Explaining Hillary Hate

by Doctor Science

A few weeks ago Sprog the Elder, who was born in 1989, asked me to explain why some people hate Hillary Rodham Clinton so very, very much. She knew that it went back to the Bill Clinton administration, but had no idea what it was based on. This is more or less what I told her:

It was misogyny, of course. But explaining the particular flavor of anti-Hillary misogyny involves both what I remember from the 90s, and things that have only become clear in retrospect. The simplest way to put it: as Sady Doyle says, she disrupted the narrative–which meant people were culturally prepared to cast her as the villain.

From the start of the 1992 campaign, as I recall, Hillary refused to sit in any of the usual boxes — even the feminist/not-feminist ones. Every modern First Lady is expected to have a policy interest, and Hillary’s has always been children’s health and education. This should be perfectly ladylike and even conventional, but she never addressed it in a ladylike way.

Hillary’s basic personality is Hermione Granger: she’s the nerd girl who knows too much, whose hand is always up first, who studies the hardest and who always has the damn right answer. Even in fiction this can be irritating, and in real life (as you know) it really gets a lot of people’s backs up, especially coming from a woman.

Even Michelle Obama fits into the “conventional First Lady” box more easily than Hillary did. Michelle has her signature policy issues (children’s nutrition, for instance), but they’re in a separate area from the “big issues” that men take seriously. And Michelle’s persona as First Lady has been “the cool smart mom”, more relaxed and friendly than Hermione could be.

For all his faults (and boy howdy, there are lots), Bill Clinton was always upfront about how much he respected Hillary’s abilities, how he (a Rhodes Scholar) thought she was the brains of the outfit. During that 1992 campaign, Bill said that by electing him voters would get “two for the price of one” because Hillary would come, too.

In retrospect, “two [Presidents] for the price of one” was a prediction more than an exaggeration, but the implications were way too feminist for a lot of people to deal with. Not just conservatives, either: look at The West Wing, supposedly based on the Clinton White House but with one particular person conspicuous by her absence.

So I think that from the very beginning, Hillary was hated not just for being a woman who “didn’t know her place”, but because Bill himself had implied that she might want to be, and be able to be, President. Eleanor Roosevelt also was the target of vitriolic hate, and like Hillary was called “That Woman” — for being uppity, for political activism, for civil rights. But Eleanor didn’t have the smell of ambition, of the drive for power found in someone who’s seriously going to run for President. That kind of ambition is considered acceptable and even admirable in men, but in women it really goes against the grain of our culture.

I remember talking with Mr Dr Science toward at the end of Bill Clinton’s Presidency (around when Hillary was running for NY Senator) about a tabloid headline I’d just seen in the grocery store. It proclaimed “Hillary’s Secret Plan to Run for President!” — and we laughed and said, what secret? I also remember riding up to an Iraq War protest in early 2003 with a bunch of other rank-and-file Democrats, talking about how we were looking forward to Hillary running for President in 2008.

It’s as though the campaign against Hillary becoming the first female President started in 1992–even though no-one was conscious of it in those terms, yet.

Since I talked to Sprog about this, I’ve concluded that another element was also involved, related to what Anil Dash calls the Law of Fail:

Once a web community has decided to dislike a person, topic, or idea, the conversation will shift from criticizing the idea to become a competition about who can be most scathing in their condemnation.

This isn’t just an online thing: this happens in all kinds of human communities, from 6-year-olds on up. Oddly, I can’t find a term for it in social psychology or sociology. Outgroup derogation misses A) how the outside element doesn’t have to be a group, it can be an individual, an idea, a style, a tool (… an operating system, type of music, clothing, food, car, pet, you name it); and B) the positive feedback cycle of derogation. It’s a kind of performative hatred, almost completely detached from its object. It’s easy and can be a lot of fun, showing off how witty (obscene, insightful, sarcastic, scatological, depending your group’s style) you can be, without attacking any of your fellow group members.

I think performative hatred toward women is a big ingredient in the Trainwreck phenomenon Sady Doyle writes about. You can also see a lot of performative hatred toward things associated with women: Justin Bieber, for instance, or yoga pants. It makes a fun, competitive game out of misogyny, one that both boys & girls can play. … Yeah.

What I noticed pretty early on in Bill Clinton’s first term was that Hillary became a performative hate target for a *lot* of people (not all of them Republicans). It was possible to make a career out of Hillary hatred, even in the periods when she was most popular, and that has continued to this day.

When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her. (And for those of you who think she’s a criminal, a habitual liar, or corrupt: that’s the Hillary Hatred bubble talking, I’m not even going to argue against it any more.) Frankly, it really burns my grits, because I don’t think the first woman to get to the brink of the American Presidency could *not* be hated.

What I and other Hillary supporters see, in contrast, is someone who could endure and get work done in the face of decades of brutal, slimy, ceaseless attacks. We see the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character. But of course toughness, determination, and steely self-control are traditionally more masculine than feminine virtues, so they also disrupt the usual narrative.

It’s interesting, then, that so many journalists & others have talked about Trump’s campaign as being disruptive & driven by a desire for change, while overlooking how Hillary’s candidacy and (probably) Presidency will disrupt our baked-in stories about what is possible in this nation and even in the world. I mean, there a a bunch of other countries where women have been elected leader, but I don’t know if any have done so on such an explicitly feminist platform, before. That’s what I really never expected to see in my lifetime.

I looked for various pictures to go with this post and got really depressed, so I think I’ll just do videos.

Hillary supporter Beyoncé covering “A Change Is Gonna Come” (including all-female chamber orchestra):

“Roar” from the Hillary Campaign, song by supporter Katy Perry:

And later tonight, a livestreamed rally in Philadelphia with both Clintons, both Obamas, and NJ icons Jon Bon Jovi AND Bruce Springsteen.

381 thoughts on “Explaining Hillary Hate”

  1. I’ll be damned if I can explain the animus that HRC seems to inspire.
    I’ll leave it to the folks here who find her frankly despicable to explain it to us all.

    Reply
  2. I’ll be damned if I can explain the animus that HRC seems to inspire.
    I’ll leave it to the folks here who find her frankly despicable to explain it to us all.

    Reply
  3. I’ll be damned if I can explain the animus that HRC seems to inspire.
    I’ll leave it to the folks here who find her frankly despicable to explain it to us all.

    Reply
  4. I have FB friends who froth at the mouth at the mention of her name, but they can give no coherent reason why. I think it is a Pavlovian response from having spent years reading rightwing hate blogs. But that explanation begs the question of why they read the rightwing hate blogs–they must crave hate. They must WANT to hate. I don’t have an explanation for that. These are people who are kind and nice in their relations with their acquaintances. They don;t seem inclined to hate people they know. They do have a pattern of marginalizing people they don’t know, the standard rightwing crap about poor people being druggies, immigrants taking jobs, immigrants voting illegally, refugees imposing Sharia law on Detroit etc. IN other words the Hillary hate seems to be part of a more generalized vision of themselves as victims of Those Other People who are a threat to….something.

    Reply
  5. I have FB friends who froth at the mouth at the mention of her name, but they can give no coherent reason why. I think it is a Pavlovian response from having spent years reading rightwing hate blogs. But that explanation begs the question of why they read the rightwing hate blogs–they must crave hate. They must WANT to hate. I don’t have an explanation for that. These are people who are kind and nice in their relations with their acquaintances. They don;t seem inclined to hate people they know. They do have a pattern of marginalizing people they don’t know, the standard rightwing crap about poor people being druggies, immigrants taking jobs, immigrants voting illegally, refugees imposing Sharia law on Detroit etc. IN other words the Hillary hate seems to be part of a more generalized vision of themselves as victims of Those Other People who are a threat to….something.

    Reply
  6. I have FB friends who froth at the mouth at the mention of her name, but they can give no coherent reason why. I think it is a Pavlovian response from having spent years reading rightwing hate blogs. But that explanation begs the question of why they read the rightwing hate blogs–they must crave hate. They must WANT to hate. I don’t have an explanation for that. These are people who are kind and nice in their relations with their acquaintances. They don;t seem inclined to hate people they know. They do have a pattern of marginalizing people they don’t know, the standard rightwing crap about poor people being druggies, immigrants taking jobs, immigrants voting illegally, refugees imposing Sharia law on Detroit etc. IN other words the Hillary hate seems to be part of a more generalized vision of themselves as victims of Those Other People who are a threat to….something.

    Reply
  7. Well I openly love Hillary. I cried for happy when she was nominated, so I can’t really explain the hatred. Your explanation seems pretty dead on.

    Reply
  8. Well I openly love Hillary. I cried for happy when she was nominated, so I can’t really explain the hatred. Your explanation seems pretty dead on.

    Reply
  9. Well I openly love Hillary. I cried for happy when she was nominated, so I can’t really explain the hatred. Your explanation seems pretty dead on.

    Reply
  10. Why would we bother.
    The premise of the post is there can only possibly be one reason to dislike her. Because she is a woman.
    And any other attempt at pointing out why is the Hillary hatred bubble that wont be discussed.
    Discussion over.

    Reply
  11. Why would we bother.
    The premise of the post is there can only possibly be one reason to dislike her. Because she is a woman.
    And any other attempt at pointing out why is the Hillary hatred bubble that wont be discussed.
    Discussion over.

    Reply
  12. Why would we bother.
    The premise of the post is there can only possibly be one reason to dislike her. Because she is a woman.
    And any other attempt at pointing out why is the Hillary hatred bubble that wont be discussed.
    Discussion over.

    Reply
  13. What I and other Hillary supporters see, in contrast, is someone who could endure and get work done in the face of decades of brutal, slimy, ceaseless attacks. We see the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character
    Yup, that looks like a pretty accurate description to me. And I would add that a lot of the work she would get done is good work: about poverty, women’s and children’s rights, and healthcare.
    I don’t know what others here might mean when they talk “about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else”, but I think that in the context of the fight with Trump they wish the Democratic candidate was less unpopular, so was a safer bet against the most dangerous candidate in recent history. You don’t have to be “looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else [they] think being hated should disqualify her” to want a candidate with fewer unfavourables in this particular election. But yes, for what it’s worth, I think most of your analysis is correct, and that a lot of “Hillary Hatred” is, as well as bog-standard partisan monstering of the opposition, a strange, partly mysogynist, eruption from the collective unconscious.

    Reply
  14. What I and other Hillary supporters see, in contrast, is someone who could endure and get work done in the face of decades of brutal, slimy, ceaseless attacks. We see the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character
    Yup, that looks like a pretty accurate description to me. And I would add that a lot of the work she would get done is good work: about poverty, women’s and children’s rights, and healthcare.
    I don’t know what others here might mean when they talk “about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else”, but I think that in the context of the fight with Trump they wish the Democratic candidate was less unpopular, so was a safer bet against the most dangerous candidate in recent history. You don’t have to be “looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else [they] think being hated should disqualify her” to want a candidate with fewer unfavourables in this particular election. But yes, for what it’s worth, I think most of your analysis is correct, and that a lot of “Hillary Hatred” is, as well as bog-standard partisan monstering of the opposition, a strange, partly mysogynist, eruption from the collective unconscious.

    Reply
  15. What I and other Hillary supporters see, in contrast, is someone who could endure and get work done in the face of decades of brutal, slimy, ceaseless attacks. We see the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character
    Yup, that looks like a pretty accurate description to me. And I would add that a lot of the work she would get done is good work: about poverty, women’s and children’s rights, and healthcare.
    I don’t know what others here might mean when they talk “about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else”, but I think that in the context of the fight with Trump they wish the Democratic candidate was less unpopular, so was a safer bet against the most dangerous candidate in recent history. You don’t have to be “looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else [they] think being hated should disqualify her” to want a candidate with fewer unfavourables in this particular election. But yes, for what it’s worth, I think most of your analysis is correct, and that a lot of “Hillary Hatred” is, as well as bog-standard partisan monstering of the opposition, a strange, partly mysogynist, eruption from the collective unconscious.

    Reply
  16. You are dumb dumb dumb. We hate Hillary for the same reasons we hated John Dillinger, Jack the Ripper, Al Capone, Bernie Madoff. We hate her because she is so callous, abuses her power and gets away with it! Why? How? Has she made a pact with Satan??? How does she get away with crime after crime after crime?????

    Reply
  17. You are dumb dumb dumb. We hate Hillary for the same reasons we hated John Dillinger, Jack the Ripper, Al Capone, Bernie Madoff. We hate her because she is so callous, abuses her power and gets away with it! Why? How? Has she made a pact with Satan??? How does she get away with crime after crime after crime?????

    Reply
  18. You are dumb dumb dumb. We hate Hillary for the same reasons we hated John Dillinger, Jack the Ripper, Al Capone, Bernie Madoff. We hate her because she is so callous, abuses her power and gets away with it! Why? How? Has she made a pact with Satan??? How does she get away with crime after crime after crime?????

    Reply
  19. the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character.
    It’s interesting that pretty much the same could be said of Obama.**
    In both cases, probably for the same reason: when you are the one breaking a major and highly visible barrier, you have to display those characteristics. Even if (see Jackie Robinson) that is not at all your actual personality. If you don’t/can’t behave that way, you don’t survive.
    ** At least Clinton (probably) won’t have to deal with accusations that she wasn’t born here.

    Reply
  20. the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character.
    It’s interesting that pretty much the same could be said of Obama.**
    In both cases, probably for the same reason: when you are the one breaking a major and highly visible barrier, you have to display those characteristics. Even if (see Jackie Robinson) that is not at all your actual personality. If you don’t/can’t behave that way, you don’t survive.
    ** At least Clinton (probably) won’t have to deal with accusations that she wasn’t born here.

    Reply
  21. the toughest, most determined and self-controlled person in American politics, with a truly astounding strength of character.
    It’s interesting that pretty much the same could be said of Obama.**
    In both cases, probably for the same reason: when you are the one breaking a major and highly visible barrier, you have to display those characteristics. Even if (see Jackie Robinson) that is not at all your actual personality. If you don’t/can’t behave that way, you don’t survive.
    ** At least Clinton (probably) won’t have to deal with accusations that she wasn’t born here.

    Reply
  22. Satire? I hope?
    I have FB friends who write stuff exactly like that. And I respond that the reason she ‘gets away with it’ is because she hasn’t been charged with anything because she hasn’t done anything to be charged with or convicted of. Typically people who say she has gotten away with it, don;t have any idea what crimes it is that she should have been charged with. Whne they do come up with something specific, it is something utterly ridiculous like murdering Vince Foster. Or its “emaisl” with no idea what they even think she did wrong with emails. Just something. Hate, first, come up with a justification for hating later.

    Reply
  23. Satire? I hope?
    I have FB friends who write stuff exactly like that. And I respond that the reason she ‘gets away with it’ is because she hasn’t been charged with anything because she hasn’t done anything to be charged with or convicted of. Typically people who say she has gotten away with it, don;t have any idea what crimes it is that she should have been charged with. Whne they do come up with something specific, it is something utterly ridiculous like murdering Vince Foster. Or its “emaisl” with no idea what they even think she did wrong with emails. Just something. Hate, first, come up with a justification for hating later.

    Reply
  24. Satire? I hope?
    I have FB friends who write stuff exactly like that. And I respond that the reason she ‘gets away with it’ is because she hasn’t been charged with anything because she hasn’t done anything to be charged with or convicted of. Typically people who say she has gotten away with it, don;t have any idea what crimes it is that she should have been charged with. Whne they do come up with something specific, it is something utterly ridiculous like murdering Vince Foster. Or its “emaisl” with no idea what they even think she did wrong with emails. Just something. Hate, first, come up with a justification for hating later.

    Reply
  25. While I agree with the thrust of the article, I’m not entirely convinced by the the ‘terrible candidate’ bit.
    I think (with some reservations on foreign policy and excessive secrecy) that she will make a fine president, but there are quite legitimate criticisms to be made of her as a candidate.

    Reply
  26. While I agree with the thrust of the article, I’m not entirely convinced by the the ‘terrible candidate’ bit.
    I think (with some reservations on foreign policy and excessive secrecy) that she will make a fine president, but there are quite legitimate criticisms to be made of her as a candidate.

    Reply
  27. While I agree with the thrust of the article, I’m not entirely convinced by the the ‘terrible candidate’ bit.
    I think (with some reservations on foreign policy and excessive secrecy) that she will make a fine president, but there are quite legitimate criticisms to be made of her as a candidate.

    Reply
  28. And any other attempt at pointing out why is the Hillary hatred bubble that wont be discussed.
    And yet, if you offered up an explanation, preferably one which avoided
    – claims of criminality (not that I am accusing you, personally, of doing so in the past). Claims for which years of Congressional investigations have somehow failed to find evidence sufficient to convince a prosecutor to bring charges.
    – attributing the hatred (which, as noted, started in the early 1990s) to things that she did years later, e.get. as Secretary of State.
    If you did that, I think a lot of us would be interested. I know I would.

    Reply
  29. And any other attempt at pointing out why is the Hillary hatred bubble that wont be discussed.
    And yet, if you offered up an explanation, preferably one which avoided
    – claims of criminality (not that I am accusing you, personally, of doing so in the past). Claims for which years of Congressional investigations have somehow failed to find evidence sufficient to convince a prosecutor to bring charges.
    – attributing the hatred (which, as noted, started in the early 1990s) to things that she did years later, e.get. as Secretary of State.
    If you did that, I think a lot of us would be interested. I know I would.

    Reply
  30. And any other attempt at pointing out why is the Hillary hatred bubble that wont be discussed.
    And yet, if you offered up an explanation, preferably one which avoided
    – claims of criminality (not that I am accusing you, personally, of doing so in the past). Claims for which years of Congressional investigations have somehow failed to find evidence sufficient to convince a prosecutor to bring charges.
    – attributing the hatred (which, as noted, started in the early 1990s) to things that she did years later, e.get. as Secretary of State.
    If you did that, I think a lot of us would be interested. I know I would.

    Reply
  31. I can’t speak for Republicans. But my reliably democratic mother who will be voting for Clinton strongly dislikes her.
    Her reasons: First Lady isn’t a real job. Using it as a resume item looks manipulative to her, and ties into her general dislike of women who ride their husbands coattails. Bill’s constant philandering makes their marriage look even more cynical and political, which means in her mind that Hillary Clinton should be thought of as connected to Bill’s politics, and partially responsible for them- what else could it mean to treat your time as First Lady as a resume item? And Bill Clinton bombed a lot of countries. Then Hillary Clinton became a Senator and supported the Iraq War up until it became unpopular, sending my brother to war where he very nearly died. Then she worked for Barack Obama and bombed more people.
    So she views Hillary Clinton as a very generic Democratic hawk who used a cheap way to get ahead and into the public spotlight. My mother would have preferred virtually any other Democrat, and is taking solace in the chance that maybe age and unpopularity will convince Clinton not to run again in 2020. I doubt she’s right about that.
    But she’ll vote Clinton because she’s not stupid and can see what Trump is. And because she’s been voting Denocratic since at least as long as I’ve been old enough to talk to her about it, and prefers the Democratic position to the Republican on virtually everything.

    Reply
  32. I can’t speak for Republicans. But my reliably democratic mother who will be voting for Clinton strongly dislikes her.
    Her reasons: First Lady isn’t a real job. Using it as a resume item looks manipulative to her, and ties into her general dislike of women who ride their husbands coattails. Bill’s constant philandering makes their marriage look even more cynical and political, which means in her mind that Hillary Clinton should be thought of as connected to Bill’s politics, and partially responsible for them- what else could it mean to treat your time as First Lady as a resume item? And Bill Clinton bombed a lot of countries. Then Hillary Clinton became a Senator and supported the Iraq War up until it became unpopular, sending my brother to war where he very nearly died. Then she worked for Barack Obama and bombed more people.
    So she views Hillary Clinton as a very generic Democratic hawk who used a cheap way to get ahead and into the public spotlight. My mother would have preferred virtually any other Democrat, and is taking solace in the chance that maybe age and unpopularity will convince Clinton not to run again in 2020. I doubt she’s right about that.
    But she’ll vote Clinton because she’s not stupid and can see what Trump is. And because she’s been voting Denocratic since at least as long as I’ve been old enough to talk to her about it, and prefers the Democratic position to the Republican on virtually everything.

    Reply
  33. I can’t speak for Republicans. But my reliably democratic mother who will be voting for Clinton strongly dislikes her.
    Her reasons: First Lady isn’t a real job. Using it as a resume item looks manipulative to her, and ties into her general dislike of women who ride their husbands coattails. Bill’s constant philandering makes their marriage look even more cynical and political, which means in her mind that Hillary Clinton should be thought of as connected to Bill’s politics, and partially responsible for them- what else could it mean to treat your time as First Lady as a resume item? And Bill Clinton bombed a lot of countries. Then Hillary Clinton became a Senator and supported the Iraq War up until it became unpopular, sending my brother to war where he very nearly died. Then she worked for Barack Obama and bombed more people.
    So she views Hillary Clinton as a very generic Democratic hawk who used a cheap way to get ahead and into the public spotlight. My mother would have preferred virtually any other Democrat, and is taking solace in the chance that maybe age and unpopularity will convince Clinton not to run again in 2020. I doubt she’s right about that.
    But she’ll vote Clinton because she’s not stupid and can see what Trump is. And because she’s been voting Denocratic since at least as long as I’ve been old enough to talk to her about it, and prefers the Democratic position to the Republican on virtually everything.

    Reply
  34. “Though Iceland is about the size of a small town in population, so I’m not sure if that counts.”
    Iceland should be an inspiration for us all. Jailing banksters, electing explicitly feminist PMs, having a huge statue of Santa taking a dump in the SagaMuseum, all that stuff.

    Reply
  35. “Though Iceland is about the size of a small town in population, so I’m not sure if that counts.”
    Iceland should be an inspiration for us all. Jailing banksters, electing explicitly feminist PMs, having a huge statue of Santa taking a dump in the SagaMuseum, all that stuff.

    Reply
  36. “Though Iceland is about the size of a small town in population, so I’m not sure if that counts.”
    Iceland should be an inspiration for us all. Jailing banksters, electing explicitly feminist PMs, having a huge statue of Santa taking a dump in the SagaMuseum, all that stuff.

    Reply
  37. wj,
    Interestingly, my hate for Hillary, as I recall, did not start that far back. In fact, I remember clearly thinking Bill screwed her in more ways than one. He took the longest shot item on his agenda, got her to run with it, and then kind of left her hanging out. Then basically blamed her for failing to get the initiative passed, while he took credit for whatever he could and fooled around in the WH. I remember hoping she made him pay the price for her embarrassment at the end of his term.
    I remember thinking it was cool, but didn’t effect me, that she got to run for the Senate herself, because by that time I was pretty sure she had more ambition than her husband so she should be the one running.
    The stuff I hate her for is all much more recent, and are her actions not her sex.

