of the case are wholly
>convincing to me, and reasonable—also because I pity them,
>remembering that their task appeared more innocent and
>adventurous when they took it on, like joining
>Shackleton’s trip to Antarctica.
>
>9. I Become Bill Buckley. Watching 96-year-old Strom
>Thurmond creak into the Senate one morning, I find him, for
>the first time in my life, a source of inspiration rather
>than hatred, and when I get back to New York I realize that
>I am no longer young, I am now aging. So far, I have been
>climbing the hill of life; now, I am going down the hill.
>My wife comes home for dinner and I tell her this. She
>agrees.
>
>We drink a lot of wine over dinner, then I stand on several
>volumes of the Starr documents like a soapbox, telling
>her some of the intellectual dishonesties that madden me.
>Have I lost my mind? I say. My wife says not. But she
>wonders whether I am more like Norman Podhoretz than William
>Buckley, in this sense: that when Norman Podhoretz underwent
>his middle-aged break over political-intellectual matters,
>she says, he was no longer able to take meals with his old
>friends, the feelings were simply too strong, the loss of
>respect. Whereas merry WASPy Mr. Buckley breaks bread
>happily with his enemies, so separated is he from his
>emotional life. Are you a Buckley or a Podhoretz?
>
>10. Betting Against Clinton Is a Sucker’s Game. I meet my
>friend John, who thinks I’m a nut, at a party and in a
>demonstration of honor say I owe him $50. Why, he says. He
>has forgotten that a year ago, in a hut in the Adirondacks,
>he gave me 3-to-1 odds that Mr. Clinton would still be in
>office a year hence. My wife’s boss is nowhere so genteel.
>On her return following New Year’s holiday, he came to her,
>palm out, demanding his $200 on a similar bet for 1998. Then
>he says he will take her side of the bet: Mr. Clinton will
>be gone before 1999 is through. But you have to stake
>$1,000. My wife loses her nerve.
>
>11. Dick Morris’ Amazing Advice. I feel desperation at the
>idea that it is going to be over and stay up till 1 A.M.
>reading the Starr papers, the Dick Morris section, where he
>describes his belief that "secret police" at the White
>House leaked confidential information to the National
>Enquirer about matters he had confessed about his sex life
>to an Administration official when he was hired at the White
>House years before.
>
>A year ago, at the President’s urging, Mr. Morris did his
>famous poll about America’s attitudes, using a
>Melbourne, Fla., research firm. To keep it secret, he asked
>the firm not even to print out the findings, and he
>swallowed the $2,000 cost. In the poll, Mr. Morris, who had
>told Mr. Clinton that they were both sex addicts,
>composed a speech the President could give to save himself.
>Here it is:
>
>"For many, many years I have been personally flawed and have
>had sexual relations outside of my marriage. This has caused
>Hillary great pain and I have tried and tried to curb my
>behavior as I saw the pain it caused her. After I became
>President, I was determined to mend my ways. For the most
>part, I did, but sometimes I fell short and gave into
>temptation. I did, in fact, have sexual relations with a
>23-year-old woman named Monica Lewinsky while I’ve
>been President. I regret my behavior more than I can say. I
>apologize for it. I take responsibility for it. I wish I
>were a better man and better able to cope with the pressures
>of life and work, and I am going to redouble my efforts to
>walk a straight line. When the allegations first surfaced, I
>did, indeed, lie about them and urge Monica to lie. I was
>wrong and I am sorry for it. I am especially sorry for the
>pain I have caused my wife and daughter. If the American
>people want me to step down as President, I will do so. With
>a heavy heart, but I will do so. If they can forgive me
>and want me to continue to lead our great nation, I’ll do
>that, too. I’ve tried to be a good President and I think
>I’ve succeeded. I’ve tried to be a good husband, and I’m
>afraid I’ve sometimes failed. As President, as a repentant
>sinner and as a Christian, I ask your forgiveness, God’s
>forgiveness and my wife and daughter’s forgiveness. My
>future is in your hands, my fellow Americans."
>
>Dick Morris’ notes indicate that 47 percent of respondents
>said that if the President gave that speech, they would
>want him out of office, while 43 percent said they would
>want him to stay. Mr. Morris called Bill Clinton with the
>results, then read the President his imagined speech. "I was
>sort of waiting for him to interrupt me and say, ‘But
>that isn’t true,’ or ‘That goes too far,’ or something like
>that, and he was silent throughout the whole thing," Mr.
>Morris said.
>
>12. The Shape of Things to Come. Eve MacSweeney, an editor
>at Harper’s Bazaar, sends me an e-mail that says,
>"couldn’t see you back from england as friend in hospital
>and everything went pear-shaped." I call to ask about the
>phrase. She tells me that "pear-shaped" is the reigning
>metaphor in England now. Things are going pear-shaped.
>They say it in the financial district when a stock goes bad.
>They say it in W11 about a marriage. Ms. MacSweeney says the
>term resonates because English women are frequently referred
>to as being pear-shaped, the men in England being buttless,
>but she and I agree that when the phrase gets here—the land
>of the aging, big-butted male—it will have wider resonance.
>
>I think of when that other Anglicism, "at the end of the
>day," came here a few years ago, landing in New York.
>The House managers use the phrase "at the end of the day"
>over and over again, summing up their case on the
>Senate floor. Now we know what the end of the day looks
>like.
>
>This column ran on page 1 in the 2/1/99 edition of The New
>York Observer.
>
>
>
>--
>http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Senate/6305/index.html
>A Rush Limbaugh Featured Site
>
>I didn't claw my way to the top of the food chain to eat vegetables!
>

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