Picture of the Day - 3
Hillary Clinton sits with Richard Mellon Scaife during a visit to the editorial board of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Scaife, if you'll remember, was the prime media pusher of the Vince Foster story, and one of the main funders of the "vast right wing conspiracy".
Or this Scaife gem,
Scaife was quoted more than once calling Foster's death "the Rosetta stone to the Clinton administration," adding in an interview with George magazine, "Once you solve that one mystery, you'll know everything that's going on or went on—I think there's been a massive coverup. … Listen, [Bill Clinton] can order people done away with at his will. He's got the entire federal government behind him. … God, there must be 60 people who have died mysteriously."
(Picture from Byron York.)
8 Comments:
Bill went on Rush's radio show the day of the OH/TX primary and now this...
She is no better than Lieberman and he is the worst!
By Anonymous, at 10:00 PM
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
By Unknown, at 2:57 AM
PolZoo, I'm guessing you were spam.
Anon, She's better than Lieberman.
By mikevotes, at 8:16 AM
She's better because she's a goyim? She's helping McCain that equates to a Lieberman in my book.
By Anonymous, at 8:28 AM
C'mon now.
Lieberman is on the bus. Lieberman is in the strategy meetings. Lieberman has said that he'd talk at the Republican convention.
By mikevotes, at 8:33 AM
Lieberman is LESS damaging to the stability of the Democratic party.
By -epm, at 9:02 AM
I'm not sure. I see your point, but at some point you would think Clinton will swing back in to support the Dem nominee.
By mikevotes, at 11:42 AM
The damage being done is institutional and goes beyond this election. Even if she gives a pro forma unity speech, damage has already been done to the Democratic party.
One example might be tarnishing the Democrat "brand" in the eyes of independent voters. Another is the factional grudges within the DNC which I think will only become deeper. There might be a nasty "struggle for the soul of the party" between the institutional top-downers and the more Main Street bottom-uppers.
By -epm, at 12:25 PM
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