    Reply
  38. wj,
    Interestingly, my hate for Hillary, as I recall, did not start that far back. In fact, I remember clearly thinking Bill screwed her in more ways than one. He took the longest shot item on his agenda, got her to run with it, and then kind of left her hanging out. Then basically blamed her for failing to get the initiative passed, while he took credit for whatever he could and fooled around in the WH. I remember hoping she made him pay the price for her embarrassment at the end of his term.
    I remember thinking it was cool, but didn’t effect me, that she got to run for the Senate herself, because by that time I was pretty sure she had more ambition than her husband so she should be the one running.
    The stuff I hate her for is all much more recent, and are her actions not her sex.

    Reply
  39. wj,
    Interestingly, my hate for Hillary, as I recall, did not start that far back. In fact, I remember clearly thinking Bill screwed her in more ways than one. He took the longest shot item on his agenda, got her to run with it, and then kind of left her hanging out. Then basically blamed her for failing to get the initiative passed, while he took credit for whatever he could and fooled around in the WH. I remember hoping she made him pay the price for her embarrassment at the end of his term.
    I remember thinking it was cool, but didn’t effect me, that she got to run for the Senate herself, because by that time I was pretty sure she had more ambition than her husband so she should be the one running.
    The stuff I hate her for is all much more recent, and are her actions not her sex.

    Reply
  40. I don’t really see the Hillary hate as misogynistic. The Republican party hs used smears and lies as a primary campaign tactic for decades now. They do it for two reasons: fear and hate brought in people who had either previously voted Democrats (the Deep South) or previously didn’t vote at all, and they need a distraction since they cannot run on their policy or legislative initiatives. So smearing and lying is what they do and they do it in every race against every Democrat. It’s no different than there use of fear and hate of gay people, poor people, refugees, immigrants, whoever is handy. It’s a tactic.
    The tactic works because the MSN is complicit. A headline appeared on my AOL a few days ago: Clinton Email Scandal New Twist. That’s a headline that convicts her without even saying what it is that she should be convicted of. The whole email witch hunt was covered that way and thet’s why there was a witch hunt in the first pace: to get headlines that put the words “Clinton, email investigation scandal” out there over and over and over. Here’s a link to an article which I think gives a good explanation for the Hilary hate:
    http://washingtonmonthly.com/2016/11/07/republicans-rely-on-truthiness-to-attack-clinton/

    Reply
  41. I don’t really see the Hillary hate as misogynistic. The Republican party hs used smears and lies as a primary campaign tactic for decades now. They do it for two reasons: fear and hate brought in people who had either previously voted Democrats (the Deep South) or previously didn’t vote at all, and they need a distraction since they cannot run on their policy or legislative initiatives. So smearing and lying is what they do and they do it in every race against every Democrat. It’s no different than there use of fear and hate of gay people, poor people, refugees, immigrants, whoever is handy. It’s a tactic.
    The tactic works because the MSN is complicit. A headline appeared on my AOL a few days ago: Clinton Email Scandal New Twist. That’s a headline that convicts her without even saying what it is that she should be convicted of. The whole email witch hunt was covered that way and thet’s why there was a witch hunt in the first pace: to get headlines that put the words “Clinton, email investigation scandal” out there over and over and over. Here’s a link to an article which I think gives a good explanation for the Hilary hate:
    http://washingtonmonthly.com/2016/11/07/republicans-rely-on-truthiness-to-attack-clinton/

    Reply
  42. I don’t really see the Hillary hate as misogynistic. The Republican party hs used smears and lies as a primary campaign tactic for decades now. They do it for two reasons: fear and hate brought in people who had either previously voted Democrats (the Deep South) or previously didn’t vote at all, and they need a distraction since they cannot run on their policy or legislative initiatives. So smearing and lying is what they do and they do it in every race against every Democrat. It’s no different than there use of fear and hate of gay people, poor people, refugees, immigrants, whoever is handy. It’s a tactic.
    The tactic works because the MSN is complicit. A headline appeared on my AOL a few days ago: Clinton Email Scandal New Twist. That’s a headline that convicts her without even saying what it is that she should be convicted of. The whole email witch hunt was covered that way and thet’s why there was a witch hunt in the first pace: to get headlines that put the words “Clinton, email investigation scandal” out there over and over and over. Here’s a link to an article which I think gives a good explanation for the Hilary hate:
    http://washingtonmonthly.com/2016/11/07/republicans-rely-on-truthiness-to-attack-clinton/

    Reply
  43. But my reliably democratic mother who will be voting for Clinton strongly dislikes her.
    Her reasons: First Lady isn’t a real job. Using it as a resume item looks manipulative to her, and ties into her general dislike of women who ride their husbands coattails. Bill’s constant philandering makes their marriage look even more cynical and political, which means in her mind that Hillary Clinton should be thought of as connected to Bill’s politics, and partially responsible for them- what else could it mean to treat your time as First Lady as a resume item? And Bill Clinton bombed a lot of countries. Then Hillary Clinton became a Senator and supported the Iraq War up until it became unpopular, sending my brother to war where he very nearly died. Then she worked for Barack Obama and bombed more people.

    A couple of things here, and since you’re speaking for your mother, it’s hard for me to get too ferocious, but forgive me if I do,
    A lot of friends I have, who are women, and are my age (or within 10 years either way, and I am 60), have very specific and different views about how women “should be”. Some of this has to do with the professions they pursued. For example, many are lawyers. Some worked in private practice, some in legal publishing, and some at corporations. A nurse, who pursued a PhD, and is now a professor of nursing. There are librarians, artists, administrators, IT folks, etc. Lots of different people who began work at a time when women had new opportunities, but were also expected to take them – while having a family, in some cases – kids, marriage, etc,
    A lot of the choices that people make in their own lives affect their opinions about other people, and I think that Hillary Clinton is an exaggerated object of that, especially for older women who have had to justify their own choices in a way that was somewhat different than many of their own mothers.

    Reply
  44. But my reliably democratic mother who will be voting for Clinton strongly dislikes her.
    Her reasons: First Lady isn’t a real job. Using it as a resume item looks manipulative to her, and ties into her general dislike of women who ride their husbands coattails. Bill’s constant philandering makes their marriage look even more cynical and political, which means in her mind that Hillary Clinton should be thought of as connected to Bill’s politics, and partially responsible for them- what else could it mean to treat your time as First Lady as a resume item? And Bill Clinton bombed a lot of countries. Then Hillary Clinton became a Senator and supported the Iraq War up until it became unpopular, sending my brother to war where he very nearly died. Then she worked for Barack Obama and bombed more people.

    A couple of things here, and since you’re speaking for your mother, it’s hard for me to get too ferocious, but forgive me if I do,
    A lot of friends I have, who are women, and are my age (or within 10 years either way, and I am 60), have very specific and different views about how women “should be”. Some of this has to do with the professions they pursued. For example, many are lawyers. Some worked in private practice, some in legal publishing, and some at corporations. A nurse, who pursued a PhD, and is now a professor of nursing. There are librarians, artists, administrators, IT folks, etc. Lots of different people who began work at a time when women had new opportunities, but were also expected to take them – while having a family, in some cases – kids, marriage, etc,
    A lot of the choices that people make in their own lives affect their opinions about other people, and I think that Hillary Clinton is an exaggerated object of that, especially for older women who have had to justify their own choices in a way that was somewhat different than many of their own mothers.

    Reply
  45. But my reliably democratic mother who will be voting for Clinton strongly dislikes her.
    Her reasons: First Lady isn’t a real job. Using it as a resume item looks manipulative to her, and ties into her general dislike of women who ride their husbands coattails. Bill’s constant philandering makes their marriage look even more cynical and political, which means in her mind that Hillary Clinton should be thought of as connected to Bill’s politics, and partially responsible for them- what else could it mean to treat your time as First Lady as a resume item? And Bill Clinton bombed a lot of countries. Then Hillary Clinton became a Senator and supported the Iraq War up until it became unpopular, sending my brother to war where he very nearly died. Then she worked for Barack Obama and bombed more people.

    A couple of things here, and since you’re speaking for your mother, it’s hard for me to get too ferocious, but forgive me if I do,
    A lot of friends I have, who are women, and are my age (or within 10 years either way, and I am 60), have very specific and different views about how women “should be”. Some of this has to do with the professions they pursued. For example, many are lawyers. Some worked in private practice, some in legal publishing, and some at corporations. A nurse, who pursued a PhD, and is now a professor of nursing. There are librarians, artists, administrators, IT folks, etc. Lots of different people who began work at a time when women had new opportunities, but were also expected to take them – while having a family, in some cases – kids, marriage, etc,
    A lot of the choices that people make in their own lives affect their opinions about other people, and I think that Hillary Clinton is an exaggerated object of that, especially for older women who have had to justify their own choices in a way that was somewhat different than many of their own mothers.

    Reply
  46. oddly enough, my personal take on HRC resembles that of Patrick’s mother.
    I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary. And I thought their subsequent move to NY and her run for Senate was transparently opportunistic.
    Then, it turned out that she was a committed and hard-working Senator, and subsequently a committed and hard-working Secretary of State.
    I don’t agree with a lot of the policies she’s promoted over the years, but I have also acquired a respect for her diligence, patience, and work ethic.
    IMO she’s a serious person, in it to do good.
    It’s worth noting that the tradition of people following their spouses or other family members into public service is a very long and creditable one.

    Reply
  47. oddly enough, my personal take on HRC resembles that of Patrick’s mother.
    I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary. And I thought their subsequent move to NY and her run for Senate was transparently opportunistic.
    Then, it turned out that she was a committed and hard-working Senator, and subsequently a committed and hard-working Secretary of State.
    I don’t agree with a lot of the policies she’s promoted over the years, but I have also acquired a respect for her diligence, patience, and work ethic.
    IMO she’s a serious person, in it to do good.
    It’s worth noting that the tradition of people following their spouses or other family members into public service is a very long and creditable one.

    Reply
  48. oddly enough, my personal take on HRC resembles that of Patrick’s mother.
    I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary. And I thought their subsequent move to NY and her run for Senate was transparently opportunistic.
    Then, it turned out that she was a committed and hard-working Senator, and subsequently a committed and hard-working Secretary of State.
    I don’t agree with a lot of the policies she’s promoted over the years, but I have also acquired a respect for her diligence, patience, and work ethic.
    IMO she’s a serious person, in it to do good.
    It’s worth noting that the tradition of people following their spouses or other family members into public service is a very long and creditable one.

    Reply
  49. “It’s worth noting that the tradition of people following their spouses or other family members into public service is a very long and creditable one.”
    This strikes me as an important point of departure.
    I don’t see her as being in public life for public service. She has made a career of using her public service for extraordinary personal gain.
    I think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.
    I see her as a serious person, in it for her gain.

    Reply
  50. “It’s worth noting that the tradition of people following their spouses or other family members into public service is a very long and creditable one.”
    This strikes me as an important point of departure.
    I don’t see her as being in public life for public service. She has made a career of using her public service for extraordinary personal gain.
    I think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.
    I see her as a serious person, in it for her gain.

    Reply
  51. “It’s worth noting that the tradition of people following their spouses or other family members into public service is a very long and creditable one.”
    This strikes me as an important point of departure.
    I don’t see her as being in public life for public service. She has made a career of using her public service for extraordinary personal gain.
    I think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.
    I see her as a serious person, in it for her gain.

    Reply
  52. I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary. And I thought their subsequent move to NY and her run for Senate was transparently opportunistic.
    I guess I never really resented her FLOTUS “role”. It was clear that she had been an accomplished activist and lawyer, and that her marriage to someone devoted to public life left her in a situation where she needed to use those talents in a way that wasn’t a constant conflict of interest (as law firm work would have been). Also, it’s traditional to reside with one’s spouse. A 1950’s wife role was not what she was going to do, so having been given a policy project, which wasn’t far removed from her prior interests, seemed reasonable to me.
    It was clear by the end of Clinton’s presidency that she was very popular among many Democrats. That’s when many of my own friends talked about longing for her to run. By 2008, when she did run, though, I wasn’t ready for her – partly because of the dynasty issue. Obama was such an amazing candidate. But Clinton’s work for Obama, and her obvious willingness to step up convinced me that she would be great. I believe that, and hope that she can succeed, despite the Republican hate machine.

    Reply
  53. I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary. And I thought their subsequent move to NY and her run for Senate was transparently opportunistic.
    I guess I never really resented her FLOTUS “role”. It was clear that she had been an accomplished activist and lawyer, and that her marriage to someone devoted to public life left her in a situation where she needed to use those talents in a way that wasn’t a constant conflict of interest (as law firm work would have been). Also, it’s traditional to reside with one’s spouse. A 1950’s wife role was not what she was going to do, so having been given a policy project, which wasn’t far removed from her prior interests, seemed reasonable to me.
    It was clear by the end of Clinton’s presidency that she was very popular among many Democrats. That’s when many of my own friends talked about longing for her to run. By 2008, when she did run, though, I wasn’t ready for her – partly because of the dynasty issue. Obama was such an amazing candidate. But Clinton’s work for Obama, and her obvious willingness to step up convinced me that she would be great. I believe that, and hope that she can succeed, despite the Republican hate machine.

    Reply
  54. I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary. And I thought their subsequent move to NY and her run for Senate was transparently opportunistic.
    I guess I never really resented her FLOTUS “role”. It was clear that she had been an accomplished activist and lawyer, and that her marriage to someone devoted to public life left her in a situation where she needed to use those talents in a way that wasn’t a constant conflict of interest (as law firm work would have been). Also, it’s traditional to reside with one’s spouse. A 1950’s wife role was not what she was going to do, so having been given a policy project, which wasn’t far removed from her prior interests, seemed reasonable to me.
    It was clear by the end of Clinton’s presidency that she was very popular among many Democrats. That’s when many of my own friends talked about longing for her to run. By 2008, when she did run, though, I wasn’t ready for her – partly because of the dynasty issue. Obama was such an amazing candidate. But Clinton’s work for Obama, and her obvious willingness to step up convinced me that she would be great. I believe that, and hope that she can succeed, despite the Republican hate machine.

    Reply
  55. I think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.
    The first time in history Republicans can’t stand the fact that people make money. Clinton Rules require that the Clintons become St. Francis of Assisi. No problem being Trump, screwing your own workers, defrauding students, licensing your identity. All good!

    Reply
  56. I think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.
    The first time in history Republicans can’t stand the fact that people make money. Clinton Rules require that the Clintons become St. Francis of Assisi. No problem being Trump, screwing your own workers, defrauding students, licensing your identity. All good!

    Reply
  57. I think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.
    The first time in history Republicans can’t stand the fact that people make money. Clinton Rules require that the Clintons become St. Francis of Assisi. No problem being Trump, screwing your own workers, defrauding students, licensing your identity. All good!

    Reply
  58. It took me a long time to get over HRC’s support for the war. I’m still not really over it. I wanted Bernie to be our candidate. I have a big fear that HRC will get us in deeper in Syria.
    However given that Trump is the alternative and his approach to foreign affairs (what would Putin do?) is considerably worse…

    Reply
  59. It took me a long time to get over HRC’s support for the war. I’m still not really over it. I wanted Bernie to be our candidate. I have a big fear that HRC will get us in deeper in Syria.
    However given that Trump is the alternative and his approach to foreign affairs (what would Putin do?) is considerably worse…

    Reply
  60. It took me a long time to get over HRC’s support for the war. I’m still not really over it. I wanted Bernie to be our candidate. I have a big fear that HRC will get us in deeper in Syria.
    However given that Trump is the alternative and his approach to foreign affairs (what would Putin do?) is considerably worse…

    Reply
  61. It took me a long time to get over HRC’s support for the war.
    That was one reason why I preferred Obama. The Iraq war was a disaster. But I forgave Kerry, and I’ve forgiven her.

    Reply
  62. It took me a long time to get over HRC’s support for the war.
    That was one reason why I preferred Obama. The Iraq war was a disaster. But I forgave Kerry, and I’ve forgiven her.

    Reply
  63. It took me a long time to get over HRC’s support for the war.
    That was one reason why I preferred Obama. The Iraq war was a disaster. But I forgave Kerry, and I’ve forgiven her.

    Reply
  64. If I may ramble a bit…
    My father used to tell a story about the test for officers candidate school. One question provided a detailed bill of materials, a topo map, and asked the question, “As an officer, how would you build a bridge over this small river?” Enough space was provided to allow for extremely detailed answers. The correct answer for OCS was, “Sargent, take these men and this pile of sh*t and build a bridge over the river. I’ll be back in four hours.”
    Resentment of superior intelligence seems to be a general human thing. I say that as both someone who was for years the smartest person in the room and on the receiving end of that resentment, and as a manager who had to work like hell to defuse the resentment within groups. Yes, there’s a whole lot more resentment when the smartest person is a woman. Generally, the only way to succeed is for the really smart person to become a resource for the group. “Yeah, she’s a dork, but she’s our dork and we’re a better group because she’s here.”
    Hillary Clinton is trying to pull off the hardest trick of all: win the top management job (where she’s managing managers) while not covering up that she’s the smartest person in the room, with a better command of the details, etc. That she’s about to do it is amazing.
    The success of her Presidency, though, will be determined by whether she can let go of being the smartest person in order to be the best manager of smart people. I admit that I’m not confident about that, and it has nothing to do with her sex.

    Reply
  65. If I may ramble a bit…
    My father used to tell a story about the test for officers candidate school. One question provided a detailed bill of materials, a topo map, and asked the question, “As an officer, how would you build a bridge over this small river?” Enough space was provided to allow for extremely detailed answers. The correct answer for OCS was, “Sargent, take these men and this pile of sh*t and build a bridge over the river. I’ll be back in four hours.”
    Resentment of superior intelligence seems to be a general human thing. I say that as both someone who was for years the smartest person in the room and on the receiving end of that resentment, and as a manager who had to work like hell to defuse the resentment within groups. Yes, there’s a whole lot more resentment when the smartest person is a woman. Generally, the only way to succeed is for the really smart person to become a resource for the group. “Yeah, she’s a dork, but she’s our dork and we’re a better group because she’s here.”
    Hillary Clinton is trying to pull off the hardest trick of all: win the top management job (where she’s managing managers) while not covering up that she’s the smartest person in the room, with a better command of the details, etc. That she’s about to do it is amazing.
    The success of her Presidency, though, will be determined by whether she can let go of being the smartest person in order to be the best manager of smart people. I admit that I’m not confident about that, and it has nothing to do with her sex.

    Reply
  66. If I may ramble a bit…
    My father used to tell a story about the test for officers candidate school. One question provided a detailed bill of materials, a topo map, and asked the question, “As an officer, how would you build a bridge over this small river?” Enough space was provided to allow for extremely detailed answers. The correct answer for OCS was, “Sargent, take these men and this pile of sh*t and build a bridge over the river. I’ll be back in four hours.”
    Resentment of superior intelligence seems to be a general human thing. I say that as both someone who was for years the smartest person in the room and on the receiving end of that resentment, and as a manager who had to work like hell to defuse the resentment within groups. Yes, there’s a whole lot more resentment when the smartest person is a woman. Generally, the only way to succeed is for the really smart person to become a resource for the group. “Yeah, she’s a dork, but she’s our dork and we’re a better group because she’s here.”
    Hillary Clinton is trying to pull off the hardest trick of all: win the top management job (where she’s managing managers) while not covering up that she’s the smartest person in the room, with a better command of the details, etc. That she’s about to do it is amazing.
    The success of her Presidency, though, will be determined by whether she can let go of being the smartest person in order to be the best manager of smart people. I admit that I’m not confident about that, and it has nothing to do with her sex.

    Reply
  67. The stuff I hate her for is all much more recent, and are her actions not her sex.
    Thanks, Marty. Care to share a couple of bullet items on those causes? Please — I really was serious when I said I would be interested.

    Reply
  68. The stuff I hate her for is all much more recent, and are her actions not her sex.
    Thanks, Marty. Care to share a couple of bullet items on those causes? Please — I really was serious when I said I would be interested.

    Reply
  69. The stuff I hate her for is all much more recent, and are her actions not her sex.
    Thanks, Marty. Care to share a couple of bullet items on those causes? Please — I really was serious when I said I would be interested.

    Reply
  70. “think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.”
    well, the clintons certainly do like to make money.
    what I don’t see is how that makes them, in any way, unusual. specifically, I don’t see how that makes them different in any way from people who you, personally, have frequently been very happy to defend.
    “Clinton rules” is a reality. they are held to a different bar than anyone else imaginable.
    that’s the thing that I don’t get.

    Reply
  71. “think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.”
    well, the clintons certainly do like to make money.
    what I don’t see is how that makes them, in any way, unusual. specifically, I don’t see how that makes them different in any way from people who you, personally, have frequently been very happy to defend.
    “Clinton rules” is a reality. they are held to a different bar than anyone else imaginable.
    that’s the thing that I don’t get.

    Reply
  72. “think it turned out her ambition merged nicely with their greed.”
    well, the clintons certainly do like to make money.
    what I don’t see is how that makes them, in any way, unusual. specifically, I don’t see how that makes them different in any way from people who you, personally, have frequently been very happy to defend.
    “Clinton rules” is a reality. they are held to a different bar than anyone else imaginable.
    that’s the thing that I don’t get.

    Reply
  73. Oh hell, if Sanders has won the primary, think how this malignant Republican crew of lying scum would be going after him.
    He’d be Bernie Gulag Fagin Shylock the Merchant of Menace Stalin. It doesn’t take too long for David Bossie, Roger Stone to fire up the hate machine to ruin people.
    And his Jew, b*tch, c*nt, lesbian, socialist wife would have been on the horror show ride of her life at the hands of these thugs.
    We’d have political ads running daily intimating darkly that shadowy, hooked-nosed pick pockets would be emptying our bank accounts and imposing a Rothschild world system of usury.
    Then Marty would come in and explain daintily that he had only turned on Sanders recently for his mention of being a little tougher on Israel and what that has to do with any of this other rancid killing hate escapes him.
    Spare me this sh*t. I know these people.

    Reply
  74. Oh hell, if Sanders has won the primary, think how this malignant Republican crew of lying scum would be going after him.
    He’d be Bernie Gulag Fagin Shylock the Merchant of Menace Stalin. It doesn’t take too long for David Bossie, Roger Stone to fire up the hate machine to ruin people.
    And his Jew, b*tch, c*nt, lesbian, socialist wife would have been on the horror show ride of her life at the hands of these thugs.
    We’d have political ads running daily intimating darkly that shadowy, hooked-nosed pick pockets would be emptying our bank accounts and imposing a Rothschild world system of usury.
    Then Marty would come in and explain daintily that he had only turned on Sanders recently for his mention of being a little tougher on Israel and what that has to do with any of this other rancid killing hate escapes him.
    Spare me this sh*t. I know these people.

