2/21/2008

Whitewater: case closed

For the last couple of days I have been reading visitor comments on various blogs and news sites – to check the pulse of the American people.

Conclusion: there are a great number of people out there who are brain dead.

Aside from the apparent failure of our education system to teach spelling and proper grammar, these comments – from Hillary, Obama and McCain supporters - have had running themes:

1) Whitewater.
2) The Clintons killed Vince Foster.
3) Hillary has never accomplished anything.
4) If Hillary can't control her husband, how can she control the country?
5) Obama is a Muslim.

Let’s address theme #5 first. Are these people so ignorant and uninformed that they cannot distinguish “militant Islamic fundamentalists” from the one in every five persons on Earth who embrace the faith of Islam? Barack Obama’s father was an African Muslim who deserted his wife when Barack was two years old. In 1985, Obama joined the United Church of Christ in Chicago and became a Christian. He, his wife Michelle and their two daughters are members of Trinity United Church of Christ in southside Chicago.

As to comment theme #3 – Hillary has never accomplished anything – let’s just chalk that one up to stupidity.

The remaining comment themes are related to the Whitewater investigation, and are addressed in the following:

(Originally published on this blog 6/25/2007 – LINK)

Whitewater: case closed

Continuing to listen to Bill Clinton’s autobiography, “My Life.” I transcribed the following excerpt from the tapes, because its subject is going to come up again in the run-up to Election 2008, and I want you, dear reader, to be aware of the other side of the story.

From Chapter 45:

“… (I)n mid-December the complete Whitewater story finally came out when the RTC (Resolution Trust Corporation) Inquiry from Pillsbury, Madison and Sutro was released. The report was written by Jay Stevens, who like Chuck Banks was a Republican former U.S. attorney, whom I had replaced.”

(See “RTC report exonerates Clintons,” Congressional Record, December 1995: LINK)

“It said, as had the preliminary report in June, that there were no grounds for a civil suit against us in Whitewater, much less any criminal action, and it recommended that the investigation be closed.

“This is what The New York Times and The Washington Post wanted to know when they called for an independent counsel. I eagerly awaited their coverage.

“Immediately after the RTC report was released, the Post mentioned it in passing in the 11th paragraph of a front-page story about an unrelated subpoena battle with (Ken) Starr. And, The New York Times didn’t run a word.

“The Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Washington Times ran an Associated Press story of about 400 words on the inside pages of their papers.

“The TV networks didn’t cover the RTC report, though ABC’s Ted Koppel reported it on “Nightline,” then dismissed its importance, because there were ‘so many new questions.’

“Whitewater wasn’t about Whitewater any more: it was about whatever Ken Starr could dig up on anybody in Arkansas or my administration.

“In the meantime, some Whitewater reporters were actually covering up evidence of our innocence. To be fair, some journalists took note.

“Washington Post writer Howard Kurtz wrote an article pointing out the way the RTC report had been buried. And, Lars Erik Nelson, a columnist for The New York Daily News, who had been a correspondent in the Soviet Union, wrote, ‘The secret verdict is in: there was nothing for the Clintons to hide. In a bizarre reversal of those Stalin-era trials in which innocent people were convicted in secret, the president and the first lady have been publicly charged and secretly found innocent.’

“I was genuinely confused by the mainstream press coverage of Whitewater. It seemed inconsistent with the more careful and balanced approach the press had taken on other issues, at least since the Republicans won Congress in 1994.

“One day, after one of our budget meetings in October, I asked Sen. Alan Simpson of Wyoming to stay a moment to talk. Simpson was a conservative Republican, but we had a pretty good relationship, because of the friendship we had in common with his governor, Mike Sullivan.

“I asked Alan if he thought Hillary and I had done anything wrong in Whitewater. ‘Of course not,’ he said, ‘that’s not what this is about. This is about making the public think you did something wrong. Anybody who looked at the evidence would see that you didn’t.’ ”

***

And, Starr’s investigation was about more than Whitewater. In early 1998, Starr won authorization to expand his investigation to include the Lewinsky scandal, and questions about Monica Lewinsky's relationship with Clinton quickly overshadowed Whitewater matters.

Of note: in late 1998, when Starr presented his case for impeachment of the president for his attempts to conceal the Lewinsky affair, he indicated that his office had NO impeachable evidence in the Whitewater matters.

