ABOUT HILLARY

The College Years

In high school, Hillary was a conservative Goldwater Girl. But throughout her college years, Hillary identified with far Left politics. At her Wellesley commencement speech, she railed against capitalism and criticized the keynote speaker, Senator Edward Brooke, for being “out of touch.”

Interestingly, in 1993, Hillary had her Wellesley senior thesis placed under “lock and key.” (Washington Times 7/13/1999)

While attending Yale Law, Hillary’s politics became very radical. She interned with Marian Wright Edelman, founder and president of the Children’s Defense Fund (CDF), and later worked for Stalinist lawyer Robert Treuhaft.

Career, Marriage and Arkansas Shenanigans

The years following her college days were filled with ideology and opportunity for the young Ms. Rodham.

In 1974, Hillary penned an article entitled “Children Under the Law,” suggesting the following measures for “children’s rights” (summed up by R. Emmett Tyrrell in Boy Clinton):
  1. The abolition of the legal category of minority and thus the reversal of a minor’s presumption of legal incompetence.
  2. Extension to children of all procedural rights that are guaranteed to adults.
  3. An end to the legal presumption that there exists an identity of interests between children and their parents, thus allowing children to assert their own interests in the courts and opening the family to further judicial intrusion.
In short, Hillary believes that a village can take your child and raise it better than you can.

In October 1975, Hillary married aspiring politician Bill Clinton. She shocked her family and friends when she announced that she would keep her maiden name— a decision she reversed several years later in an emergency effort to shore up Bill’s political viability.

In 1976, Hillary accepted an offer at the Rose Law Firm. By 1982, she was making $100,000, compared with her husband's salary of $35,000. At Rose, she met Vince Foster and Webster Hubbell.

During the ’70s and ’80s, the Clintons were engaged in several shady business transactions in Arkansas, known collectively as Whitewater. With the power of the Clintons, and the experience and know-how of family friends Jim and Susan McDougal, Bill and Hillary were able to make a hefty profit.

The Clintons became partners with the McDougals in the Whitewater Development Corporation. They purchased 230 acres of land in Arkansas. In order to get this land, they needed $20,000 for the down payment. The Union National Bank of Little Rock loaned them the money, even though the Clintons had no assets and $27,000 in liabilities.

In the meantime, Susan McDougal raised the land value artificially through a trick known as “land-flipping.” The Whitewater Development Corporation used the inflated price to lure new tenants by hook and crook. Several of these tenants were bankrupted and evicted for not following guidelines of which they were not made aware.

Hillary was also one of the two lawyers who represented Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan, which was owned by the McDougals. When the securities commissioner refused to comply with her plan to issue preferred stock in order to help the company get out of financial trouble, he was replaced by a Clinton appointee, who gladly cooperated.

In a curious postscript to the Whitewater scandal, on July 20, 1993, Vince Foster was found dead in Fort Marcy, Virginia. His death was ruled a suicide. However, some believe that Hillary’s Madison billing records— containing potentially damning evidence— were removed from Foster’s office almost immediately after his death. (CNN All Politics 6/13/1996)

In addition, from 1978 to 1979, Hillary was able to turn a $1,000 investment into a $99,000 windfall by trading mainly in cattle futures. Such a gain is unfeasible for a novice like Hillary. On her first trade, Hillary increased her investment to $5,300, a percentage increase considered impossible to make by any legal means. It is also suspicious that Hillary was allowed to invest only $1,000, when the price of a contract was $1,200. Many suspect that connections to an insider may have helped Hillary obtain her immense profit.

The Co-President

Upon arriving in Washington, Hillary used her immense influence to determine White House employment. One of her first moves was to fire the entire White House Travel Office staff to make room for Clinton cronies.

The buddy system did not stop there. According to the Wall Street Journal (7/14/1993), all 32 U.S. attorneys were fired and replaced. Two of the new appointees were Webster Hubbell and Vince Foster. “Control [of the Justice Department] has in fact rested with appointees from Little Rock's Rose Law Firm.”

Early in 1993, Hillary was placed in charge of the 500 member health care “task force.” This group held its meetings in secret until a court ruling forced it to make the meetings public.

Ultimately, Hillary’s inability to convince Americans that there was a “health care crisis”— along with deep public mistrust of her intentions— left her unable to realize her goal of socializing America’s health care system.

In the years since, Hillary has focused on pulling Bill to the Left on major policy issues and defending her man against the scandals that have rocked the presidency and the nation.
 
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