    Reply
  75. Oh hell, if Sanders has won the primary, think how this malignant Republican crew of lying scum would be going after him.
    He’d be Bernie Gulag Fagin Shylock the Merchant of Menace Stalin. It doesn’t take too long for David Bossie, Roger Stone to fire up the hate machine to ruin people.
    And his Jew, b*tch, c*nt, lesbian, socialist wife would have been on the horror show ride of her life at the hands of these thugs.
    We’d have political ads running daily intimating darkly that shadowy, hooked-nosed pick pockets would be emptying our bank accounts and imposing a Rothschild world system of usury.
    Then Marty would come in and explain daintily that he had only turned on Sanders recently for his mention of being a little tougher on Israel and what that has to do with any of this other rancid killing hate escapes him.
    Spare me this sh*t. I know these people.

    Reply
  76. I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary.
    Russell, do you even realize how silly that sounds? Yes, the nation (albeit not with my vote) elected Bill Clinton. But Presidents routinely and necessarily pick others to draft and implement national policy. The fact that, in Hilary Clinton’s case, the person he picked happened to be married to him is kinda irrelevant.
    At best, you are (pardon me, but it seems quite possible) making the rather sexist assumption that the First Lady should restrict herself to First Lady stuff, and not be allowed to do what any other woman not married to the President could do. What other reason is there not to have her involved?

    Reply
  77. I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary.
    Russell, do you even realize how silly that sounds? Yes, the nation (albeit not with my vote) elected Bill Clinton. But Presidents routinely and necessarily pick others to draft and implement national policy. The fact that, in Hilary Clinton’s case, the person he picked happened to be married to him is kinda irrelevant.
    At best, you are (pardon me, but it seems quite possible) making the rather sexist assumption that the First Lady should restrict herself to First Lady stuff, and not be allowed to do what any other woman not married to the President could do. What other reason is there not to have her involved?

    Reply
  78. I was not in favor of her deep involvement with national policy while FLOTUS – the nation elected Bill, not Hilary.
    Russell, do you even realize how silly that sounds? Yes, the nation (albeit not with my vote) elected Bill Clinton. But Presidents routinely and necessarily pick others to draft and implement national policy. The fact that, in Hilary Clinton’s case, the person he picked happened to be married to him is kinda irrelevant.
    At best, you are (pardon me, but it seems quite possible) making the rather sexist assumption that the First Lady should restrict herself to First Lady stuff, and not be allowed to do what any other woman not married to the President could do. What other reason is there not to have her involved?

    Reply
  79. The Clintons are held to a different standard. Just look at how the media fell for Comey’s announcement about more emails–and compare that to the coverage of Trump’s upcoming RICO trail (what coverage?), the court order to pay his creditors (what coverage?), his upcoming appearance as a material witness in a fraud trail (what coverage?), his missing taxes (just imagine how HRC’s taxes would have been covered if she had not been forthcoming with them), the fine from the IRS for misusing his foundation money (what coverage/) and so on. Or the contrasting charities: Trump claimed that she was using her charity for pay-for-play and his remarks got repeated and immediately became an article of faith in teh rightwing media. A couple of reporters for AP tried to earn some stripes for themselves by “proving” that she was abusing her foundation; the fact that they found nothing didn;t stop them from getting a story published which implied nefarious behavior.
    If it hadn’t been for that Newsweek reporter who found real dirt, tons of it including pay-for-play in the Trump Foundation, teh narrative on HRC’s foundation would have been the same as for the emails: a non-issue turned into a scandal and a smear.
    The sad thing is that the kind of work done by the Newsweek reporter is rare.

    Reply
  80. The Clintons are held to a different standard. Just look at how the media fell for Comey’s announcement about more emails–and compare that to the coverage of Trump’s upcoming RICO trail (what coverage?), the court order to pay his creditors (what coverage?), his upcoming appearance as a material witness in a fraud trail (what coverage?), his missing taxes (just imagine how HRC’s taxes would have been covered if she had not been forthcoming with them), the fine from the IRS for misusing his foundation money (what coverage/) and so on. Or the contrasting charities: Trump claimed that she was using her charity for pay-for-play and his remarks got repeated and immediately became an article of faith in teh rightwing media. A couple of reporters for AP tried to earn some stripes for themselves by “proving” that she was abusing her foundation; the fact that they found nothing didn;t stop them from getting a story published which implied nefarious behavior.
    If it hadn’t been for that Newsweek reporter who found real dirt, tons of it including pay-for-play in the Trump Foundation, teh narrative on HRC’s foundation would have been the same as for the emails: a non-issue turned into a scandal and a smear.
    The sad thing is that the kind of work done by the Newsweek reporter is rare.

    Reply
  81. The Clintons are held to a different standard. Just look at how the media fell for Comey’s announcement about more emails–and compare that to the coverage of Trump’s upcoming RICO trail (what coverage?), the court order to pay his creditors (what coverage?), his upcoming appearance as a material witness in a fraud trail (what coverage?), his missing taxes (just imagine how HRC’s taxes would have been covered if she had not been forthcoming with them), the fine from the IRS for misusing his foundation money (what coverage/) and so on. Or the contrasting charities: Trump claimed that she was using her charity for pay-for-play and his remarks got repeated and immediately became an article of faith in teh rightwing media. A couple of reporters for AP tried to earn some stripes for themselves by “proving” that she was abusing her foundation; the fact that they found nothing didn;t stop them from getting a story published which implied nefarious behavior.
    If it hadn’t been for that Newsweek reporter who found real dirt, tons of it including pay-for-play in the Trump Foundation, teh narrative on HRC’s foundation would have been the same as for the emails: a non-issue turned into a scandal and a smear.
    The sad thing is that the kind of work done by the Newsweek reporter is rare.

    Reply
  82. “What other reason is there not to have her involved?”
    Because I didn’t vote for her, I voted for Bill.
    Because other people who the President might enlist to draft and implement policy aren’t going to bed with him or her. Or, shouldn’t be.
    I absolutely think that the spouse of an executive – whether political, corporate, whatever – engaging in substantive decision making should be held to much closer scrutiny than any other person of the same gender would.
    There is nothing sexist about it, because I’d feel the same way if the genders were reversed. Should Clinton win, I would not want Bill getting hands-on with national policy.
    I voted for Hilary this time around, not for him.
    Ask yourself what you would think as a hypothetical investor in (for example) Google if it emerged that CEO Sundar Pichai was tasking his wife Anjali with major strategic planning initiatives.
    To follow up on the “politicians getting rich” thing, feast your eyes on this.
    https://ballotpedia.org/Changes_in_Net_Worth_of_U.S._Senators_and_Representatives_(Personal_Gain_Index)
    I completely agree that the tendency of national office holders to – quel surprise – find themselves stinking rich is less than seemly.
    I don’t understand what makes HRC uniquely bad.
    She seems kind of middle of the road to me.

    Reply
  83. “What other reason is there not to have her involved?”
    Because I didn’t vote for her, I voted for Bill.
    Because other people who the President might enlist to draft and implement policy aren’t going to bed with him or her. Or, shouldn’t be.
    I absolutely think that the spouse of an executive – whether political, corporate, whatever – engaging in substantive decision making should be held to much closer scrutiny than any other person of the same gender would.
    There is nothing sexist about it, because I’d feel the same way if the genders were reversed. Should Clinton win, I would not want Bill getting hands-on with national policy.
    I voted for Hilary this time around, not for him.
    Ask yourself what you would think as a hypothetical investor in (for example) Google if it emerged that CEO Sundar Pichai was tasking his wife Anjali with major strategic planning initiatives.
    To follow up on the “politicians getting rich” thing, feast your eyes on this.
    https://ballotpedia.org/Changes_in_Net_Worth_of_U.S._Senators_and_Representatives_(Personal_Gain_Index)
    I completely agree that the tendency of national office holders to – quel surprise – find themselves stinking rich is less than seemly.
    I don’t understand what makes HRC uniquely bad.
    She seems kind of middle of the road to me.

    Reply
  84. “What other reason is there not to have her involved?”
    Because I didn’t vote for her, I voted for Bill.
    Because other people who the President might enlist to draft and implement policy aren’t going to bed with him or her. Or, shouldn’t be.
    I absolutely think that the spouse of an executive – whether political, corporate, whatever – engaging in substantive decision making should be held to much closer scrutiny than any other person of the same gender would.
    There is nothing sexist about it, because I’d feel the same way if the genders were reversed. Should Clinton win, I would not want Bill getting hands-on with national policy.
    I voted for Hilary this time around, not for him.
    Ask yourself what you would think as a hypothetical investor in (for example) Google if it emerged that CEO Sundar Pichai was tasking his wife Anjali with major strategic planning initiatives.
    To follow up on the “politicians getting rich” thing, feast your eyes on this.
    https://ballotpedia.org/Changes_in_Net_Worth_of_U.S._Senators_and_Representatives_(Personal_Gain_Index)
    I completely agree that the tendency of national office holders to – quel surprise – find themselves stinking rich is less than seemly.
    I don’t understand what makes HRC uniquely bad.
    She seems kind of middle of the road to me.

    Reply
  85. I really, REALLY don’t want Bill Clinton getting hands on with policy if/when Hillary Clinton wins office. We have term limits. It may not be a technical violation for a former President to get in close with an incoming President and take on a policy role, but its certainly against the spirit of the rule, and I’m old fashioned enough to care.

    Reply
  86. I really, REALLY don’t want Bill Clinton getting hands on with policy if/when Hillary Clinton wins office. We have term limits. It may not be a technical violation for a former President to get in close with an incoming President and take on a policy role, but its certainly against the spirit of the rule, and I’m old fashioned enough to care.

    Reply
  87. I really, REALLY don’t want Bill Clinton getting hands on with policy if/when Hillary Clinton wins office. We have term limits. It may not be a technical violation for a former President to get in close with an incoming President and take on a policy role, but its certainly against the spirit of the rule, and I’m old fashioned enough to care.

    Reply
  88. I wrote a long response and my session expired , whatever that means, so that masterpiece of saliva filled invective is lost. No it wasn’t like that.
    Second version. The fact that there is a lot of misogyny in many Clinton critics doesn’t mean all harsh criticism is therefore misogynistic. Also, Clinton is not Hermione Granger. She didn’t do her homework on Iraq– in fact she didn’t read the classified national intelligence estimate. There is something a little ironic about antiwar supporters in 2003 daydreaming about a Clinton presidency.
    She didn’t do her homework on Libya. Her “we came we saw he died hahaha” moment on Gadaffi’s death would be famous among liberals if a well known Republican had said it. It was creepy in the same way Bush’s carrier landing was–some bureaucrat far from the battlefield pretending to be Caesar. Libya didn’t turn out well.
    The Clintons have made a lot of money in the way it seems to be done in DC, with politics and taking money once out of office and sometimes in office going hard in hand, I suppose it’s legal. Google Nathan Robinson for a critical Clinton voting lefty view on the Foundation.
    The idea that Clinton is smart and always right does fit into the stereotype of the liberal technocrat ( policy wonk is the preferred term now) who thinks he or she is smarter than everyone else. Hermione was, but that was fiction. Robert McNamara is the real life version in foreign policy. Thinking of Clinton as Hermione reminds me of the conservative I remember who compared Dubya to Aragorn.

    Reply
  89. I wrote a long response and my session expired , whatever that means, so that masterpiece of saliva filled invective is lost. No it wasn’t like that.
    Second version. The fact that there is a lot of misogyny in many Clinton critics doesn’t mean all harsh criticism is therefore misogynistic. Also, Clinton is not Hermione Granger. She didn’t do her homework on Iraq– in fact she didn’t read the classified national intelligence estimate. There is something a little ironic about antiwar supporters in 2003 daydreaming about a Clinton presidency.
    She didn’t do her homework on Libya. Her “we came we saw he died hahaha” moment on Gadaffi’s death would be famous among liberals if a well known Republican had said it. It was creepy in the same way Bush’s carrier landing was–some bureaucrat far from the battlefield pretending to be Caesar. Libya didn’t turn out well.
    The Clintons have made a lot of money in the way it seems to be done in DC, with politics and taking money once out of office and sometimes in office going hard in hand, I suppose it’s legal. Google Nathan Robinson for a critical Clinton voting lefty view on the Foundation.
    The idea that Clinton is smart and always right does fit into the stereotype of the liberal technocrat ( policy wonk is the preferred term now) who thinks he or she is smarter than everyone else. Hermione was, but that was fiction. Robert McNamara is the real life version in foreign policy. Thinking of Clinton as Hermione reminds me of the conservative I remember who compared Dubya to Aragorn.

    Reply
  90. I wrote a long response and my session expired , whatever that means, so that masterpiece of saliva filled invective is lost. No it wasn’t like that.
    Second version. The fact that there is a lot of misogyny in many Clinton critics doesn’t mean all harsh criticism is therefore misogynistic. Also, Clinton is not Hermione Granger. She didn’t do her homework on Iraq– in fact she didn’t read the classified national intelligence estimate. There is something a little ironic about antiwar supporters in 2003 daydreaming about a Clinton presidency.
    She didn’t do her homework on Libya. Her “we came we saw he died hahaha” moment on Gadaffi’s death would be famous among liberals if a well known Republican had said it. It was creepy in the same way Bush’s carrier landing was–some bureaucrat far from the battlefield pretending to be Caesar. Libya didn’t turn out well.
    The Clintons have made a lot of money in the way it seems to be done in DC, with politics and taking money once out of office and sometimes in office going hard in hand, I suppose it’s legal. Google Nathan Robinson for a critical Clinton voting lefty view on the Foundation.
    The idea that Clinton is smart and always right does fit into the stereotype of the liberal technocrat ( policy wonk is the preferred term now) who thinks he or she is smarter than everyone else. Hermione was, but that was fiction. Robert McNamara is the real life version in foreign policy. Thinking of Clinton as Hermione reminds me of the conservative I remember who compared Dubya to Aragorn.

    Reply
  91. When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her.
    I’ll echo GftNC’s guarded and Nigel’s less-guarded questioning of this. For me, the reason this particular point is so irksome is that establishment Democrats have made “electability” a pillar of faith – yet this cycle, when it came time to pick their insider favorite or not, “electability” went out the window and it was suddenly all and only about “qualifications”. I’m keenly aware that “electability” always was first and foremost Iron Law of Institutions BS, but the blatancy of the establishment’s self-serving flexibility is more than a little off-putting, especially since they didn’t bother reducing their output of pious moralizing even a little.
    Fair or not, Clinton was and is a pile of vulnerabilities and traps for herself. If an organization touts pragmatism above ideology while lecturing all and sundry that the most important thing is to see the other party beaten, it behooves them to take seriously the unpopularity of a potential candidate, even if they love that candidate to death, rather than trying to convince anyone who’ll listen that said unpopularity just proves how great a candidate they are. If you’re going to claim your foremost goal is winning rather than having your candidate in particular win (which the establishment Dems have, at tedious length), then complaining about “fairness” of perceptions is not just meaningless, but explicitly contradicting everything you’re saying out of the other side of your mouth.

    Reply
  92. When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her.
    I’ll echo GftNC’s guarded and Nigel’s less-guarded questioning of this. For me, the reason this particular point is so irksome is that establishment Democrats have made “electability” a pillar of faith – yet this cycle, when it came time to pick their insider favorite or not, “electability” went out the window and it was suddenly all and only about “qualifications”. I’m keenly aware that “electability” always was first and foremost Iron Law of Institutions BS, but the blatancy of the establishment’s self-serving flexibility is more than a little off-putting, especially since they didn’t bother reducing their output of pious moralizing even a little.
    Fair or not, Clinton was and is a pile of vulnerabilities and traps for herself. If an organization touts pragmatism above ideology while lecturing all and sundry that the most important thing is to see the other party beaten, it behooves them to take seriously the unpopularity of a potential candidate, even if they love that candidate to death, rather than trying to convince anyone who’ll listen that said unpopularity just proves how great a candidate they are. If you’re going to claim your foremost goal is winning rather than having your candidate in particular win (which the establishment Dems have, at tedious length), then complaining about “fairness” of perceptions is not just meaningless, but explicitly contradicting everything you’re saying out of the other side of your mouth.

    Reply
  93. When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her.
    I’ll echo GftNC’s guarded and Nigel’s less-guarded questioning of this. For me, the reason this particular point is so irksome is that establishment Democrats have made “electability” a pillar of faith – yet this cycle, when it came time to pick their insider favorite or not, “electability” went out the window and it was suddenly all and only about “qualifications”. I’m keenly aware that “electability” always was first and foremost Iron Law of Institutions BS, but the blatancy of the establishment’s self-serving flexibility is more than a little off-putting, especially since they didn’t bother reducing their output of pious moralizing even a little.
    Fair or not, Clinton was and is a pile of vulnerabilities and traps for herself. If an organization touts pragmatism above ideology while lecturing all and sundry that the most important thing is to see the other party beaten, it behooves them to take seriously the unpopularity of a potential candidate, even if they love that candidate to death, rather than trying to convince anyone who’ll listen that said unpopularity just proves how great a candidate they are. If you’re going to claim your foremost goal is winning rather than having your candidate in particular win (which the establishment Dems have, at tedious length), then complaining about “fairness” of perceptions is not just meaningless, but explicitly contradicting everything you’re saying out of the other side of your mouth.

    Reply
  94. The problem with all this is that Bill Clinton also seems to be very deeply hated on the Right. I mean, he’s not even running for president and he’s been routinely portrayed as a vicious, corrupt rapist.
    So while misogyny surely plays a part, it seems unlikely to be the main cause. (There may be a “Lady Macbeth” element in which she’s suspected to be the mastermind behind some of the worst of the made-up crimes.) But whatever explains the hatred of her ought to explain the hatred of him. They do seem closely connected.
    Notably, she was quite popular nationally when she was a senator and for a while as Secretary of State. As was he until quite recently. The GOP hate machine has just swung back from Obama to them, and it is pretty effective at convincing people that it’s targets are hateful.

    Reply
  95. The problem with all this is that Bill Clinton also seems to be very deeply hated on the Right. I mean, he’s not even running for president and he’s been routinely portrayed as a vicious, corrupt rapist.
    So while misogyny surely plays a part, it seems unlikely to be the main cause. (There may be a “Lady Macbeth” element in which she’s suspected to be the mastermind behind some of the worst of the made-up crimes.) But whatever explains the hatred of her ought to explain the hatred of him. They do seem closely connected.
    Notably, she was quite popular nationally when she was a senator and for a while as Secretary of State. As was he until quite recently. The GOP hate machine has just swung back from Obama to them, and it is pretty effective at convincing people that it’s targets are hateful.

    Reply
  96. The problem with all this is that Bill Clinton also seems to be very deeply hated on the Right. I mean, he’s not even running for president and he’s been routinely portrayed as a vicious, corrupt rapist.
    So while misogyny surely plays a part, it seems unlikely to be the main cause. (There may be a “Lady Macbeth” element in which she’s suspected to be the mastermind behind some of the worst of the made-up crimes.) But whatever explains the hatred of her ought to explain the hatred of him. They do seem closely connected.
    Notably, she was quite popular nationally when she was a senator and for a while as Secretary of State. As was he until quite recently. The GOP hate machine has just swung back from Obama to them, and it is pretty effective at convincing people that it’s targets are hateful.

    Reply
  97. Patrick, my parents have explicitly cited the opposite sentiment of your 8:52 as a reason they’ll be voting for HRC. I’ve heard it elsewhere as well. It’s not the sort of thing I’d expect any poll to be able to suss out unambiguously, but I’d really, really be curious as to how much of HRC’s support is foremost a desire for a third term for WJC.

    Also, as usual, I’ll just underscore DJ’s 8:53. Not any of it in particular; the whole thing, all at once.

    Reply
  98. Patrick, my parents have explicitly cited the opposite sentiment of your 8:52 as a reason they’ll be voting for HRC. I’ve heard it elsewhere as well. It’s not the sort of thing I’d expect any poll to be able to suss out unambiguously, but I’d really, really be curious as to how much of HRC’s support is foremost a desire for a third term for WJC.

    Also, as usual, I’ll just underscore DJ’s 8:53. Not any of it in particular; the whole thing, all at once.

    Reply
  99. Patrick, my parents have explicitly cited the opposite sentiment of your 8:52 as a reason they’ll be voting for HRC. I’ve heard it elsewhere as well. It’s not the sort of thing I’d expect any poll to be able to suss out unambiguously, but I’d really, really be curious as to how much of HRC’s support is foremost a desire for a third term for WJC.

    Also, as usual, I’ll just underscore DJ’s 8:53. Not any of it in particular; the whole thing, all at once.

    Reply
  100. “Clinton Rules” certainly exist, as Michelle stands on stage with Bill talking about what a horrible sexist pervert Trump is while Beyoncé wanders around nude on stage. He being the only one actually caught having an affair with an intern down the hall from his wife.
    Every thing that the Clintons have done to leverage their time in office, while in office, to enrich themselves would be considered completely unethical and potentially illegal for any.one.else.
    Do you know why I hate her? Because she doesn’t even deny it, she smiles and all the self righteous people who complained for decades about too much money in politics and a revolving door and lobbyists make excuses for her.
    Which reinforces her feeling of being untouchable.
    Trump thinks he can stand in the middle of 5th avenue and shoot someone? He has nothing on them.
    She can use the office of Secretary of State to reward people for giving her husband a million dollars and what, shrugs?
    Barry Bonds got convicted for lying to Congress about taking PED’s, PED’s. And she can lie to Congress and the FBI doesn’t do a thing. She can destroy emails that are under subpoena by Congress. She can destroy hardware whose contents are evidence in an investigation. More than that, she can just declare that the investigation just isn’t worth bothering with and everyone should just “move on” while everyone that worked for her gets immunity.
    Not one of those things isn’t a fact. But, for Hillary, its otay.
    And before one person points out something Trump did or didn’t do, I don’t care. The tu quoque is tiresome. He is bad. The question isn’t whether she is better or worse than Trump. It is why do I hate her.
    I hate her because over the last ten years she has used her position to perform every despicable act a person can to enrich herself, flout the law, and get away with it.

    Reply
  101. “Clinton Rules” certainly exist, as Michelle stands on stage with Bill talking about what a horrible sexist pervert Trump is while Beyoncé wanders around nude on stage. He being the only one actually caught having an affair with an intern down the hall from his wife.
    Every thing that the Clintons have done to leverage their time in office, while in office, to enrich themselves would be considered completely unethical and potentially illegal for any.one.else.
    Do you know why I hate her? Because she doesn’t even deny it, she smiles and all the self righteous people who complained for decades about too much money in politics and a revolving door and lobbyists make excuses for her.
    Which reinforces her feeling of being untouchable.
    Trump thinks he can stand in the middle of 5th avenue and shoot someone? He has nothing on them.
    She can use the office of Secretary of State to reward people for giving her husband a million dollars and what, shrugs?
    Barry Bonds got convicted for lying to Congress about taking PED’s, PED’s. And she can lie to Congress and the FBI doesn’t do a thing. She can destroy emails that are under subpoena by Congress. She can destroy hardware whose contents are evidence in an investigation. More than that, she can just declare that the investigation just isn’t worth bothering with and everyone should just “move on” while everyone that worked for her gets immunity.
    Not one of those things isn’t a fact. But, for Hillary, its otay.
    And before one person points out something Trump did or didn’t do, I don’t care. The tu quoque is tiresome. He is bad. The question isn’t whether she is better or worse than Trump. It is why do I hate her.
    I hate her because over the last ten years she has used her position to perform every despicable act a person can to enrich herself, flout the law, and get away with it.