Starr resigned in October 1999 and was succeeded by Robert W. Ray, the senior litigation counsel in Starr's office. In September 2000, Ray ended the Whitewater inquiry, stating there was “insufficient evidence” to prove that President Clinton or his wife had committed any crime in connection with the failed real estate venture or the independent counsel's investigation into it.

The final report was issued 18 months later.

In February 1999, CNN’s Terry Friedan wrote:

“Expenditures by Independent Counsel Ken Starr's office have officially surpassed the $40 million mark, according to new Justice Department figures. … The figures show that Starr's office, through the end of November 1998, had spent $40,835,000. … Those figures do not include costs incurred by Starr's predecessor, Robert Fiske, whose office spent about $6 million before Starr was appointed to lead the investigation.” LINK

There are continuing allegations that the Clintons murdered their longtime Arkansas friend Vince Foster, although his death was officially ruled a suicide.

And, there is the ongoing reduction of the amazing life stories of Bill and Hillary Clinton into a two-word summary: Monica Lewinsky.

I was telling a yound friend how impressed I am with Clinton’s ability to recall life events and his skill at keeping the reader engaged, and her response was, “Has Slick Willy mentioned Monica?”

How very sad, I thought, that such a life could be so trivialized by one tragic flaw, especially by those who do not care to read the rest of the story.

5 comments:

airth10 said...

True, there are a number of people and voters out there who are brain dead.

BJ. It also works the other way, the brain deadness. People attribute things to certain leaders they love that are false. For instance, they attribute great things to Reagan, things he never accomplished.

A lot of the brain dead in people can also be attributed to bias. They don't like Hillary so she can do no right. They love Reagan, he did no wrong

Anonymous said...

I know that you are very supportive of Hillary, and I hesitate to say even one more thing about this matter, but that may be the point.

She and everyone suffers from press coverage now that the media has become "entertainment" and follows some of the same tabloid guidelines.

I guess I would feel better if--just once--you would offer credence to people who do not like her style as a candidate, people who do not want to see that style represent the USA. It may or may not be "right" but it's the way it is. People make choices based on NOW, not everyone is looking back to Watergate.

I don't know about everyone else, but just looking at her presentation At This Point I am frightened by the thought that she would be representing this country. I'm not looking back!

You are a very smart lady, I am continually confused by this situation. There are a lot of very engaged voters out there expressing an opinion, and I don't think they are all wrong. And I don't think they are all totally influenced by the media or the past. They are watching her now. Listening to her now.

Don't hate me, I think you are one of the sharpest people I've ever met, though virtually. I really have gotten into looking at this situation because of your postings and the situation that is at hand in this country. I'm really not looking back. I'm looking at now. Eowyn

Anonymous said...

Sorry, Whitewater. Eowyn

B.J. said...

Eowyn, why in the world would I “hate” you? The purpose of these comments is to allow persons to express their opinions and convictions. The only problem I have is with persons who comment when it’s obvious they have NOT read the post. It’s true that Whitewater is in the past, and that’s where it needs to remain. And, that’s exactly why I find it disturbing that a great many people continue to bring it up in the current election cycle. I am very supportive of the TRUTH. You just keep those cmments coming! BJ

Anonymous said...

Thank you. I didn't mean "hate me." I was just trying to say that along the way in this primary I was forming real feelings, and I didn't want to place them in a post that offended. Even that doesn't make it clear. You are energized, you are convincing. I love what you present. I sometimes feel that comments are a good thing, but if it sounds like a rebuttal--to what I like to have for info--then maybe it was misplaced. Eowyn, of the one chicken.

A small aside: two days ago my one chicken and I had to fight off TWO Bald Eagles. I was running, the chicken was screaming, the dog and the sheep were everywhere. I finally grabbed her up and put her in the barn. And we sat for a very long time. Side by side, looking at each other till she got over it. She was stronger than I but "sad", you could see it. It's terrible when there are predators in a really nice life. It reminded me of normal life, I was amazed, as always at the intelligence and affection and the simple dignity of the chicken--I never noticed in a flock, an individual is different. We sat there for the longest time, and were renewed.

My point is that this political thing is a wonderful opportunity and a great moment. After all these years of a horrible unresponsive president we do rejoice in just the dialogue! Opinions that might matter! The fight goes on, we're all just hoping for a better day.