    Reply
  102. “Clinton Rules” certainly exist, as Michelle stands on stage with Bill talking about what a horrible sexist pervert Trump is while Beyoncé wanders around nude on stage. He being the only one actually caught having an affair with an intern down the hall from his wife.
    Every thing that the Clintons have done to leverage their time in office, while in office, to enrich themselves would be considered completely unethical and potentially illegal for any.one.else.
    Do you know why I hate her? Because she doesn’t even deny it, she smiles and all the self righteous people who complained for decades about too much money in politics and a revolving door and lobbyists make excuses for her.
    Which reinforces her feeling of being untouchable.
    Trump thinks he can stand in the middle of 5th avenue and shoot someone? He has nothing on them.
    She can use the office of Secretary of State to reward people for giving her husband a million dollars and what, shrugs?
    Barry Bonds got convicted for lying to Congress about taking PED’s, PED’s. And she can lie to Congress and the FBI doesn’t do a thing. She can destroy emails that are under subpoena by Congress. She can destroy hardware whose contents are evidence in an investigation. More than that, she can just declare that the investigation just isn’t worth bothering with and everyone should just “move on” while everyone that worked for her gets immunity.
    Not one of those things isn’t a fact. But, for Hillary, its otay.
    And before one person points out something Trump did or didn’t do, I don’t care. The tu quoque is tiresome. He is bad. The question isn’t whether she is better or worse than Trump. It is why do I hate her.
    I hate her because over the last ten years she has used her position to perform every despicable act a person can to enrich herself, flout the law, and get away with it.

    Reply
  103. The idea that Clinton is smart and always right does fit into the stereotype of the liberal technocrat ( policy wonk is the preferred term now) who thinks he or she is smarter than everyone else.
    Except that it’s often true. Yes, smart people make mistakes, sometimes fatal. But the perfect don’t usually get elected, now do they? They pretty much don’t even run. Wait, I don’t think I even know any of them.

    Reply
  104. The idea that Clinton is smart and always right does fit into the stereotype of the liberal technocrat ( policy wonk is the preferred term now) who thinks he or she is smarter than everyone else.
    Except that it’s often true. Yes, smart people make mistakes, sometimes fatal. But the perfect don’t usually get elected, now do they? They pretty much don’t even run. Wait, I don’t think I even know any of them.

    Reply
  105. The idea that Clinton is smart and always right does fit into the stereotype of the liberal technocrat ( policy wonk is the preferred term now) who thinks he or she is smarter than everyone else.
    Except that it’s often true. Yes, smart people make mistakes, sometimes fatal. But the perfect don’t usually get elected, now do they? They pretty much don’t even run. Wait, I don’t think I even know any of them.

    Reply
  106. Ask yourself what you would think as a hypothetical investor in (for example) Google if it emerged that CEO Sundar Pichai was tasking his wife Anjali with major strategic planning initiatives.
    IF the lady was an experienced IT professional, i.e. someone with decent qualifications (exclusive of her marriage) for the task, I wouldn’t have a problem with it. And given the number of IT folks who marry each other (possibly because it ups the chance of having a meaningful conversation about work over dinner – I certainly find it a help not to have to stop to give background on everything), that doesn’t seem impossible.
    I would have a problem with a President nominating his/her spouse to a permanent position (e.g. the Supreme Court). But simply putting together a policy and its implementation? Nope, no problem at all.

    Reply
  107. Ask yourself what you would think as a hypothetical investor in (for example) Google if it emerged that CEO Sundar Pichai was tasking his wife Anjali with major strategic planning initiatives.
    IF the lady was an experienced IT professional, i.e. someone with decent qualifications (exclusive of her marriage) for the task, I wouldn’t have a problem with it. And given the number of IT folks who marry each other (possibly because it ups the chance of having a meaningful conversation about work over dinner – I certainly find it a help not to have to stop to give background on everything), that doesn’t seem impossible.
    I would have a problem with a President nominating his/her spouse to a permanent position (e.g. the Supreme Court). But simply putting together a policy and its implementation? Nope, no problem at all.

    Reply
  108. Ask yourself what you would think as a hypothetical investor in (for example) Google if it emerged that CEO Sundar Pichai was tasking his wife Anjali with major strategic planning initiatives.
    IF the lady was an experienced IT professional, i.e. someone with decent qualifications (exclusive of her marriage) for the task, I wouldn’t have a problem with it. And given the number of IT folks who marry each other (possibly because it ups the chance of having a meaningful conversation about work over dinner – I certainly find it a help not to have to stop to give background on everything), that doesn’t seem impossible.
    I would have a problem with a President nominating his/her spouse to a permanent position (e.g. the Supreme Court). But simply putting together a policy and its implementation? Nope, no problem at all.

    Reply
  109. When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her.
    Gotta go with the various responses to this. I guess it depends on exactly what is meant by “terrible candidate.” If it is used to mean “someone who can’t get elected” or “someone who shouldn’t get elected”, then no it’s wrong.
    But if it just means “someone who is bad at the process of campaigning”? I’d say that is a fair take on Hilary. She simply isn’t good at campaigning. She has learned how to do it adequately, but it visibly isn’t her strong suit.

    Reply
  110. When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her.
    Gotta go with the various responses to this. I guess it depends on exactly what is meant by “terrible candidate.” If it is used to mean “someone who can’t get elected” or “someone who shouldn’t get elected”, then no it’s wrong.
    But if it just means “someone who is bad at the process of campaigning”? I’d say that is a fair take on Hilary. She simply isn’t good at campaigning. She has learned how to do it adequately, but it visibly isn’t her strong suit.

    Reply
  111. When I see commenters here & elsewhere talking about how Hillary is an obviously “terrible candidate” and Democrats should have nominated someone else, it seems to me they’re looking at Hillary Hatred and either buying into it, or else they think being hated should disqualify her.
    Gotta go with the various responses to this. I guess it depends on exactly what is meant by “terrible candidate.” If it is used to mean “someone who can’t get elected” or “someone who shouldn’t get elected”, then no it’s wrong.
    But if it just means “someone who is bad at the process of campaigning”? I’d say that is a fair take on Hilary. She simply isn’t good at campaigning. She has learned how to do it adequately, but it visibly isn’t her strong suit.

    Reply
  112. I am surprised we’ve gotten this far without anyone citing the “vast right-wing conspiracy”.
    The Arkansas Project did exist.
    It was well funded, and employed several professional propagandists as well as enthusiastic amateurs.
    The Republican Party noted its “accomplishments”, and some fraction of GOP pols adopted the tactics.
    HRC (and WJC) have been consistently, deliberately smeared by one or another professionally-conducted campaign of innuendo, half-truths, and outright lies since at least 1990. After thirty-five years of dishonest propaganda, it’s not suprising that a large fraction of Americans have internalized the message to a greater or lesser degree.

    Reply
  113. I am surprised we’ve gotten this far without anyone citing the “vast right-wing conspiracy”.
    The Arkansas Project did exist.
    It was well funded, and employed several professional propagandists as well as enthusiastic amateurs.
    The Republican Party noted its “accomplishments”, and some fraction of GOP pols adopted the tactics.
    HRC (and WJC) have been consistently, deliberately smeared by one or another professionally-conducted campaign of innuendo, half-truths, and outright lies since at least 1990. After thirty-five years of dishonest propaganda, it’s not suprising that a large fraction of Americans have internalized the message to a greater or lesser degree.

    Reply
  114. I am surprised we’ve gotten this far without anyone citing the “vast right-wing conspiracy”.
    The Arkansas Project did exist.
    It was well funded, and employed several professional propagandists as well as enthusiastic amateurs.
    The Republican Party noted its “accomplishments”, and some fraction of GOP pols adopted the tactics.
    HRC (and WJC) have been consistently, deliberately smeared by one or another professionally-conducted campaign of innuendo, half-truths, and outright lies since at least 1990. After thirty-five years of dishonest propaganda, it’s not suprising that a large fraction of Americans have internalized the message to a greater or lesser degree.

    Reply
  115. I really, REALLY don’t want Bill Clinton getting hands on with policy if/when Hillary Clinton wins office.
    I’ve gone one step farther, and said that I don’t want Bill living in Washington. He’s a former President, with a library to oversee and a foundation that’s doing good work that’s headquartered in NY. Stay the hell away from Washington — nothing good can come from you being there.

    Reply
  116. I really, REALLY don’t want Bill Clinton getting hands on with policy if/when Hillary Clinton wins office.
    I’ve gone one step farther, and said that I don’t want Bill living in Washington. He’s a former President, with a library to oversee and a foundation that’s doing good work that’s headquartered in NY. Stay the hell away from Washington — nothing good can come from you being there.

    Reply
  117. I really, REALLY don’t want Bill Clinton getting hands on with policy if/when Hillary Clinton wins office.
    I’ve gone one step farther, and said that I don’t want Bill living in Washington. He’s a former President, with a library to oversee and a foundation that’s doing good work that’s headquartered in NY. Stay the hell away from Washington — nothing good can come from you being there.

    Reply
  118. Sapient, the post compares Clinton to Hermione as the smart nerd who is hated because she studies and always has the right answer. The reality is that policy wonks like McNamara probably don’t know as much as they claim and their answers are often wrong. In Clinton’s case she ran as a foreign policy expert among other things and yet she didn’t read the NIE and was spectacularly wrong. The myth and the reality of the policy wonk are often quite different, but liberals often cling to it in cases where the evidence doesn’t fit.
    NV– I agree that the self described pragmatists of the Democratic Party are often not pragmatic in reality. Or they are, but not in the way they claim to mean. As you say, for the apparatchiks in the party it was the Iron law of institutions at work.

    Reply
  119. Sapient, the post compares Clinton to Hermione as the smart nerd who is hated because she studies and always has the right answer. The reality is that policy wonks like McNamara probably don’t know as much as they claim and their answers are often wrong. In Clinton’s case she ran as a foreign policy expert among other things and yet she didn’t read the NIE and was spectacularly wrong. The myth and the reality of the policy wonk are often quite different, but liberals often cling to it in cases where the evidence doesn’t fit.
    NV– I agree that the self described pragmatists of the Democratic Party are often not pragmatic in reality. Or they are, but not in the way they claim to mean. As you say, for the apparatchiks in the party it was the Iron law of institutions at work.

    Reply
  120. Sapient, the post compares Clinton to Hermione as the smart nerd who is hated because she studies and always has the right answer. The reality is that policy wonks like McNamara probably don’t know as much as they claim and their answers are often wrong. In Clinton’s case she ran as a foreign policy expert among other things and yet she didn’t read the NIE and was spectacularly wrong. The myth and the reality of the policy wonk are often quite different, but liberals often cling to it in cases where the evidence doesn’t fit.
    NV– I agree that the self described pragmatists of the Democratic Party are often not pragmatic in reality. Or they are, but not in the way they claim to mean. As you say, for the apparatchiks in the party it was the Iron law of institutions at work.

    Reply
  121. IF the lady was an experienced IT professional, i.e. someone with decent qualifications (exclusive of her marriage) for the task, I wouldn’t have a problem with it
    I would. Lady or man, the gender is not relevant to me.
    In my mind, it has to do with transparency and accountability. Spouses – or really any family members – stay out of professional or public business.
    Just a difference of opinion.

    Reply
  122. IF the lady was an experienced IT professional, i.e. someone with decent qualifications (exclusive of her marriage) for the task, I wouldn’t have a problem with it
    I would. Lady or man, the gender is not relevant to me.
    In my mind, it has to do with transparency and accountability. Spouses – or really any family members – stay out of professional or public business.
    Just a difference of opinion.

    Reply
  123. IF the lady was an experienced IT professional, i.e. someone with decent qualifications (exclusive of her marriage) for the task, I wouldn’t have a problem with it
    I would. Lady or man, the gender is not relevant to me.
    In my mind, it has to do with transparency and accountability. Spouses – or really any family members – stay out of professional or public business.
    Just a difference of opinion.

    Reply
  124. The Clintons…both of them, were seen as illegitimate from the get go, as St. Ronnie had set the stage for a permanent GOP ascendancy. The Clintons didn’t help their cause any by repeatedly stepping in doo-doo at a minor level.
    The wingnut fangs were out from the beginning.
    As to policy, the Left has been highly critical of the both of them from a policy standpoint…both foreign and domestic. But of course, the the Marty’s of the world know more about the Left than leftist do…go figure.
    As a Bernie supporter, I have always looked back on Clinton’s Iraq war vote as an act of political cowardice (after all, both NY Senators voted “yes”, and a “no” vote would have most likely meant political suicide in the state where 9/11 took place) or worse, a mistake.
    I voted for her, and I wish her well. But I will be highly outspoken on any tack she takes that I disagree with, esp. wrt foreign policy (Syrian no-fly zone….are you ‘effing kidding me?).
    But the Republican Party is way worse. What can you say about a political organization that actively HATES workers? That promotes the idea that poverty is the result of personal moral failure. What ‘effing outrageous moral hypocrisy.
    Collectively/institutionally (not individually) they are in the thrall of free market extremism, they are racist, they are xenophobic, and they are lickspittle for the rich.
    Collectively, they aspire to implement public policies that are widely at variance from what is good for our country….and I say this through gritted teeth.
    That they might fall on each other and tear their ‘effingly smug party apart is an outcome I devoutly desire to see.

    Reply
  125. The Clintons…both of them, were seen as illegitimate from the get go, as St. Ronnie had set the stage for a permanent GOP ascendancy. The Clintons didn’t help their cause any by repeatedly stepping in doo-doo at a minor level.
    The wingnut fangs were out from the beginning.
    As to policy, the Left has been highly critical of the both of them from a policy standpoint…both foreign and domestic. But of course, the the Marty’s of the world know more about the Left than leftist do…go figure.
    As a Bernie supporter, I have always looked back on Clinton’s Iraq war vote as an act of political cowardice (after all, both NY Senators voted “yes”, and a “no” vote would have most likely meant political suicide in the state where 9/11 took place) or worse, a mistake.
    I voted for her, and I wish her well. But I will be highly outspoken on any tack she takes that I disagree with, esp. wrt foreign policy (Syrian no-fly zone….are you ‘effing kidding me?).
    But the Republican Party is way worse. What can you say about a political organization that actively HATES workers? That promotes the idea that poverty is the result of personal moral failure. What ‘effing outrageous moral hypocrisy.
    Collectively/institutionally (not individually) they are in the thrall of free market extremism, they are racist, they are xenophobic, and they are lickspittle for the rich.
    Collectively, they aspire to implement public policies that are widely at variance from what is good for our country….and I say this through gritted teeth.
    That they might fall on each other and tear their ‘effingly smug party apart is an outcome I devoutly desire to see.

    Reply
  126. The Clintons…both of them, were seen as illegitimate from the get go, as St. Ronnie had set the stage for a permanent GOP ascendancy. The Clintons didn’t help their cause any by repeatedly stepping in doo-doo at a minor level.
    The wingnut fangs were out from the beginning.
    As to policy, the Left has been highly critical of the both of them from a policy standpoint…both foreign and domestic. But of course, the the Marty’s of the world know more about the Left than leftist do…go figure.
    As a Bernie supporter, I have always looked back on Clinton’s Iraq war vote as an act of political cowardice (after all, both NY Senators voted “yes”, and a “no” vote would have most likely meant political suicide in the state where 9/11 took place) or worse, a mistake.
    I voted for her, and I wish her well. But I will be highly outspoken on any tack she takes that I disagree with, esp. wrt foreign policy (Syrian no-fly zone….are you ‘effing kidding me?).
    But the Republican Party is way worse. What can you say about a political organization that actively HATES workers? That promotes the idea that poverty is the result of personal moral failure. What ‘effing outrageous moral hypocrisy.
    Collectively/institutionally (not individually) they are in the thrall of free market extremism, they are racist, they are xenophobic, and they are lickspittle for the rich.
    Collectively, they aspire to implement public policies that are widely at variance from what is good for our country….and I say this through gritted teeth.
    That they might fall on each other and tear their ‘effingly smug party apart is an outcome I devoutly desire to see.

    Reply
  127. NV: …the blatancy of the establishment’s self-serving flexibility
    What counts as The Establishment, NV? I mean, how many of the primary voters who voted for her do you consider part of The Establishment? How many of them do you consider mindless dupes of The Establishment?
    As for yours and Donald’s sincere (and honorable, but not infallible) judgements that Bosnia was theater and Libya was a disaster, none of us can say with Trumpian certainty what the result of any alternative policy would have been — except that lots of death and destruction would have been features of it no matter what.
    –TP

    Reply
  128. NV: …the blatancy of the establishment’s self-serving flexibility
    What counts as The Establishment, NV? I mean, how many of the primary voters who voted for her do you consider part of The Establishment? How many of them do you consider mindless dupes of The Establishment?
    As for yours and Donald’s sincere (and honorable, but not infallible) judgements that Bosnia was theater and Libya was a disaster, none of us can say with Trumpian certainty what the result of any alternative policy would have been — except that lots of death and destruction would have been features of it no matter what.
    –TP

    Reply
  129. NV: …the blatancy of the establishment’s self-serving flexibility
    What counts as The Establishment, NV? I mean, how many of the primary voters who voted for her do you consider part of The Establishment? How many of them do you consider mindless dupes of The Establishment?
    As for yours and Donald’s sincere (and honorable, but not infallible) judgements that Bosnia was theater and Libya was a disaster, none of us can say with Trumpian certainty what the result of any alternative policy would have been — except that lots of death and destruction would have been features of it no matter what.
    –TP

    Reply
  130. I’m keenly aware that “electability” always was first and foremost Iron Law of Institutions BS
    NV,
    I may be wrong here, but I believe this take on the Iron Law of Institutions is mistaken. The nomination of Clinton in lieu of (let’s just assume for now) a “more electable” Sanders is well nigh a perfect prediction of the workings of the Iron Law’s postulates.

    Reply
  131. I’m keenly aware that “electability” always was first and foremost Iron Law of Institutions BS
    NV,
    I may be wrong here, but I believe this take on the Iron Law of Institutions is mistaken. The nomination of Clinton in lieu of (let’s just assume for now) a “more electable” Sanders is well nigh a perfect prediction of the workings of the Iron Law’s postulates.

    Reply
  132. I’m keenly aware that “electability” always was first and foremost Iron Law of Institutions BS
    NV,
    I may be wrong here, but I believe this take on the Iron Law of Institutions is mistaken. The nomination of Clinton in lieu of (let’s just assume for now) a “more electable” Sanders is well nigh a perfect prediction of the workings of the Iron Law’s postulates.

    Reply
  133. “Every thing that the Clintons have done to leverage their time in office, while in office, to enrich themselves would be considered completely unethical and potentially illegal for any.one.else.”
    with respect, I have to say that as far as I can tell everything the Clintons have done, in or out of office, to enrich themselves is dead normal.
    this isn’t a tu quoque thing because I’m not saying “your guy does it too”. I’m saying it’s the norm, and the Clintons are far from the worst offenders.
    national office holders are highly visible people, and there are about 10 million ways for highly visible people to turn their visibiliy into money.
    I’d like all of that crap to stop, because I think it’s corrupting.
    Sadly, I’m not the king.
    If you’re gonna insist on this kind of standard, you have to require it for everyone.

    Reply
  134. “Every thing that the Clintons have done to leverage their time in office, while in office, to enrich themselves would be considered completely unethical and potentially illegal for any.one.else.”
    with respect, I have to say that as far as I can tell everything the Clintons have done, in or out of office, to enrich themselves is dead normal.
    this isn’t a tu quoque thing because I’m not saying “your guy does it too”. I’m saying it’s the norm, and the Clintons are far from the worst offenders.
    national office holders are highly visible people, and there are about 10 million ways for highly visible people to turn their visibiliy into money.
    I’d like all of that crap to stop, because I think it’s corrupting.
    Sadly, I’m not the king.
    If you’re gonna insist on this kind of standard, you have to require it for everyone.

    Reply
  135. “Every thing that the Clintons have done to leverage their time in office, while in office, to enrich themselves would be considered completely unethical and potentially illegal for any.one.else.”
    with respect, I have to say that as far as I can tell everything the Clintons have done, in or out of office, to enrich themselves is dead normal.
    this isn’t a tu quoque thing because I’m not saying “your guy does it too”. I’m saying it’s the norm, and the Clintons are far from the worst offenders.
    national office holders are highly visible people, and there are about 10 million ways for highly visible people to turn their visibiliy into money.
    I’d like all of that crap to stop, because I think it’s corrupting.
    Sadly, I’m not the king.
    If you’re gonna insist on this kind of standard, you have to require it for everyone.

    Reply
  136. The more important issue than the Clinton’s self enrichment is Citizens United. Republicans are for it, Democrats against. That’s all we actually need to know about the issue. The worst Democrat is going to be better on this score than the best Republican, no matter their personal fundraising history.

    Reply
  137. The more important issue than the Clinton’s self enrichment is Citizens United. Republicans are for it, Democrats against. That’s all we actually need to know about the issue. The worst Democrat is going to be better on this score than the best Republican, no matter their personal fundraising history.

    Reply
  138. The more important issue than the Clinton’s self enrichment is Citizens United. Republicans are for it, Democrats against. That’s all we actually need to know about the issue. The worst Democrat is going to be better on this score than the best Republican, no matter their personal fundraising history.

    Reply
  139. I’m not sure if this is helpful, but I’ll speak as someone who was not convinced by Hillary when she ran against Obama but am now. I put a lot of weight on Brad DeLong’s complaint about her back then
    http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/2003_archives/001600.html
    (which he has since revised,
    http://www.bradford-delong.com/2015/04/endorsing-hillary-rodham-clinton.html)
    I’m used to people not changing. I find it especially true for men, as they get older, they seem to, as far as I can tell, hunker down and just refuse to move. HRC is someone who has, I think, been able to change. As DeLong writes
    At this point, she has been a successful Secretary of State, ran an almost-good-enough presidential nomination campaign, and been an effective Senator. And she was an ineffective policy-development presidential assistant back in 1993-1994. That’s more experience in more different roles with more success than Barack Obama had had, than George W. Bush had had, than Ronald Reagan had had, than Jimmy Carter had had, and than John F. Kennedy had had when they faced the electorate. That’s successful experience in more different roles than Bill Clinton had had. And it’s about equal in variety–and greater in success–than George H.W. Bush had had.
    And it’s vastly more than the Republican candidate will have, whoever he may be.
    The only thing that could keep me from putting her at the very top would be if she has not reflected on and determined to avoid what made her so unsuccessful as health-care policy-development czar in 1993-1994.
    But I know she has.

    The concern about Bill’s role in the administration is more male BS. If you haven’t noticed, Bill’s been looking a little frail, and been prone to go off message. Of course, Hillary, not having the intestinal fortitude that we males have, is just going to let him run roughshod. It’s a pretty sexist complaint when you unpack it.
    If she were my friend, I’d probably ask her ‘why put yourself through this?’ I anticipate at least 4 and possibly 8 more years of being disrespected, insulted, lied about. Obama was ‘uppity’ when he put his feet up on the desk, and ‘talking down’ to everyone when explained things, I can’t imagine what fresh new hell will be in store for Hillary and us after the State of the Union or the first press conference, or even the turkey pardoning. It’s not going to let up, and if Hillary ever loses her temper, or gets caught yelling at an aide (‘She’s hysterical, I knew she would be’) we are going to be treated to a month’s worth of wall to wall coverage and learn a whole lot of ways to allude to menopause. Embarrassment about the n word kept it from being deployed against Obama too often, but the b and c words are going to get a work out.
    Furthermore, no one, on the right or the left, is going to give her a break, because the only way she could have become president is to bring in a resume the length she has, which will then give everyone something to sink their teeth into. Of course, that resume is a necessary (but in no ways sufficient) requirement for her to get where she has gotten. I mean, take Obama’s resume before becoming the Dem nominee. Now imagine if it were a woman. Is anyone here going to suggest that a serious presidential run would even be remotely possible?
    IMO, she’s definitely what the country needs. It’s just I wouldn’t wish the abuse she’s going to get on my worst enemy.

    Reply
  140. I’m not sure if this is helpful, but I’ll speak as someone who was not convinced by Hillary when she ran against Obama but am now. I put a lot of weight on Brad DeLong’s complaint about her back then
    http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/2003_archives/001600.html
    (which he has since revised,
    http://www.bradford-delong.com/2015/04/endorsing-hillary-rodham-clinton.html)
    I’m used to people not changing. I find it especially true for men, as they get older, they seem to, as far as I can tell, hunker down and just refuse to move. HRC is someone who has, I think, been able to change. As DeLong writes
    At this point, she has been a successful Secretary of State, ran an almost-good-enough presidential nomination campaign, and been an effective Senator. And she was an ineffective policy-development presidential assistant back in 1993-1994. That’s more experience in more different roles with more success than Barack Obama had had, than George W. Bush had had, than Ronald Reagan had had, than Jimmy Carter had had, and than John F. Kennedy had had when they faced the electorate. That’s successful experience in more different roles than Bill Clinton had had. And it’s about equal in variety–and greater in success–than George H.W. Bush had had.
    And it’s vastly more than the Republican candidate will have, whoever he may be.
    The only thing that could keep me from putting her at the very top would be if she has not reflected on and determined to avoid what made her so unsuccessful as health-care policy-development czar in 1993-1994.
    But I know she has.

    The concern about Bill’s role in the administration is more male BS. If you haven’t noticed, Bill’s been looking a little frail, and been prone to go off message. Of course, Hillary, not having the intestinal fortitude that we males have, is just going to let him run roughshod. It’s a pretty sexist complaint when you unpack it.
    If she were my friend, I’d probably ask her ‘why put yourself through this?’ I anticipate at least 4 and possibly 8 more years of being disrespected, insulted, lied about. Obama was ‘uppity’ when he put his feet up on the desk, and ‘talking down’ to everyone when explained things, I can’t imagine what fresh new hell will be in store for Hillary and us after the State of the Union or the first press conference, or even the turkey pardoning. It’s not going to let up, and if Hillary ever loses her temper, or gets caught yelling at an aide (‘She’s hysterical, I knew she would be’) we are going to be treated to a month’s worth of wall to wall coverage and learn a whole lot of ways to allude to menopause. Embarrassment about the n word kept it from being deployed against Obama too often, but the b and c words are going to get a work out.
    Furthermore, no one, on the right or the left, is going to give her a break, because the only way she could have become president is to bring in a resume the length she has, which will then give everyone something to sink their teeth into. Of course, that resume is a necessary (but in no ways sufficient) requirement for her to get where she has gotten. I mean, take Obama’s resume before becoming the Dem nominee. Now imagine if it were a woman. Is anyone here going to suggest that a serious presidential run would even be remotely possible?
    IMO, she’s definitely what the country needs. It’s just I wouldn’t wish the abuse she’s going to get on my worst enemy.

    Reply
  141. I’m not sure if this is helpful, but I’ll speak as someone who was not convinced by Hillary when she ran against Obama but am now. I put a lot of weight on Brad DeLong’s complaint about her back then
    http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/2003_archives/001600.html
    (which he has since revised,
    http://www.bradford-delong.com/2015/04/endorsing-hillary-rodham-clinton.html)
    I’m used to people not changing. I find it especially true for men, as they get older, they seem to, as far as I can tell, hunker down and just refuse to move. HRC is someone who has, I think, been able to change. As DeLong writes
    At this point, she has been a successful Secretary of State, ran an almost-good-enough presidential nomination campaign, and been an effective Senator. And she was an ineffective policy-development presidential assistant back in 1993-1994. That’s more experience in more different roles with more success than Barack Obama had had, than George W. Bush had had, than Ronald Reagan had had, than Jimmy Carter had had, and than John F. Kennedy had had when they faced the electorate. That’s successful experience in more different roles than Bill Clinton had had. And it’s about equal in variety–and greater in success–than George H.W. Bush had had.
    And it’s vastly more than the Republican candidate will have, whoever he may be.
    The only thing that could keep me from putting her at the very top would be if she has not reflected on and determined to avoid what made her so unsuccessful as health-care policy-development czar in 1993-1994.
    But I know she has.

    The concern about Bill’s role in the administration is more male BS. If you haven’t noticed, Bill’s been looking a little frail, and been prone to go off message. Of course, Hillary, not having the intestinal fortitude that we males have, is just going to let him run roughshod. It’s a pretty sexist complaint when you unpack it.
    If she were my friend, I’d probably ask her ‘why put yourself through this?’ I anticipate at least 4 and possibly 8 more years of being disrespected, insulted, lied about. Obama was ‘uppity’ when he put his feet up on the desk, and ‘talking down’ to everyone when explained things, I can’t imagine what fresh new hell will be in store for Hillary and us after the State of the Union or the first press conference, or even the turkey pardoning. It’s not going to let up, and if Hillary ever loses her temper, or gets caught yelling at an aide (‘She’s hysterical, I knew she would be’) we are going to be treated to a month’s worth of wall to wall coverage and learn a whole lot of ways to allude to menopause. Embarrassment about the n word kept it from being deployed against Obama too often, but the b and c words are going to get a work out.
    Furthermore, no one, on the right or the left, is going to give her a break, because the only way she could have become president is to bring in a resume the length she has, which will then give everyone something to sink their teeth into. Of course, that resume is a necessary (but in no ways sufficient) requirement for her to get where she has gotten. I mean, take Obama’s resume before becoming the Dem nominee. Now imagine if it were a woman. Is anyone here going to suggest that a serious presidential run would even be remotely possible?
    IMO, she’s definitely what the country needs. It’s just I wouldn’t wish the abuse she’s going to get on my worst enemy.

    Reply
  142. bp – you seem to be taking that statement backwards. The centerist officials, staffers, and PR flaks (which is what I mean by “establishment”, TP – professional Democrats and high-volume amateur mouthpieces dedicated to that faction’s agenda) have for years used “electability” as a club to fend off other factions. This cycle, as you note, abandoning that “principle” is entirely in keeping with ILoI predictions. Which was my point: “electability” was loudly flaunted as principled pragmatism not just for the good of the party, but absolutely imperative for the party’s survival as a significant force… right up until it was summarily swept under the rug for being inconvenient to establishmentarians.

    Reply
  143. bp – you seem to be taking that statement backwards. The centerist officials, staffers, and PR flaks (which is what I mean by “establishment”, TP – professional Democrats and high-volume amateur mouthpieces dedicated to that faction’s agenda) have for years used “electability” as a club to fend off other factions. This cycle, as you note, abandoning that “principle” is entirely in keeping with ILoI predictions. Which was my point: “electability” was loudly flaunted as principled pragmatism not just for the good of the party, but absolutely imperative for the party’s survival as a significant force… right up until it was summarily swept under the rug for being inconvenient to establishmentarians.

    Reply
  144. bp – you seem to be taking that statement backwards. The centerist officials, staffers, and PR flaks (which is what I mean by “establishment”, TP – professional Democrats and high-volume amateur mouthpieces dedicated to that faction’s agenda) have for years used “electability” as a club to fend off other factions. This cycle, as you note, abandoning that “principle” is entirely in keeping with ILoI predictions. Which was my point: “electability” was loudly flaunted as principled pragmatism not just for the good of the party, but absolutely imperative for the party’s survival as a significant force… right up until it was summarily swept under the rug for being inconvenient to establishmentarians.

    Reply
  145. Thank you, Joel Hanes.
    There were meetings among right-wing operatives long before any of Clinton’s peccadillos became evident in which they decided to insert the shiv in the b*tch, just as McConnell and company met within days of Obama’s election to decide to stymie all governance by Democrats and their Kenyan leader.
    It’s fact, so not amenable to Marty’s empathy.
    I also agree with Michael Cain and others that Bill Clinton, as unrealistic as this is, needs to be shut down, just as it was in retrospect ridiculous that Yoko Ono could pipe up from her cot from the corner of the studio at Abbey Road and lend chord progression advice to the two or three greatest song writers in the world.
    I don’t have a problem with back channel but somehow transparent advice from Bill to Hillary, because of his experience, just as I have no problem with Hillary seeking out Colin Powell’s or George W. Bush’s or Barack Obama’s counsel, but I fear the Republican Party’s operative no good faith stance will be to isolate and hamstring the President of the United States from all governing avenues, in which case I believe in radical street level measures.

    Reply
  146. Thank you, Joel Hanes.
    There were meetings among right-wing operatives long before any of Clinton’s peccadillos became evident in which they decided to insert the shiv in the b*tch, just as McConnell and company met within days of Obama’s election to decide to stymie all governance by Democrats and their Kenyan leader.
    It’s fact, so not amenable to Marty’s empathy.
    I also agree with Michael Cain and others that Bill Clinton, as unrealistic as this is, needs to be shut down, just as it was in retrospect ridiculous that Yoko Ono could pipe up from her cot from the corner of the studio at Abbey Road and lend chord progression advice to the two or three greatest song writers in the world.
    I don’t have a problem with back channel but somehow transparent advice from Bill to Hillary, because of his experience, just as I have no problem with Hillary seeking out Colin Powell’s or George W. Bush’s or Barack Obama’s counsel, but I fear the Republican Party’s operative no good faith stance will be to isolate and hamstring the President of the United States from all governing avenues, in which case I believe in radical street level measures.

    Reply
  147. Thank you, Joel Hanes.
    There were meetings among right-wing operatives long before any of Clinton’s peccadillos became evident in which they decided to insert the shiv in the b*tch, just as McConnell and company met within days of Obama’s election to decide to stymie all governance by Democrats and their Kenyan leader.
    It’s fact, so not amenable to Marty’s empathy.
    I also agree with Michael Cain and others that Bill Clinton, as unrealistic as this is, needs to be shut down, just as it was in retrospect ridiculous that Yoko Ono could pipe up from her cot from the corner of the studio at Abbey Road and lend chord progression advice to the two or three greatest song writers in the world.
    I don’t have a problem with back channel but somehow transparent advice from Bill to Hillary, because of his experience, just as I have no problem with Hillary seeking out Colin Powell’s or George W. Bush’s or Barack Obama’s counsel, but I fear the Republican Party’s operative no good faith stance will be to isolate and hamstring the President of the United States from all governing avenues, in which case I believe in radical street level measures.

    Reply
  148. My problem with Hillary is that she tends to tack rightwards when in doubt. It was a problem with Obama too on too many policy issues when he hoped to win some GOPster votes for the sake of bipartisanship. We have to be thankful that the GOP rejected any offer on that. With Obama it was a vain attempt to be nice, with H.Clinton it will be a mix of triangulation and actual belief. I will not go as far as “Only Nixon could go to China and only a Democrat can destroy the New Deal” but, if the GOP could put pragmatism over guts, the erosion would speed up under an HRC presidency not slow down. Obama’s “Grand Bargain” was a very bad idea, Clinton is likely to be worse. And I hate the idea that all what stands against the possibly fatal weakening of the social contract is the visceral reaction of the GOP: “It is supposed to be US that screws the common scum. We will not allow any Demon Rat to do it for us!”*.
    And yes, I think Clinton went ‘left’ during the campaign for purely tactical reasons and will go back to ‘centrism’ (GOP light) at the first opportunity.
    I do not think she does it for personal gain but because she has bought into the idea of it being necessary. And imo she totally lacks the sadistic glee of the leading GOPsters and their backers for whom the screwing part is at least as important (and imo actually even more) than the material benefits they expect from it.
    *I think this is a major part explaining the hatred: not only was the power they feel entitled to taken from them but the takers tried/try to do the fun part without even considering it as fun.

    Reply
  149. My problem with Hillary is that she tends to tack rightwards when in doubt. It was a problem with Obama too on too many policy issues when he hoped to win some GOPster votes for the sake of bipartisanship. We have to be thankful that the GOP rejected any offer on that. With Obama it was a vain attempt to be nice, with H.Clinton it will be a mix of triangulation and actual belief. I will not go as far as “Only Nixon could go to China and only a Democrat can destroy the New Deal” but, if the GOP could put pragmatism over guts, the erosion would speed up under an HRC presidency not slow down. Obama’s “Grand Bargain” was a very bad idea, Clinton is likely to be worse. And I hate the idea that all what stands against the possibly fatal weakening of the social contract is the visceral reaction of the GOP: “It is supposed to be US that screws the common scum. We will not allow any Demon Rat to do it for us!”*.
    And yes, I think Clinton went ‘left’ during the campaign for purely tactical reasons and will go back to ‘centrism’ (GOP light) at the first opportunity.
    I do not think she does it for personal gain but because she has bought into the idea of it being necessary. And imo she totally lacks the sadistic glee of the leading GOPsters and their backers for whom the screwing part is at least as important (and imo actually even more) than the material benefits they expect from it.
    *I think this is a major part explaining the hatred: not only was the power they feel entitled to taken from them but the takers tried/try to do the fun part without even considering it as fun.

    Reply
  150. My problem with Hillary is that she tends to tack rightwards when in doubt. It was a problem with Obama too on too many policy issues when he hoped to win some GOPster votes for the sake of bipartisanship. We have to be thankful that the GOP rejected any offer on that. With Obama it was a vain attempt to be nice, with H.Clinton it will be a mix of triangulation and actual belief. I will not go as far as “Only Nixon could go to China and only a Democrat can destroy the New Deal” but, if the GOP could put pragmatism over guts, the erosion would speed up under an HRC presidency not slow down. Obama’s “Grand Bargain” was a very bad idea, Clinton is likely to be worse. And I hate the idea that all what stands against the possibly fatal weakening of the social contract is the visceral reaction of the GOP: “It is supposed to be US that screws the common scum. We will not allow any Demon Rat to do it for us!”*.
    And yes, I think Clinton went ‘left’ during the campaign for purely tactical reasons and will go back to ‘centrism’ (GOP light) at the first opportunity.
    I do not think she does it for personal gain but because she has bought into the idea of it being necessary. And imo she totally lacks the sadistic glee of the leading GOPsters and their backers for whom the screwing part is at least as important (and imo actually even more) than the material benefits they expect from it.
    *I think this is a major part explaining the hatred: not only was the power they feel entitled to taken from them but the takers tried/try to do the fun part without even considering it as fun.

    Reply
  151. Curt Schilling is a hater and was a great pitcher in the game I love.
    F8ck him.
    http://mediamatters.org/blog/2016/11/07/breitbart-s-curt-schilling-praises-photo-man-advocating-lynching-journalists/214377
    He wants violence, he will get it. You encourage violence, it will show up on your doorstep soon.
    That went for the Symbionese Liberation Army 45 years ago and it applies to Schilling and company.
    Journalists should carry weaponry when seeking his thoughts on current events and be ready to pull the trigger at the sign of any false move.
    Those big guys faint at the sight of their own plasma soaking the carpet.
    Marty might want to chime in on his empathy for the bleeding foot or maybe his splitter.
    F*ck him and hurt him.
    You don’t see Sandy Koufax threatening violence on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
    Stop this now, Republicans, win or lose, or you will reap the whirlwind in the thorn bush.

    Reply
  152. Curt Schilling is a hater and was a great pitcher in the game I love.
    F8ck him.
    http://mediamatters.org/blog/2016/11/07/breitbart-s-curt-schilling-praises-photo-man-advocating-lynching-journalists/214377
    He wants violence, he will get it. You encourage violence, it will show up on your doorstep soon.
    That went for the Symbionese Liberation Army 45 years ago and it applies to Schilling and company.
    Journalists should carry weaponry when seeking his thoughts on current events and be ready to pull the trigger at the sign of any false move.
    Those big guys faint at the sight of their own plasma soaking the carpet.
    Marty might want to chime in on his empathy for the bleeding foot or maybe his splitter.
    F*ck him and hurt him.
    You don’t see Sandy Koufax threatening violence on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
    Stop this now, Republicans, win or lose, or you will reap the whirlwind in the thorn bush.

    Reply
  153. Curt Schilling is a hater and was a great pitcher in the game I love.
    F8ck him.
    http://mediamatters.org/blog/2016/11/07/breitbart-s-curt-schilling-praises-photo-man-advocating-lynching-journalists/214377
    He wants violence, he will get it. You encourage violence, it will show up on your doorstep soon.
    That went for the Symbionese Liberation Army 45 years ago and it applies to Schilling and company.
    Journalists should carry weaponry when seeking his thoughts on current events and be ready to pull the trigger at the sign of any false move.
    Those big guys faint at the sight of their own plasma soaking the carpet.
    Marty might want to chime in on his empathy for the bleeding foot or maybe his splitter.
    F*ck him and hurt him.
    You don’t see Sandy Koufax threatening violence on behalf of Hillary Clinton.
    Stop this now, Republicans, win or lose, or you will reap the whirlwind in the thorn bush.

    Reply
  154. HRC (and WJC) have been consistently, deliberately smeared by one or another professionally-conducted campaign of innuendo, half-truths, and outright lies since at least 1990. After thirty-five years of dishonest propaganda, it’s not suprising that a large fraction of Americans have internalized the message to a greater or lesser degree.
    This is actually the best response to the Hillary hate question (by joel hanes). It’s unfortunate that even as public as this hate campaign has been, so many people have fallen for it.

    Reply
  155. HRC (and WJC) have been consistently, deliberately smeared by one or another professionally-conducted campaign of innuendo, half-truths, and outright lies since at least 1990. After thirty-five years of dishonest propaganda, it’s not suprising that a large fraction of Americans have internalized the message to a greater or lesser degree.
    This is actually the best response to the Hillary hate question (by joel hanes). It’s unfortunate that even as public as this hate campaign has been, so many people have fallen for it.

    Reply
  156. HRC (and WJC) have been consistently, deliberately smeared by one or another professionally-conducted campaign of innuendo, half-truths, and outright lies since at least 1990. After thirty-five years of dishonest propaganda, it’s not suprising that a large fraction of Americans have internalized the message to a greater or lesser degree.
    This is actually the best response to the Hillary hate question (by joel hanes). It’s unfortunate that even as public as this hate campaign has been, so many people have fallen for it.

    Reply
  157. i say it all the time, so i’ll say it again: Hating the Clintons is a religion. it’s built on faith and sustains itself with confirmation bias.
    years and years of acrid smoke has convinced people there must be a fire. but if you look closely, you can see the GOP-brand™ smoke machines in the center of every reported fire and you can see the guys in the GOP-brand™ firefighters jackets manning those machines. it’s just a show for the faithful: puts butts in the seats and dollars in the coffers.
    emails!

    Reply
  158. i say it all the time, so i’ll say it again: Hating the Clintons is a religion. it’s built on faith and sustains itself with confirmation bias.
    years and years of acrid smoke has convinced people there must be a fire. but if you look closely, you can see the GOP-brand™ smoke machines in the center of every reported fire and you can see the guys in the GOP-brand™ firefighters jackets manning those machines. it’s just a show for the faithful: puts butts in the seats and dollars in the coffers.
    emails!

    Reply
  159. i say it all the time, so i’ll say it again: Hating the Clintons is a religion. it’s built on faith and sustains itself with confirmation bias.
    years and years of acrid smoke has convinced people there must be a fire. but if you look closely, you can see the GOP-brand™ smoke machines in the center of every reported fire and you can see the guys in the GOP-brand™ firefighters jackets manning those machines. it’s just a show for the faithful: puts butts in the seats and dollars in the coffers.
    emails!

    Reply
  160. I doubt there are any death threats aimed at Americans or those Others, the Republicans, in Clinton emails, though I’ll bet the late David Bossie and his empathizer Marty could anagram plenty for us.
    No, for that, we go LIVE to any old Trump rally, which merely mimics in large type, nearly every major and Republican political rally of the past 25 years, where armed filth are tolerated and the hate they plan to enforce with the NRA’s blessing is in full display:
    https://twitter.com/kyledcheney/status/795815058697814016/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
    Can’t watch this today.
    If Clinton wins, I beseech (rhymes with impeach, so does that count?) her to extend a sweeping and gracious gesture to all who wish her dead or destroyed and try to carry that thru to Inauguration Day.
    Go directly to their gerrymandered districts and walk among them and start a dialogue. Forgo obvious Secret Service protection.
    Let’s find out what their response is regardless of its extremity.
    I also implore (because I am willing to deplore when needed. Right kids?) her to NOT take her supporters in all of the communities of this country for granted who have been terrorized by this election, as they have been taken too often by the Democratic Party in past cycles, and I’m speaking domestically.
    But I also want her to acknowledge as well the grave concerns of those who differ with her on her past foreign policy actions and who expect a refined approach this time around.
    If Trump wins, I expect to be identified as the enemy, just like always happens with these lot, but it will be horrifically worse.
    There can be no credible backing off or apology from their malign rhetoric and violent actions during this awful year, so I plan to live up to their image of me, and then some.
    It won’t take the form of pointless blogging.
    I depend too much on only one Amendment to the Constitution. I’m hankering to try out that other one that has brought so many so close to ruining the country.
    It seems to work.

    Reply
  161. I doubt there are any death threats aimed at Americans or those Others, the Republicans, in Clinton emails, though I’ll bet the late David Bossie and his empathizer Marty could anagram plenty for us.
    No, for that, we go LIVE to any old Trump rally, which merely mimics in large type, nearly every major and Republican political rally of the past 25 years, where armed filth are tolerated and the hate they plan to enforce with the NRA’s blessing is in full display:
    https://twitter.com/kyledcheney/status/795815058697814016/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
    Can’t watch this today.
    If Clinton wins, I beseech (rhymes with impeach, so does that count?) her to extend a sweeping and gracious gesture to all who wish her dead or destroyed and try to carry that thru to Inauguration Day.
    Go directly to their gerrymandered districts and walk among them and start a dialogue. Forgo obvious Secret Service protection.
    Let’s find out what their response is regardless of its extremity.
    I also implore (because I am willing to deplore when needed. Right kids?) her to NOT take her supporters in all of the communities of this country for granted who have been terrorized by this election, as they have been taken too often by the Democratic Party in past cycles, and I’m speaking domestically.
    But I also want her to acknowledge as well the grave concerns of those who differ with her on her past foreign policy actions and who expect a refined approach this time around.
    If Trump wins, I expect to be identified as the enemy, just like always happens with these lot, but it will be horrifically worse.
    There can be no credible backing off or apology from their malign rhetoric and violent actions during this awful year, so I plan to live up to their image of me, and then some.
    It won’t take the form of pointless blogging.
    I depend too much on only one Amendment to the Constitution. I’m hankering to try out that other one that has brought so many so close to ruining the country.
    It seems to work.

    Reply
  162. I doubt there are any death threats aimed at Americans or those Others, the Republicans, in Clinton emails, though I’ll bet the late David Bossie and his empathizer Marty could anagram plenty for us.
    No, for that, we go LIVE to any old Trump rally, which merely mimics in large type, nearly every major and Republican political rally of the past 25 years, where armed filth are tolerated and the hate they plan to enforce with the NRA’s blessing is in full display:
    https://twitter.com/kyledcheney/status/795815058697814016/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
    Can’t watch this today.
    If Clinton wins, I beseech (rhymes with impeach, so does that count?) her to extend a sweeping and gracious gesture to all who wish her dead or destroyed and try to carry that thru to Inauguration Day.
    Go directly to their gerrymandered districts and walk among them and start a dialogue. Forgo obvious Secret Service protection.
    Let’s find out what their response is regardless of its extremity.
    I also implore (because I am willing to deplore when needed. Right kids?) her to NOT take her supporters in all of the communities of this country for granted who have been terrorized by this election, as they have been taken too often by the Democratic Party in past cycles, and I’m speaking domestically.
    But I also want her to acknowledge as well the grave concerns of those who differ with her on her past foreign policy actions and who expect a refined approach this time around.
    If Trump wins, I expect to be identified as the enemy, just like always happens with these lot, but it will be horrifically worse.
    There can be no credible backing off or apology from their malign rhetoric and violent actions during this awful year, so I plan to live up to their image of me, and then some.
    It won’t take the form of pointless blogging.
    I depend too much on only one Amendment to the Constitution. I’m hankering to try out that other one that has brought so many so close to ruining the country.
    It seems to work.

    Reply
  163. Michael cain,
    One question provided a detailed bill of materials, a topo map, and asked the question, “As an officer, how would you build a bridge over this small river?” Enough space was provided to allow for extremely detailed answers. The correct answer for OCS was, “Sargent, take these men and this pile of sh*t and build a bridge over the river. I’ll be back in four hours.”
    Really? That seems like a terrible answer that totally abdicates leadership’s responsibilities. I’d reject anyone who gave it.

    Reply
  164. Michael cain,
    One question provided a detailed bill of materials, a topo map, and asked the question, “As an officer, how would you build a bridge over this small river?” Enough space was provided to allow for extremely detailed answers. The correct answer for OCS was, “Sargent, take these men and this pile of sh*t and build a bridge over the river. I’ll be back in four hours.”
    Really? That seems like a terrible answer that totally abdicates leadership’s responsibilities. I’d reject anyone who gave it.

    Reply
  165. Michael cain,
    One question provided a detailed bill of materials, a topo map, and asked the question, “As an officer, how would you build a bridge over this small river?” Enough space was provided to allow for extremely detailed answers. The correct answer for OCS was, “Sargent, take these men and this pile of sh*t and build a bridge over the river. I’ll be back in four hours.”
    Really? That seems like a terrible answer that totally abdicates leadership’s responsibilities. I’d reject anyone who gave it.

    Reply
  166. Maybe someone has mentioned this before, but is part of the problem people have with the Clintons getting rich that they weren’t rich to begin with? No one cares if Richie Rich Bush makes a bunch of money on his name. He deserves it, sort of like royalty, anointed by pedigree so long ago.

    Reply
  167. Maybe someone has mentioned this before, but is part of the problem people have with the Clintons getting rich that they weren’t rich to begin with? No one cares if Richie Rich Bush makes a bunch of money on his name. He deserves it, sort of like royalty, anointed by pedigree so long ago.

    Reply
  168. Maybe someone has mentioned this before, but is part of the problem people have with the Clintons getting rich that they weren’t rich to begin with? No one cares if Richie Rich Bush makes a bunch of money on his name. He deserves it, sort of like royalty, anointed by pedigree so long ago.

    Reply
  169. Boomtown, I think you are missing the point. Which is that a leader is expected to set goals and objectives. And to then have the good sense to NOT micromanage the experienced technical experts as they get the job done.
    Anyone here who has experience being micromanaged, especially by a boss with minimal training and experience in the field, can doubtless relate.

    Reply
  170. Boomtown, I think you are missing the point. Which is that a leader is expected to set goals and objectives. And to then have the good sense to NOT micromanage the experienced technical experts as they get the job done.
    Anyone here who has experience being micromanaged, especially by a boss with minimal training and experience in the field, can doubtless relate.

    Reply
  171. Boomtown, I think you are missing the point. Which is that a leader is expected to set goals and objectives. And to then have the good sense to NOT micromanage the experienced technical experts as they get the job done.
    Anyone here who has experience being micromanaged, especially by a boss with minimal training and experience in the field, can doubtless relate.

    Reply
  172. years and years of acrid smoke has convinced people there must be a fire. but if you look closely, you can see the GOP-brand™ smoke machines in the center of every reported fire and you can see the guys in the GOP-brand™ firefighters jackets manning those machines.
    This is very true. In “The Power of Nightmares”, a very interesting (though controversial) 3-part documentary on the rise of Al-Quaeda and its relationship to American neoconservatism, IIRC some of the very GOP operatives who confected some of the smoke (like Vince Foster’s murder) own up to it.

    Reply
  173. years and years of acrid smoke has convinced people there must be a fire. but if you look closely, you can see the GOP-brand™ smoke machines in the center of every reported fire and you can see the guys in the GOP-brand™ firefighters jackets manning those machines.
    This is very true. In “The Power of Nightmares”, a very interesting (though controversial) 3-part documentary on the rise of Al-Quaeda and its relationship to American neoconservatism, IIRC some of the very GOP operatives who confected some of the smoke (like Vince Foster’s murder) own up to it.

    Reply
  174. years and years of acrid smoke has convinced people there must be a fire. but if you look closely, you can see the GOP-brand™ smoke machines in the center of every reported fire and you can see the guys in the GOP-brand™ firefighters jackets manning those machines.
    This is very true. In “The Power of Nightmares”, a very interesting (though controversial) 3-part documentary on the rise of Al-Quaeda and its relationship to American neoconservatism, IIRC some of the very GOP operatives who confected some of the smoke (like Vince Foster’s murder) own up to it.

    Reply
  175. wj,
    Is “boomtown” me?
    Well, if the sergeant is an expert at throwing together bridges from a pile of junk then fine. But if he doesn’t know any more than I do then it’s unreasonable to leave it to him. It’s not micromanaging to help figure out what to do.
    Being micromanaged is unpleasant, I agree, and bosses should avoid doing it. But I’ve also seen too many bosses who think it’s heroic to “set goals” that are impossible, and refuse to listen to objections, offer advice, or help in any way. That’s not leadership.

    Reply
  176. wj,
    Is “boomtown” me?
    Well, if the sergeant is an expert at throwing together bridges from a pile of junk then fine. But if he doesn’t know any more than I do then it’s unreasonable to leave it to him. It’s not micromanaging to help figure out what to do.
    Being micromanaged is unpleasant, I agree, and bosses should avoid doing it. But I’ve also seen too many bosses who think it’s heroic to “set goals” that are impossible, and refuse to listen to objections, offer advice, or help in any way. That’s not leadership.

    Reply
  177. wj,
    Is “boomtown” me?
    Well, if the sergeant is an expert at throwing together bridges from a pile of junk then fine. But if he doesn’t know any more than I do then it’s unreasonable to leave it to him. It’s not micromanaging to help figure out what to do.
    Being micromanaged is unpleasant, I agree, and bosses should avoid doing it. But I’ve also seen too many bosses who think it’s heroic to “set goals” that are impossible, and refuse to listen to objections, offer advice, or help in any way. That’s not leadership.

    Reply
  178. Back to the main topic.
    I certainly don’t hate Hillary. But there are things about the whole family that rub me the wrong way, and I don’t think misogyny is the reason.
    For one thing, the Clintons seem to me excessively greedy and entitled, even by the standards of successful former politicians. I recall when Chelsea got a $600K job as a rookie newscaster. That grated. So do the $225K speeches, and 3-4 million dollar/yr job – whatever it was – that Bill got at Laureate U.
    Sorry, that kind of thing is irritating.

    Reply
  179. Back to the main topic.
    I certainly don’t hate Hillary. But there are things about the whole family that rub me the wrong way, and I don’t think misogyny is the reason.
    For one thing, the Clintons seem to me excessively greedy and entitled, even by the standards of successful former politicians. I recall when Chelsea got a $600K job as a rookie newscaster. That grated. So do the $225K speeches, and 3-4 million dollar/yr job – whatever it was – that Bill got at Laureate U.
    Sorry, that kind of thing is irritating.

    Reply
  180. Back to the main topic.
    I certainly don’t hate Hillary. But there are things about the whole family that rub me the wrong way, and I don’t think misogyny is the reason.
    For one thing, the Clintons seem to me excessively greedy and entitled, even by the standards of successful former politicians. I recall when Chelsea got a $600K job as a rookie newscaster. That grated. So do the $225K speeches, and 3-4 million dollar/yr job – whatever it was – that Bill got at Laureate U.
    Sorry, that kind of thing is irritating.

    Reply
  181. So do the $225K speeches
    what’s the going rate for a speech from a former Senator + First Lady + SecState ?
    Condi Rice gets $150K, and she was part of W’s fail-a-thon.

    Reply
  182. So do the $225K speeches
    what’s the going rate for a speech from a former Senator + First Lady + SecState ?
    Condi Rice gets $150K, and she was part of W’s fail-a-thon.

    Reply
  183. So do the $225K speeches
    what’s the going rate for a speech from a former Senator + First Lady + SecState ?
    Condi Rice gets $150K, and she was part of W’s fail-a-thon.

    Reply
  184. byomtov,
    Maybe it was the seemingly crass way they went about it, or at least first Bill and then Hillary?
    Bill & Hillary are sui genersis in a lot of ways, this being one of them it seems.

    Reply
  185. byomtov,
    Maybe it was the seemingly crass way they went about it, or at least first Bill and then Hillary?
    Bill & Hillary are sui genersis in a lot of ways, this being one of them it seems.

    Reply
  186. byomtov,
    Maybe it was the seemingly crass way they went about it, or at least first Bill and then Hillary?
    Bill & Hillary are sui genersis in a lot of ways, this being one of them it seems.

    Reply
  187. Well, if the sergeant is an expert at throwing together bridges from a pile of junk then fine. But if he doesn’t know any more than I do then it’s unreasonable to leave it to him. It’s not micromanaging to help figure out what to do.
    It’s largely a matter of how our military is structured. NCOs are professional managers. Commissioned officers are executives, and at the lowest ranks they typically have far less relevant experience than even the junior enlisted personnel, as well as very broad sets of responsibilities (which they may or may not be trained for). Even if the officer was previously an NCO, they don’t necessarily have experience with the particular tasks that the NCO does, whereas that’s normally the NCO’s job. It may sound pompous and aloof to set a task and walk away, but it’s how we’ve structured our military – a professional NCO Corps, and an Officer Corps primarily staffed at the low levels by inexperienced college graduates.

    Reply
  188. Well, if the sergeant is an expert at throwing together bridges from a pile of junk then fine. But if he doesn’t know any more than I do then it’s unreasonable to leave it to him. It’s not micromanaging to help figure out what to do.
    It’s largely a matter of how our military is structured. NCOs are professional managers. Commissioned officers are executives, and at the lowest ranks they typically have far less relevant experience than even the junior enlisted personnel, as well as very broad sets of responsibilities (which they may or may not be trained for). Even if the officer was previously an NCO, they don’t necessarily have experience with the particular tasks that the NCO does, whereas that’s normally the NCO’s job. It may sound pompous and aloof to set a task and walk away, but it’s how we’ve structured our military – a professional NCO Corps, and an Officer Corps primarily staffed at the low levels by inexperienced college graduates.

    Reply
  189. Well, if the sergeant is an expert at throwing together bridges from a pile of junk then fine. But if he doesn’t know any more than I do then it’s unreasonable to leave it to him. It’s not micromanaging to help figure out what to do.
    It’s largely a matter of how our military is structured. NCOs are professional managers. Commissioned officers are executives, and at the lowest ranks they typically have far less relevant experience than even the junior enlisted personnel, as well as very broad sets of responsibilities (which they may or may not be trained for). Even if the officer was previously an NCO, they don’t necessarily have experience with the particular tasks that the NCO does, whereas that’s normally the NCO’s job. It may sound pompous and aloof to set a task and walk away, but it’s how we’ve structured our military – a professional NCO Corps, and an Officer Corps primarily staffed at the low levels by inexperienced college graduates.

    Reply
  190. (Ideally, a junior officer in an executive role understands they’re inexperienced and listen to their senior NCOs before making decisions, as well. It doesn’t always happen, but that’s the theory of how it’s supposed to work.)

    Reply
  191. (Ideally, a junior officer in an executive role understands they’re inexperienced and listen to their senior NCOs before making decisions, as well. It doesn’t always happen, but that’s the theory of how it’s supposed to work.)

    Reply
  192. (Ideally, a junior officer in an executive role understands they’re inexperienced and listen to their senior NCOs before making decisions, as well. It doesn’t always happen, but that’s the theory of how it’s supposed to work.)

    Reply
  193. byomtov, yup #%$¥& autocorrect!
    The (not unreasonable) assumption in the military is that the NCOs always know more about how to do things than the junior officers. A lieutenant will have been around for 3 years tops; a Sargeant for at least double that, maybe 3-4 times. It Is possible to get a junior officer who actually does know something useful. But (mustangs excepted) that’s definitely not the way to bet.

    Reply
  194. byomtov, yup #%$¥& autocorrect!
    The (not unreasonable) assumption in the military is that the NCOs always know more about how to do things than the junior officers. A lieutenant will have been around for 3 years tops; a Sargeant for at least double that, maybe 3-4 times. It Is possible to get a junior officer who actually does know something useful. But (mustangs excepted) that’s definitely not the way to bet.

    Reply
  195. byomtov, yup #%$¥& autocorrect!
    The (not unreasonable) assumption in the military is that the NCOs always know more about how to do things than the junior officers. A lieutenant will have been around for 3 years tops; a Sargeant for at least double that, maybe 3-4 times. It Is possible to get a junior officer who actually does know something useful. But (mustangs excepted) that’s definitely not the way to bet.

    Reply
  196. It may sound pompous and aloof to set a task and walk away, but it’s how we’ve structured our military – a professional NCO Corps, and an Officer Corps primarily staffed at the low levels by inexperienced college graduates.
    Actually it’s just a matter of the military preserving the traditional division of labor between the nobility/aristocrats and the masses. Some day a brilliant innovator may come up with a better paradigm. But so far, everybody is sticking with what is known to work.

    Reply
  197. It may sound pompous and aloof to set a task and walk away, but it’s how we’ve structured our military – a professional NCO Corps, and an Officer Corps primarily staffed at the low levels by inexperienced college graduates.
    Actually it’s just a matter of the military preserving the traditional division of labor between the nobility/aristocrats and the masses. Some day a brilliant innovator may come up with a better paradigm. But so far, everybody is sticking with what is known to work.

    Reply
  198. It may sound pompous and aloof to set a task and walk away, but it’s how we’ve structured our military – a professional NCO Corps, and an Officer Corps primarily staffed at the low levels by inexperienced college graduates.
    Actually it’s just a matter of the military preserving the traditional division of labor between the nobility/aristocrats and the masses. Some day a brilliant innovator may come up with a better paradigm. But so far, everybody is sticking with what is known to work.

    Reply
  199. So do the $225K speeches
    IMO the extremely porous boundary between great big piles of money and positions of public responsibility smells. All of it.
    That said, $225K is, amazingly enough, not out of line for speeches-for-hire by public figures. It’s in the big leagues for sure, but far from exceptional.
    I have no idea what makes a one-hour-or-less speech by anybody worth a quarter of a million dollars, but apparently it’s a thing.

    Reply
  200. So do the $225K speeches
    IMO the extremely porous boundary between great big piles of money and positions of public responsibility smells. All of it.
    That said, $225K is, amazingly enough, not out of line for speeches-for-hire by public figures. It’s in the big leagues for sure, but far from exceptional.
    I have no idea what makes a one-hour-or-less speech by anybody worth a quarter of a million dollars, but apparently it’s a thing.

    Reply
  201. So do the $225K speeches
    IMO the extremely porous boundary between great big piles of money and positions of public responsibility smells. All of it.
    That said, $225K is, amazingly enough, not out of line for speeches-for-hire by public figures. It’s in the big leagues for sure, but far from exceptional.
    I have no idea what makes a one-hour-or-less speech by anybody worth a quarter of a million dollars, but apparently it’s a thing.

    Reply
  202. Actually it’s just a matter of the military preserving the traditional division of labor between the nobility/aristocrats and the masses.
    Yup. The class resentment between enlisted personnel and commissioned personnel makes this very clear; even if a lot of people don’t recognize it as class resentment, it’s very, very real. As someone who enlisted to commission before getting physically broken and riding out my contract as enlisted, this was very painfully obvious (it helped that my best friend, another broken OC, managed to get back to OCS despite the dramatically tightening standards after we were reclassed, but even w/o their perspective it was really glaring).

    Reply
  203. Actually it’s just a matter of the military preserving the traditional division of labor between the nobility/aristocrats and the masses.
    Yup. The class resentment between enlisted personnel and commissioned personnel makes this very clear; even if a lot of people don’t recognize it as class resentment, it’s very, very real. As someone who enlisted to commission before getting physically broken and riding out my contract as enlisted, this was very painfully obvious (it helped that my best friend, another broken OC, managed to get back to OCS despite the dramatically tightening standards after we were reclassed, but even w/o their perspective it was really glaring).

    Reply
  204. Actually it’s just a matter of the military preserving the traditional division of labor between the nobility/aristocrats and the masses.
    Yup. The class resentment between enlisted personnel and commissioned personnel makes this very clear; even if a lot of people don’t recognize it as class resentment, it’s very, very real. As someone who enlisted to commission before getting physically broken and riding out my contract as enlisted, this was very painfully obvious (it helped that my best friend, another broken OC, managed to get back to OCS despite the dramatically tightening standards after we were reclassed, but even w/o their perspective it was really glaring).

    Reply
  205. wj, nv, others,
    OK. I give on the military example.
    But in civilian life, at least in business environments I’ve worked in, that’s a BS way of doing things.
    If the boss tells you the product has to be ready by Dec. 31, he better be able to tell you why that’s realistic, and provide resources and ideas that will help. Pounding his chest and saying, “Just get it done,” is not helpful.

    Reply
  206. wj, nv, others,
    OK. I give on the military example.
    But in civilian life, at least in business environments I’ve worked in, that’s a BS way of doing things.
    If the boss tells you the product has to be ready by Dec. 31, he better be able to tell you why that’s realistic, and provide resources and ideas that will help. Pounding his chest and saying, “Just get it done,” is not helpful.

    Reply
  207. wj, nv, others,
    OK. I give on the military example.
    But in civilian life, at least in business environments I’ve worked in, that’s a BS way of doing things.
    If the boss tells you the product has to be ready by Dec. 31, he better be able to tell you why that’s realistic, and provide resources and ideas that will help. Pounding his chest and saying, “Just get it done,” is not helpful.

    Reply
  208. I think it’s great that Chelsea made big bucks working for her parents. That way, she pays taxes on the money. If she just waited to inherit it, it might be a different story. So by all means, pay her a salary, a BIG salary.

    Reply
  209. I think it’s great that Chelsea made big bucks working for her parents. That way, she pays taxes on the money. If she just waited to inherit it, it might be a different story. So by all means, pay her a salary, a BIG salary.

    Reply
  210. I think it’s great that Chelsea made big bucks working for her parents. That way, she pays taxes on the money. If she just waited to inherit it, it might be a different story. So by all means, pay her a salary, a BIG salary.

    Reply
  211. For one thing, the Clintons seem to me excessively greedy and entitled, even by the standards of successful former politicians.
    You know what? America is full of rich lawyers, and I’m guessing that their graduating year from Yale Law school is now full of millionaires, few of whom have the chance and the intention to do the good to e.g. the poor that HRC has. Also, those couture Ralph Lauren pantsuits aren’t going to buy themselves. Their now net worth could have let them kick back and enjoy the spoils; she’s not doing that.

    Reply
  212. For one thing, the Clintons seem to me excessively greedy and entitled, even by the standards of successful former politicians.
    You know what? America is full of rich lawyers, and I’m guessing that their graduating year from Yale Law school is now full of millionaires, few of whom have the chance and the intention to do the good to e.g. the poor that HRC has. Also, those couture Ralph Lauren pantsuits aren’t going to buy themselves. Their now net worth could have let them kick back and enjoy the spoils; she’s not doing that.

    Reply
  213. For one thing, the Clintons seem to me excessively greedy and entitled, even by the standards of successful former politicians.
    You know what? America is full of rich lawyers, and I’m guessing that their graduating year from Yale Law school is now full of millionaires, few of whom have the chance and the intention to do the good to e.g. the poor that HRC has. Also, those couture Ralph Lauren pantsuits aren’t going to buy themselves. Their now net worth could have let them kick back and enjoy the spoils; she’s not doing that.

    Reply
  214. And not just the poor, or women’s and children’s health and rights, but also and maybe most importantly climate change!

    Reply
  215. And not just the poor, or women’s and children’s health and rights, but also and maybe most importantly climate change!

    Reply
  216. And not just the poor, or women’s and children’s health and rights, but also and maybe most importantly climate change!

    Reply
  217. Now I voted for her, but I feel it is the strangely the most horrible vote and most necessary vote I’ve ever cast. Trump would be a horrible risk.
    The Clintons are one of the deepest products of tribal politics so it is almost impossible to talk about them without invoking the protections of your side.
    From my perspective the problem with the Clintons is the classic “the shocking part is what’s legal”. They have always been very lawyerly in how they institutionalize corrupt practices. It is a breadth and depth issue. I’m sure all sorts of politicians do individual things just as corrupt (but technically legal), but the Clintons do it big.
    I would love to see the following things analyzed and explained using a classic progressive understanding of how money works in politics, but it is impossible because once you say “Clinton” the entire Democratic Party goes into battered spouse defense mode.
    I’ve never heard a good non-corrupt explanation for how commodities trader and Clinton Foundation donor Rajiv Fernando got Clinton’s office to successfully push him onto the arms control oriented and top-secret clearance requiring International Security Advisory Board. Was it prosecutably illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to see a good explanation.
    I’ve never seen a good explanation of why Sidney Blumenthal was getting $10,000 per month as a staff member of the Clinton Foundation while he was also pulling in about $200,000 a year doing unspecificed ‘consulting’ with Media Matters entities for multiple years–just another case of how being a Clinton loyalist can make you fantastically rich. Is it technically illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to hear a good explanation.
    It isn’t remotely clear why the Saudi government was giving tens of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation. I’m sure Clinton’s lawyers have reviewed it all to make sure it technically doesn’t break any laws, but Congress writes the corruption laws…
    So, just as a start can I get a good non-corrupt explanation for Fernado?

    Reply
  218. Now I voted for her, but I feel it is the strangely the most horrible vote and most necessary vote I’ve ever cast. Trump would be a horrible risk.
    The Clintons are one of the deepest products of tribal politics so it is almost impossible to talk about them without invoking the protections of your side.
    From my perspective the problem with the Clintons is the classic “the shocking part is what’s legal”. They have always been very lawyerly in how they institutionalize corrupt practices. It is a breadth and depth issue. I’m sure all sorts of politicians do individual things just as corrupt (but technically legal), but the Clintons do it big.
    I would love to see the following things analyzed and explained using a classic progressive understanding of how money works in politics, but it is impossible because once you say “Clinton” the entire Democratic Party goes into battered spouse defense mode.
    I’ve never heard a good non-corrupt explanation for how commodities trader and Clinton Foundation donor Rajiv Fernando got Clinton’s office to successfully push him onto the arms control oriented and top-secret clearance requiring International Security Advisory Board. Was it prosecutably illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to see a good explanation.
    I’ve never seen a good explanation of why Sidney Blumenthal was getting $10,000 per month as a staff member of the Clinton Foundation while he was also pulling in about $200,000 a year doing unspecificed ‘consulting’ with Media Matters entities for multiple years–just another case of how being a Clinton loyalist can make you fantastically rich. Is it technically illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to hear a good explanation.
    It isn’t remotely clear why the Saudi government was giving tens of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation. I’m sure Clinton’s lawyers have reviewed it all to make sure it technically doesn’t break any laws, but Congress writes the corruption laws…
    So, just as a start can I get a good non-corrupt explanation for Fernado?

    Reply
  219. Now I voted for her, but I feel it is the strangely the most horrible vote and most necessary vote I’ve ever cast. Trump would be a horrible risk.
    The Clintons are one of the deepest products of tribal politics so it is almost impossible to talk about them without invoking the protections of your side.
    From my perspective the problem with the Clintons is the classic “the shocking part is what’s legal”. They have always been very lawyerly in how they institutionalize corrupt practices. It is a breadth and depth issue. I’m sure all sorts of politicians do individual things just as corrupt (but technically legal), but the Clintons do it big.
    I would love to see the following things analyzed and explained using a classic progressive understanding of how money works in politics, but it is impossible because once you say “Clinton” the entire Democratic Party goes into battered spouse defense mode.
    I’ve never heard a good non-corrupt explanation for how commodities trader and Clinton Foundation donor Rajiv Fernando got Clinton’s office to successfully push him onto the arms control oriented and top-secret clearance requiring International Security Advisory Board. Was it prosecutably illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to see a good explanation.
    I’ve never seen a good explanation of why Sidney Blumenthal was getting $10,000 per month as a staff member of the Clinton Foundation while he was also pulling in about $200,000 a year doing unspecificed ‘consulting’ with Media Matters entities for multiple years–just another case of how being a Clinton loyalist can make you fantastically rich. Is it technically illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to hear a good explanation.
    It isn’t remotely clear why the Saudi government was giving tens of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation. I’m sure Clinton’s lawyers have reviewed it all to make sure it technically doesn’t break any laws, but Congress writes the corruption laws…
    So, just as a start can I get a good non-corrupt explanation for Fernado?

    Reply
  220. I’m not sure why the Blumenthal situation requires any explanation. You say it’s technically legal (actually you said illegal but I believe you meant legal). Under what theory would it be illegal at all for Blumenthal do earn money from Media Matters and the Clinton Foundation?

    Reply
  221. I’m not sure why the Blumenthal situation requires any explanation. You say it’s technically legal (actually you said illegal but I believe you meant legal). Under what theory would it be illegal at all for Blumenthal do earn money from Media Matters and the Clinton Foundation?

    Reply
  222. I’m not sure why the Blumenthal situation requires any explanation. You say it’s technically legal (actually you said illegal but I believe you meant legal). Under what theory would it be illegal at all for Blumenthal do earn money from Media Matters and the Clinton Foundation?

    Reply
  223. Anyone who favored Clinton over Sanders on electability grounds was 100% right to do so, and I say this as someone who voted for Sanders in the primary.
    He turned out to deal poorly with challenges from people very unlike himself. He learned to do better, and would presumably have done so in the general campaign. But Clinton has nothing to learn about challenges, however weird, brutal, and detached from reality. Sanders’ campaign against Trump would have been littered with more lapses and bouts of recovery, while Clinton had none.
    Further, a basic fact of American life now is that the Republican Party owns the majority of the while male vote. Not all white men fall for Republican lies, but a majority do. Clinton started off the campaign already popular with lots of the people who make up the Democratic basic – white women, African-American men and women, Latin@ men and women, and so on. Sanders clearly bears none of them ill wishes or anything like that, but he hasn’t had to know a whole lot about their various particular needs and wishes, particularly ones that don’t really boil down to economics. Clinton came in able to build on existing strengths.
    For all the talk of her negatives, she’s been able to inspire massive participation, including in the vital, structural get-out-the-vote stuff. That’s electability in a nutshell. and it was foreseeable – and foreseen, by people with better judgment than me – at the time.

    Reply
  224. Anyone who favored Clinton over Sanders on electability grounds was 100% right to do so, and I say this as someone who voted for Sanders in the primary.
    He turned out to deal poorly with challenges from people very unlike himself. He learned to do better, and would presumably have done so in the general campaign. But Clinton has nothing to learn about challenges, however weird, brutal, and detached from reality. Sanders’ campaign against Trump would have been littered with more lapses and bouts of recovery, while Clinton had none.
    Further, a basic fact of American life now is that the Republican Party owns the majority of the while male vote. Not all white men fall for Republican lies, but a majority do. Clinton started off the campaign already popular with lots of the people who make up the Democratic basic – white women, African-American men and women, Latin@ men and women, and so on. Sanders clearly bears none of them ill wishes or anything like that, but he hasn’t had to know a whole lot about their various particular needs and wishes, particularly ones that don’t really boil down to economics. Clinton came in able to build on existing strengths.
    For all the talk of her negatives, she’s been able to inspire massive participation, including in the vital, structural get-out-the-vote stuff. That’s electability in a nutshell. and it was foreseeable – and foreseen, by people with better judgment than me – at the time.

    Reply
  225. Anyone who favored Clinton over Sanders on electability grounds was 100% right to do so, and I say this as someone who voted for Sanders in the primary.
    He turned out to deal poorly with challenges from people very unlike himself. He learned to do better, and would presumably have done so in the general campaign. But Clinton has nothing to learn about challenges, however weird, brutal, and detached from reality. Sanders’ campaign against Trump would have been littered with more lapses and bouts of recovery, while Clinton had none.
    Further, a basic fact of American life now is that the Republican Party owns the majority of the while male vote. Not all white men fall for Republican lies, but a majority do. Clinton started off the campaign already popular with lots of the people who make up the Democratic basic – white women, African-American men and women, Latin@ men and women, and so on. Sanders clearly bears none of them ill wishes or anything like that, but he hasn’t had to know a whole lot about their various particular needs and wishes, particularly ones that don’t really boil down to economics. Clinton came in able to build on existing strengths.
    For all the talk of her negatives, she’s been able to inspire massive participation, including in the vital, structural get-out-the-vote stuff. That’s electability in a nutshell. and it was foreseeable – and foreseen, by people with better judgment than me – at the time.

    Reply
  226. I’ve never heard a good non-corrupt explanation for how commodities trader and Clinton Foundation donor Rajiv Fernando got Clinton’s office to successfully push him onto the arms control oriented and top-secret clearance requiring International Security Advisory Board. Was it prosecutably illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to see a good explanation.
    From Sid Blumenthal’s mouth to your ears.
    Took maybe 5 seconds to find on the inter-tubes.

    Reply
  227. I’ve never heard a good non-corrupt explanation for how commodities trader and Clinton Foundation donor Rajiv Fernando got Clinton’s office to successfully push him onto the arms control oriented and top-secret clearance requiring International Security Advisory Board. Was it prosecutably illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to see a good explanation.
    From Sid Blumenthal’s mouth to your ears.
    Took maybe 5 seconds to find on the inter-tubes.

    Reply
  228. I’ve never heard a good non-corrupt explanation for how commodities trader and Clinton Foundation donor Rajiv Fernando got Clinton’s office to successfully push him onto the arms control oriented and top-secret clearance requiring International Security Advisory Board. Was it prosecutably illegal? I don’t care, I’d like to see a good explanation.
    From Sid Blumenthal’s mouth to your ears.
    Took maybe 5 seconds to find on the inter-tubes.

    Reply
  229. I’ve never seen a good explanation of why Sidney Blumenthal was getting $10,000 per month as a staff member of the Clinton Foundation while he was also pulling in about $200,000 a year doing unspecificed ‘consulting’ with Media Matters entities for multiple years–just another case of how being a Clinton loyalist can make you fantastically rich.
    Lessee know, that’s….why that’s $320,000 a year!!!!!!!! Whoever heard of anybody making that much money? Oh, wait, that’s chump change in the corporate/lobbying/finance scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours world. After all, Condi Rice now sits on the Board of Directors at Dropbox. WTF does she know about the internets business?
    But you know, the outrage can only apparently be applied to Democrats.
    Christ.

    Reply
  230. I’ve never seen a good explanation of why Sidney Blumenthal was getting $10,000 per month as a staff member of the Clinton Foundation while he was also pulling in about $200,000 a year doing unspecificed ‘consulting’ with Media Matters entities for multiple years–just another case of how being a Clinton loyalist can make you fantastically rich.
    Lessee know, that’s….why that’s $320,000 a year!!!!!!!! Whoever heard of anybody making that much money? Oh, wait, that’s chump change in the corporate/lobbying/finance scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours world. After all, Condi Rice now sits on the Board of Directors at Dropbox. WTF does she know about the internets business?
    But you know, the outrage can only apparently be applied to Democrats.
    Christ.

    Reply
  231. I’ve never seen a good explanation of why Sidney Blumenthal was getting $10,000 per month as a staff member of the Clinton Foundation while he was also pulling in about $200,000 a year doing unspecificed ‘consulting’ with Media Matters entities for multiple years–just another case of how being a Clinton loyalist can make you fantastically rich.
    Lessee know, that’s….why that’s $320,000 a year!!!!!!!! Whoever heard of anybody making that much money? Oh, wait, that’s chump change in the corporate/lobbying/finance scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours world. After all, Condi Rice now sits on the Board of Directors at Dropbox. WTF does she know about the internets business?
    But you know, the outrage can only apparently be applied to Democrats.
    Christ.

    Reply
  232. It isn’t remotely clear why the Saudi government was giving tens of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation.
    They plunked down about $10m to help Clinton build his presidential library. They donated the same amount to fund G.W. Bush’s presidential library.
    But you have never experienced one ounce of outrage about that gift to a Republican, now have you.
    Why don’t you actually try to look into some of these concerns before artfully expressing them in terms deliberately chosen to make the Clintons look bad?
    I don’t believe that is too much to ask.

    Reply
  233. It isn’t remotely clear why the Saudi government was giving tens of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation.
    They plunked down about $10m to help Clinton build his presidential library. They donated the same amount to fund G.W. Bush’s presidential library.
    But you have never experienced one ounce of outrage about that gift to a Republican, now have you.
    Why don’t you actually try to look into some of these concerns before artfully expressing them in terms deliberately chosen to make the Clintons look bad?
    I don’t believe that is too much to ask.

    Reply
  234. It isn’t remotely clear why the Saudi government was giving tens of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation.
    They plunked down about $10m to help Clinton build his presidential library. They donated the same amount to fund G.W. Bush’s presidential library.
    But you have never experienced one ounce of outrage about that gift to a Republican, now have you.
    Why don’t you actually try to look into some of these concerns before artfully expressing them in terms deliberately chosen to make the Clintons look bad?
    I don’t believe that is too much to ask.

    Reply
  235. The Bush family was in bed with the Saudis. One of their ambassadors was called Bandar Bush, iirc. The Saudis spread a lot of money around. Perhaps coincidentally, they are our allies from hell and get away with murder.
    The Democrats have pretty much flushed the issue of money in politics down the toilet. I don’t mean they are worse than the Republicans.

    Reply
  236. The Bush family was in bed with the Saudis. One of their ambassadors was called Bandar Bush, iirc. The Saudis spread a lot of money around. Perhaps coincidentally, they are our allies from hell and get away with murder.
    The Democrats have pretty much flushed the issue of money in politics down the toilet. I don’t mean they are worse than the Republicans.

    Reply
  237. The Bush family was in bed with the Saudis. One of their ambassadors was called Bandar Bush, iirc. The Saudis spread a lot of money around. Perhaps coincidentally, they are our allies from hell and get away with murder.
    The Democrats have pretty much flushed the issue of money in politics down the toilet. I don’t mean they are worse than the Republicans.

    Reply
  238. If Trump wins, will you be sitting down, shutting up, and “get[ting] over it”? Somehow, I doubt it. Because, ofc, life doesn’t stop when the last vote is cast, and what mattered then still matters. The primary is done, just as tomorrow the general election will be done, but the politics driving them are never done. So no, no reason to “get over it” aside from your desire to quash dissent.

    Reply
  239. If Trump wins, will you be sitting down, shutting up, and “get[ting] over it”? Somehow, I doubt it. Because, ofc, life doesn’t stop when the last vote is cast, and what mattered then still matters. The primary is done, just as tomorrow the general election will be done, but the politics driving them are never done. So no, no reason to “get over it” aside from your desire to quash dissent.

    Reply
  240. If Trump wins, will you be sitting down, shutting up, and “get[ting] over it”? Somehow, I doubt it. Because, ofc, life doesn’t stop when the last vote is cast, and what mattered then still matters. The primary is done, just as tomorrow the general election will be done, but the politics driving them are never done. So no, no reason to “get over it” aside from your desire to quash dissent.

    Reply
  241. NV,
    Have I convinced you to vote for Hillary yet? How about a bribe…cold hard cash? Well, I tried. 🙂
    As to the iron law: as I understand it, if those who possess institutional power are given the following choices:
    1. Do whatever it takes to achieve your goals, even at the cost of your institutional power. Or…
    2. Do whatever it takes to maintain your institutional power, even if it blunts the chances of achieving institutional goals…
    …will pick door #2 just about every time. If my understanding is accurate, I’m still not sure how your example applies.
    As always, thanks.

    Reply
  242. NV,
    Have I convinced you to vote for Hillary yet? How about a bribe…cold hard cash? Well, I tried. 🙂
    As to the iron law: as I understand it, if those who possess institutional power are given the following choices:
    1. Do whatever it takes to achieve your goals, even at the cost of your institutional power. Or…
    2. Do whatever it takes to maintain your institutional power, even if it blunts the chances of achieving institutional goals…
    …will pick door #2 just about every time. If my understanding is accurate, I’m still not sure how your example applies.
    As always, thanks.

    Reply
  243. NV,
    Have I convinced you to vote for Hillary yet? How about a bribe…cold hard cash? Well, I tried. 🙂
    As to the iron law: as I understand it, if those who possess institutional power are given the following choices:
    1. Do whatever it takes to achieve your goals, even at the cost of your institutional power. Or…
    2. Do whatever it takes to maintain your institutional power, even if it blunts the chances of achieving institutional goals…
    …will pick door #2 just about every time. If my understanding is accurate, I’m still not sure how your example applies.
    As always, thanks.

    Reply
  244. Bobbyp, the link you provide appears to be all 2016 election spin, and nothing to do with the reporting at the time (or even as recently as February 2016 when new emails on the issue came to light).
    According to contemporaneous emails, the state department official working with the board didn’t even know why he had been appointed ABC News. This strongly suggests that explanations 5 years later are spin, not actual descriptions of the process employed by the state department in selecting Fernando.
    Your other responses are precisely what I mean about the difficulty of talking about Clinton.
    First the suggestion that $320,000 per year (that we know of) isn’t enough to be a sign of corruption. That’s a bit surprising.
    Second, a failure of context. $120,000 per year of that being paid by the Clinton Foundation. We are supposed to be treating the Clinton Foundation as a charity, not an arm of a political machine. That’s the story. Blumenthal is a political fixer and media spin-meister whose most famous work was spreading lies to the media about Monica Lewinsky and helping Clinton lose to Obama in the primaries 8 years ago. Why a political machine affiliated with the Clintons might want to pay him is obvious. Why a charity might want to pay him that much is not.
    Third, is almost shocking to see you write a paragraph with a major premise being either a) that Saudi money should not be considered corrupting vis a vis the Bushes OR b) that the Clintons shouldn’t be considered any more corrupted by Saudi money than the Bushes so that is ok.
    Totally normal observations about corruption in politics suddenly become unspeakable when the Clintons do it.
    Normally you could expect the other party to pick it apart, but the things that are best evidence of Clinton corruption implicate lots of Republicans, so they can’t easily attack them there.
    But that doesn’t mean that the Clintons are standard-level corruption for Democrats. They aren’t. Most Democrats aren’t anywhere near the Clintons. But because we can’t talk about it, they normalize their corruption and institutionalize it in the Democratic Party.

    Reply
  245. Bobbyp, the link you provide appears to be all 2016 election spin, and nothing to do with the reporting at the time (or even as recently as February 2016 when new emails on the issue came to light).
    According to contemporaneous emails, the state department official working with the board didn’t even know why he had been appointed ABC News. This strongly suggests that explanations 5 years later are spin, not actual descriptions of the process employed by the state department in selecting Fernando.
    Your other responses are precisely what I mean about the difficulty of talking about Clinton.
    First the suggestion that $320,000 per year (that we know of) isn’t enough to be a sign of corruption. That’s a bit surprising.
    Second, a failure of context. $120,000 per year of that being paid by the Clinton Foundation. We are supposed to be treating the Clinton Foundation as a charity, not an arm of a political machine. That’s the story. Blumenthal is a political fixer and media spin-meister whose most famous work was spreading lies to the media about Monica Lewinsky and helping Clinton lose to Obama in the primaries 8 years ago. Why a political machine affiliated with the Clintons might want to pay him is obvious. Why a charity might want to pay him that much is not.
    Third, is almost shocking to see you write a paragraph with a major premise being either a) that Saudi money should not be considered corrupting vis a vis the Bushes OR b) that the Clintons shouldn’t be considered any more corrupted by Saudi money than the Bushes so that is ok.
    Totally normal observations about corruption in politics suddenly become unspeakable when the Clintons do it.
    Normally you could expect the other party to pick it apart, but the things that are best evidence of Clinton corruption implicate lots of Republicans, so they can’t easily attack them there.
    But that doesn’t mean that the Clintons are standard-level corruption for Democrats. They aren’t. Most Democrats aren’t anywhere near the Clintons. But because we can’t talk about it, they normalize their corruption and institutionalize it in the Democratic Party.

    Reply
  246. Bobbyp, the link you provide appears to be all 2016 election spin, and nothing to do with the reporting at the time (or even as recently as February 2016 when new emails on the issue came to light).
    According to contemporaneous emails, the state department official working with the board didn’t even know why he had been appointed ABC News. This strongly suggests that explanations 5 years later are spin, not actual descriptions of the process employed by the state department in selecting Fernando.
    Your other responses are precisely what I mean about the difficulty of talking about Clinton.
    First the suggestion that $320,000 per year (that we know of) isn’t enough to be a sign of corruption. That’s a bit surprising.
    Second, a failure of context. $120,000 per year of that being paid by the Clinton Foundation. We are supposed to be treating the Clinton Foundation as a charity, not an arm of a political machine. That’s the story. Blumenthal is a political fixer and media spin-meister whose most famous work was spreading lies to the media about Monica Lewinsky and helping Clinton lose to Obama in the primaries 8 years ago. Why a political machine affiliated with the Clintons might want to pay him is obvious. Why a charity might want to pay him that much is not.
    Third, is almost shocking to see you write a paragraph with a major premise being either a) that Saudi money should not be considered corrupting vis a vis the Bushes OR b) that the Clintons shouldn’t be considered any more corrupted by Saudi money than the Bushes so that is ok.
    Totally normal observations about corruption in politics suddenly become unspeakable when the Clintons do it.
    Normally you could expect the other party to pick it apart, but the things that are best evidence of Clinton corruption implicate lots of Republicans, so they can’t easily attack them there.
    But that doesn’t mean that the Clintons are standard-level corruption for Democrats. They aren’t. Most Democrats aren’t anywhere near the Clintons. But because we can’t talk about it, they normalize their corruption and institutionalize it in the Democratic Party.

    Reply
  247. Like others above, I am astonished that anyone gets their knickers in a twist about the Clintons parlaying (ex-)political power into wealth and, conversely, those with wealth parlaying that into political access. ‘Twas ever thus, at least in my 70+ years on this planet. Indeed, it used to be that wealth could be directly into ambassadorships, though that is somewhat less true nowadays, I understand.
    The self-righteous twittering (literally and figuratively) about the Clintons by those who have never objected to these time-hallowed practices I can only attribute to (1) Democratic envy, or (2) as someone pointed out above, a view that regards the non-aristocratic (or at least not originally rich) Clintons as unworthy of the largesse to which the ruling class are justly entitled for their “service to the nation.”
    Sheesh.
    (Anyone who can point to a lengthy personal history of objecting publicly to the garnering of high speaking fees, salaries, and such like perquisites by others in the past – preferably wealthy and/or Republican from the outset – is hereby granted exemption from this rant. The rest of you: you know who/what you are.)

    Reply
  248. Like others above, I am astonished that anyone gets their knickers in a twist about the Clintons parlaying (ex-)political power into wealth and, conversely, those with wealth parlaying that into political access. ‘Twas ever thus, at least in my 70+ years on this planet. Indeed, it used to be that wealth could be directly into ambassadorships, though that is somewhat less true nowadays, I understand.
    The self-righteous twittering (literally and figuratively) about the Clintons by those who have never objected to these time-hallowed practices I can only attribute to (1) Democratic envy, or (2) as someone pointed out above, a view that regards the non-aristocratic (or at least not originally rich) Clintons as unworthy of the largesse to which the ruling class are justly entitled for their “service to the nation.”
    Sheesh.
    (Anyone who can point to a lengthy personal history of objecting publicly to the garnering of high speaking fees, salaries, and such like perquisites by others in the past – preferably wealthy and/or Republican from the outset – is hereby granted exemption from this rant. The rest of you: you know who/what you are.)

    Reply
  249. Like others above, I am astonished that anyone gets their knickers in a twist about the Clintons parlaying (ex-)political power into wealth and, conversely, those with wealth parlaying that into political access. ‘Twas ever thus, at least in my 70+ years on this planet. Indeed, it used to be that wealth could be directly into ambassadorships, though that is somewhat less true nowadays, I understand.
    The self-righteous twittering (literally and figuratively) about the Clintons by those who have never objected to these time-hallowed practices I can only attribute to (1) Democratic envy, or (2) as someone pointed out above, a view that regards the non-aristocratic (or at least not originally rich) Clintons as unworthy of the largesse to which the ruling class are justly entitled for their “service to the nation.”
    Sheesh.
    (Anyone who can point to a lengthy personal history of objecting publicly to the garnering of high speaking fees, salaries, and such like perquisites by others in the past – preferably wealthy and/or Republican from the outset – is hereby granted exemption from this rant. The rest of you: you know who/what you are.)

    Reply
  250. The ABC report here shows that the state department official working with the board didn’t even know why Fernando had been appointed. This fact shows that Fernando did not go through the normal vetting process, not even enough to give the liason an explanation.
    Regarding Blumenthal, maybe I’m not explaining the problem I have with his hiring well enough. The story on the Clinton Foundation is that it is a charity NOT a political arm of Clinton power. Blumenthal is a political fixer and spinmeister. He is not a policy analyst. He is not fundraiser. He is best known for spreading lies about Lewinsky to the press before the existence of the dress was known and for being involved in a number of key decisions leading to Clinton’s loss to Obama in the primaries. Hiring Blumenthal for $120,000 per year for multiple years at the Clinton Foundation (while he also has enough of a job to make $200,000 a year through Media Matters) doesn’t fit with the Clinton Foundation as a charity. It fits perfectly with the idea that a part of the Clinton Foundation is supposed to tie into the Clintons’ political power in general and Hillary’s Presidential run in particular. Also the idea that $320,000 per year for multiple years isn’t enough to count is a scary commentary on what is ok.
    Which leads us to the Saudi gifts to the Clinton Foundation.
    The premise of your paragraph on that issue is very surprising. You seem to be saying either that the Saudis weren’t corruptly linked to the Bushes (can the bobbyp I know possibly mean that?), or that the Clintons are no more corrupt than the Bushes so we’re ok.
    I can’t wrap my head around the first one, so I’ll assume you mean the second.
    The Clintons are much worse than your average Democrat. There are lots of Democrats around, it is troubling that we are so deeply involved with the ones who barely might not be as deeply in bed with the Saudis as the Bushes. I’m relatively confident that none of the other candidates or potential candidates on the Democratic side got 10-25 million from the Saudi government.
    My objection to the Clintons is that they are deeply normalizing corruption on a scale that isn’t ok. They make us defend things that we would attack if the other side were doing it. They make us defend things that we DO attack when the other side does it.
    Trump is MUCH worse. But that is a defense of the choice at this moment. Not a defense of the terrible political system which has brought us to the moment.

    Reply
  251. The ABC report here shows that the state department official working with the board didn’t even know why Fernando had been appointed. This fact shows that Fernando did not go through the normal vetting process, not even enough to give the liason an explanation.
    Regarding Blumenthal, maybe I’m not explaining the problem I have with his hiring well enough. The story on the Clinton Foundation is that it is a charity NOT a political arm of Clinton power. Blumenthal is a political fixer and spinmeister. He is not a policy analyst. He is not fundraiser. He is best known for spreading lies about Lewinsky to the press before the existence of the dress was known and for being involved in a number of key decisions leading to Clinton’s loss to Obama in the primaries. Hiring Blumenthal for $120,000 per year for multiple years at the Clinton Foundation (while he also has enough of a job to make $200,000 a year through Media Matters) doesn’t fit with the Clinton Foundation as a charity. It fits perfectly with the idea that a part of the Clinton Foundation is supposed to tie into the Clintons’ political power in general and Hillary’s Presidential run in particular. Also the idea that $320,000 per year for multiple years isn’t enough to count is a scary commentary on what is ok.
    Which leads us to the Saudi gifts to the Clinton Foundation.
    The premise of your paragraph on that issue is very surprising. You seem to be saying either that the Saudis weren’t corruptly linked to the Bushes (can the bobbyp I know possibly mean that?), or that the Clintons are no more corrupt than the Bushes so we’re ok.
    I can’t wrap my head around the first one, so I’ll assume you mean the second.
    The Clintons are much worse than your average Democrat. There are lots of Democrats around, it is troubling that we are so deeply involved with the ones who barely might not be as deeply in bed with the Saudis as the Bushes. I’m relatively confident that none of the other candidates or potential candidates on the Democratic side got 10-25 million from the Saudi government.
    My objection to the Clintons is that they are deeply normalizing corruption on a scale that isn’t ok. They make us defend things that we would attack if the other side were doing it. They make us defend things that we DO attack when the other side does it.
    Trump is MUCH worse. But that is a defense of the choice at this moment. Not a defense of the terrible political system which has brought us to the moment.

    Reply
  252. The ABC report here shows that the state department official working with the board didn’t even know why Fernando had been appointed. This fact shows that Fernando did not go through the normal vetting process, not even enough to give the liason an explanation.
    Regarding Blumenthal, maybe I’m not explaining the problem I have with his hiring well enough. The story on the Clinton Foundation is that it is a charity NOT a political arm of Clinton power. Blumenthal is a political fixer and spinmeister. He is not a policy analyst. He is not fundraiser. He is best known for spreading lies about Lewinsky to the press before the existence of the dress was known and for being involved in a number of key decisions leading to Clinton’s loss to Obama in the primaries. Hiring Blumenthal for $120,000 per year for multiple years at the Clinton Foundation (while he also has enough of a job to make $200,000 a year through Media Matters) doesn’t fit with the Clinton Foundation as a charity. It fits perfectly with the idea that a part of the Clinton Foundation is supposed to tie into the Clintons’ political power in general and Hillary’s Presidential run in particular. Also the idea that $320,000 per year for multiple years isn’t enough to count is a scary commentary on what is ok.
    Which leads us to the Saudi gifts to the Clinton Foundation.
    The premise of your paragraph on that issue is very surprising. You seem to be saying either that the Saudis weren’t corruptly linked to the Bushes (can the bobbyp I know possibly mean that?), or that the Clintons are no more corrupt than the Bushes so we’re ok.
    I can’t wrap my head around the first one, so I’ll assume you mean the second.
    The Clintons are much worse than your average Democrat. There are lots of Democrats around, it is troubling that we are so deeply involved with the ones who barely might not be as deeply in bed with the Saudis as the Bushes. I’m relatively confident that none of the other candidates or potential candidates on the Democratic side got 10-25 million from the Saudi government.
    My objection to the Clintons is that they are deeply normalizing corruption on a scale that isn’t ok. They make us defend things that we would attack if the other side were doing it. They make us defend things that we DO attack when the other side does it.
    Trump is MUCH worse. But that is a defense of the choice at this moment. Not a defense of the terrible political system which has brought us to the moment.

    Reply
  253. I haven’t been thinking about htis campaign in terms of first woman President. That is until I saw the video of people putting I voted stickers on Susan B anthony’s grave. I actually teared up over that

    Reply
  254. I haven’t been thinking about htis campaign in terms of first woman President. That is until I saw the video of people putting I voted stickers on Susan B anthony’s grave. I actually teared up over that

    Reply
  255. I haven’t been thinking about htis campaign in terms of first woman President. That is until I saw the video of people putting I voted stickers on Susan B anthony’s grave. I actually teared up over that

    Reply
  256. One thing I like about Sebastian’s tribalism explanation, at least from where I stand, is that it absolves any particular person of blame, which accords with the way I think things tend to go down. If you walk into a village that is beset with tribalism, you can’t point a finger at someone and say ‘It’s your fault’. And whoever is going to change that system has to be transformative, or, as is today’s parlance goes, ‘disruptive’. It also explains why systems fail to change, despite best intentions.
    Unfortunately, the transformative politican is a pretty rare occurence, and they usually don’t get but one chance, which certainly illuminates the mess we find ourselves in. How we, as individuals, create and support that transformational politician becomes the question and the challenge. Not that I have the faintest idea of how, though…

    Reply
  257. One thing I like about Sebastian’s tribalism explanation, at least from where I stand, is that it absolves any particular person of blame, which accords with the way I think things tend to go down. If you walk into a village that is beset with tribalism, you can’t point a finger at someone and say ‘It’s your fault’. And whoever is going to change that system has to be transformative, or, as is today’s parlance goes, ‘disruptive’. It also explains why systems fail to change, despite best intentions.
    Unfortunately, the transformative politican is a pretty rare occurence, and they usually don’t get but one chance, which certainly illuminates the mess we find ourselves in. How we, as individuals, create and support that transformational politician becomes the question and the challenge. Not that I have the faintest idea of how, though…

    Reply
  258. One thing I like about Sebastian’s tribalism explanation, at least from where I stand, is that it absolves any particular person of blame, which accords with the way I think things tend to go down. If you walk into a village that is beset with tribalism, you can’t point a finger at someone and say ‘It’s your fault’. And whoever is going to change that system has to be transformative, or, as is today’s parlance goes, ‘disruptive’. It also explains why systems fail to change, despite best intentions.
    Unfortunately, the transformative politican is a pretty rare occurence, and they usually don’t get but one chance, which certainly illuminates the mess we find ourselves in. How we, as individuals, create and support that transformational politician becomes the question and the challenge. Not that I have the faintest idea of how, though…

    Reply
  259. …will pick door #2 just about every time. If my understanding is accurate, I’m still not sure how your example applies.
    The point is that the “pragmatic” centerists have spent years lecturing the “ideological” leftists about how important it is to put aside their particular political preferences IOT elect “electable” candidates, which conveniently happened to be centerists. This cycle, however, “electability” is out and it’s all about qualifications, which means that instead of considering someone other than the centerists’ choice, we have to defer to their wisdom, as always. It’s entirely in keeping with ILoI, but the establishmentarians have traditionally been shocked – shocked! – that anyone could think to suggest they’re operating in a ferrous manner. It’s not surprising, it’s just telling.

    Reply
  260. …will pick door #2 just about every time. If my understanding is accurate, I’m still not sure how your example applies.
    The point is that the “pragmatic” centerists have spent years lecturing the “ideological” leftists about how important it is to put aside their particular political preferences IOT elect “electable” candidates, which conveniently happened to be centerists. This cycle, however, “electability” is out and it’s all about qualifications, which means that instead of considering someone other than the centerists’ choice, we have to defer to their wisdom, as always. It’s entirely in keeping with ILoI, but the establishmentarians have traditionally been shocked – shocked! – that anyone could think to suggest they’re operating in a ferrous manner. It’s not surprising, it’s just telling.

    Reply
  261. …will pick door #2 just about every time. If my understanding is accurate, I’m still not sure how your example applies.
    The point is that the “pragmatic” centerists have spent years lecturing the “ideological” leftists about how important it is to put aside their particular political preferences IOT elect “electable” candidates, which conveniently happened to be centerists. This cycle, however, “electability” is out and it’s all about qualifications, which means that instead of considering someone other than the centerists’ choice, we have to defer to their wisdom, as always. It’s entirely in keeping with ILoI, but the establishmentarians have traditionally been shocked – shocked! – that anyone could think to suggest they’re operating in a ferrous manner. It’s not surprising, it’s just telling.

    Reply
  262. Someone once hypothesized to me that Republicans didn’t like HRC because she had served on the Watergate Committee. That would be pre-Bill.

    Reply
  263. Someone once hypothesized to me that Republicans didn’t like HRC because she had served on the Watergate Committee. That would be pre-Bill.

    Reply
  264. Someone once hypothesized to me that Republicans didn’t like HRC because she had served on the Watergate Committee. That would be pre-Bill.

    Reply
  265. My objection to the Clintons is that they are deeply normalizing corruption on a scale that isn’t ok.
    But you say absolutely nothing about how Republican corruption, or look at the obvious financial elite corruption that is “deeply normalizing corruption” on an unacceptable scale, and this reveals an underlying bias of your premise.
    Because you seem to condemn on a very selective and particular criteria. You ignore the systemic implications of your own analysis.
    Result? You only pick on f%cking Democrats.
    When you unleash a corker about the “corruption” of our elites in general, and place that in some kind of meaningful analysis of how this came to be, then I could take you much more seriously.
    I shall reply at more length when I sober up 🙂
    Right now I have election returns to fret about!

    Reply
  266. My objection to the Clintons is that they are deeply normalizing corruption on a scale that isn’t ok.
    But you say absolutely nothing about how Republican corruption, or look at the obvious financial elite corruption that is “deeply normalizing corruption” on an unacceptable scale, and this reveals an underlying bias of your premise.
    Because you seem to condemn on a very selective and particular criteria. You ignore the systemic implications of your own analysis.
    Result? You only pick on f%cking Democrats.
    When you unleash a corker about the “corruption” of our elites in general, and place that in some kind of meaningful analysis of how this came to be, then I could take you much more seriously.
    I shall reply at more length when I sober up 🙂
    Right now I have election returns to fret about!

    Reply
  267. My objection to the Clintons is that they are deeply normalizing corruption on a scale that isn’t ok.
    But you say absolutely nothing about how Republican corruption, or look at the obvious financial elite corruption that is “deeply normalizing corruption” on an unacceptable scale, and this reveals an underlying bias of your premise.
    Because you seem to condemn on a very selective and particular criteria. You ignore the systemic implications of your own analysis.
    Result? You only pick on f%cking Democrats.
    When you unleash a corker about the “corruption” of our elites in general, and place that in some kind of meaningful analysis of how this came to be, then I could take you much more seriously.
    I shall reply at more length when I sober up 🙂
    Right now I have election returns to fret about!

    Reply
  268. Sebastian,
    We on the ever paranoid left have always criticized the corruption influence of wealth and power. My god man, I was weaned on C. Wright Mills. Many Bernie Bros (including me) criticize Clinton for her clientism.
    But you are determined to demonstrate that her particular corruptions are somehow worse. Are you kidding me?
    For more on the ISAB controversy (a board that pays nothing, and is advisory only….something you conveniently omitted to mention) see here:
    http://www.vox.com/2016/6/22/11910312/hillary-clinton-donors-isab
    http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2016/06/10/how_clinton_donor_rajiv_fernando_got_a_job_as_a_nuclear_expert_he_wasn_t.html
    And you explicitly seem to deny the direct testimony of those involved provided in my first link…as “spin”. Well, can’t argue with somebody insisting on tossing out all contravening evidence.
    Again…this is a nothingburger.

    Reply
  269. Sebastian,
    We on the ever paranoid left have always criticized the corruption influence of wealth and power. My god man, I was weaned on C. Wright Mills. Many Bernie Bros (including me) criticize Clinton for her clientism.
    But you are determined to demonstrate that her particular corruptions are somehow worse. Are you kidding me?
    For more on the ISAB controversy (a board that pays nothing, and is advisory only….something you conveniently omitted to mention) see here:
    http://www.vox.com/2016/6/22/11910312/hillary-clinton-donors-isab
    http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2016/06/10/how_clinton_donor_rajiv_fernando_got_a_job_as_a_nuclear_expert_he_wasn_t.html
    And you explicitly seem to deny the direct testimony of those involved provided in my first link…as “spin”. Well, can’t argue with somebody insisting on tossing out all contravening evidence.
    Again…this is a nothingburger.

    Reply
  270. Sebastian,
    We on the ever paranoid left have always criticized the corruption influence of wealth and power. My god man, I was weaned on C. Wright Mills. Many Bernie Bros (including me) criticize Clinton for her clientism.
    But you are determined to demonstrate that her particular corruptions are somehow worse. Are you kidding me?
    For more on the ISAB controversy (a board that pays nothing, and is advisory only….something you conveniently omitted to mention) see here:
    http://www.vox.com/2016/6/22/11910312/hillary-clinton-donors-isab
    http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2016/06/10/how_clinton_donor_rajiv_fernando_got_a_job_as_a_nuclear_expert_he_wasn_t.html
    And you explicitly seem to deny the direct testimony of those involved provided in my first link…as “spin”. Well, can’t argue with somebody insisting on tossing out all contravening evidence.
    Again…this is a nothingburger.

    Reply
  271. if things play out the way they look to be playing out, you’ll look back with fond nostalgia on the days when big speaking fees and email servers were considered a scandal.
    I remember when congress people over drawing their congressional bank accounts for THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS was a BFD.
    good times.
    we ain’t seen nothing yet.

    Reply
  272. if things play out the way they look to be playing out, you’ll look back with fond nostalgia on the days when big speaking fees and email servers were considered a scandal.
    I remember when congress people over drawing their congressional bank accounts for THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS was a BFD.
    good times.
    we ain’t seen nothing yet.

    Reply
  273. if things play out the way they look to be playing out, you’ll look back with fond nostalgia on the days when big speaking fees and email servers were considered a scandal.
    I remember when congress people over drawing their congressional bank accounts for THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS was a BFD.
    good times.
    we ain’t seen nothing yet.

    Reply
  274. The premise of your paragraph on that issue is very surprising. You seem to be saying either that the Saudis weren’t corruptly linked to the Bushes (can the bobbyp I know possibly mean that?), or that the Clintons are no more corrupt than the Bushes so we’re ok.
    Again, the question is this: What is an acceptable level of “influence peddling”? You are, by implication, telling me that the Saudis donating to Bush’s library is somehow OK, but donating to Clinton’s is “(greater) corruption”?
    Really?
    You first. Make up your mind. Again, the fact that you have NEVER objected to the Saudi donation to the Bush library is revealing.
    When you start criticizing powerful conservatives for the VERY SAME THING I will be willing to take you seriously.
    Otherwise…not so much.

    Reply
  275. The premise of your paragraph on that issue is very surprising. You seem to be saying either that the Saudis weren’t corruptly linked to the Bushes (can the bobbyp I know possibly mean that?), or that the Clintons are no more corrupt than the Bushes so we’re ok.
    Again, the question is this: What is an acceptable level of “influence peddling”? You are, by implication, telling me that the Saudis donating to Bush’s library is somehow OK, but donating to Clinton’s is “(greater) corruption”?
    Really?
    You first. Make up your mind. Again, the fact that you have NEVER objected to the Saudi donation to the Bush library is revealing.
    When you start criticizing powerful conservatives for the VERY SAME THING I will be willing to take you seriously.
    Otherwise…not so much.

    Reply
  276. The premise of your paragraph on that issue is very surprising. You seem to be saying either that the Saudis weren’t corruptly linked to the Bushes (can the bobbyp I know possibly mean that?), or that the Clintons are no more corrupt than the Bushes so we’re ok.
    Again, the question is this: What is an acceptable level of “influence peddling”? You are, by implication, telling me that the Saudis donating to Bush’s library is somehow OK, but donating to Clinton’s is “(greater) corruption”?
    Really?
    You first. Make up your mind. Again, the fact that you have NEVER objected to the Saudi donation to the Bush library is revealing.
    When you start criticizing powerful conservatives for the VERY SAME THING I will be willing to take you seriously.
    Otherwise…not so much.

    Reply
  277. The Republicans aren’t excluded from my calculus. I am saying that Clinton is one of the worst possible Democrats. It appears that the question is moot.
    It may be the worst I have ever felt in my life to have been right.

    Reply
  278. The Republicans aren’t excluded from my calculus. I am saying that Clinton is one of the worst possible Democrats. It appears that the question is moot.
    It may be the worst I have ever felt in my life to have been right.

    Reply
  279. The Republicans aren’t excluded from my calculus. I am saying that Clinton is one of the worst possible Democrats. It appears that the question is moot.
    It may be the worst I have ever felt in my life to have been right.

    Reply
  280. I was writing the above on the assumption that Clinton would win. I thought our country was smart enough that she would. I’m not going to bother following up on it as it appears we need to focus on what the hell we can do to stop Trump from completely destroying us.

    Reply
  281. I was writing the above on the assumption that Clinton would win. I thought our country was smart enough that she would. I’m not going to bother following up on it as it appears we need to focus on what the hell we can do to stop Trump from completely destroying us.

    Reply
  282. I was writing the above on the assumption that Clinton would win. I thought our country was smart enough that she would. I’m not going to bother following up on it as it appears we need to focus on what the hell we can do to stop Trump from completely destroying us.

    Reply
  283. you don’t miss the water ’til the well runs dry.
    “Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.”
    ― Abraham Lincoln

    Reply
  284. you don’t miss the water ’til the well runs dry.
    “Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.”
    ― Abraham Lincoln

    Reply
  285. you don’t miss the water ’til the well runs dry.
    “Elections belong to the people. It’s their decision. If they decide to turn their back on the fire and burn their behinds, then they will just have to sit on their blisters.”
    ― Abraham Lincoln

    Reply
  286. sadly, we will all get to sit on our blisters, regardless of how we voted.
    I’m trying to see a silver lining here but I’m coming up empty.
    I guess we’ll see how it all goes.

    Reply
  287. sadly, we will all get to sit on our blisters, regardless of how we voted.
    I’m trying to see a silver lining here but I’m coming up empty.
    I guess we’ll see how it all goes.

    Reply
  288. sadly, we will all get to sit on our blisters, regardless of how we voted.
    I’m trying to see a silver lining here but I’m coming up empty.
    I guess we’ll see how it all goes.

    Reply
  289. …it appears we need to focus on what the hell we can do to stop Trump from completely destroying us.
    I think that should be Congress by means of Trump. If the Dems had at least kept the senate, the worst likely could be prevented. But with the GOPsters holding both chambers and the WH (and thus SCOTUS in their hands soon also)…

    Reply
  290. …it appears we need to focus on what the hell we can do to stop Trump from completely destroying us.
    I think that should be Congress by means of Trump. If the Dems had at least kept the senate, the worst likely could be prevented. But with the GOPsters holding both chambers and the WH (and thus SCOTUS in their hands soon also)…

    Reply
  291. …it appears we need to focus on what the hell we can do to stop Trump from completely destroying us.
    I think that should be Congress by means of Trump. If the Dems had at least kept the senate, the worst likely could be prevented. But with the GOPsters holding both chambers and the WH (and thus SCOTUS in their hands soon also)…

    Reply

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