Shameless
Hillary
stonewalled and has now outsourced her problem to attack-dog
subordinates and Democratic stalwarts who, she believes, have Hillary—or
no one—for 2016. I guess the message is “I’m lying, so what?”
Remember
Richard Nixon’s vain attempt to keep Watergate tapes because he alone
had determined that some were only private in nature and did not relate
to government business or subpoenas—and the subsequent reaction to his
“gaps.” That is Hillary Clinton’s absurd line of something like
“secretary of state privilege,” and thus her press conference could only
end in disaster. After all the obfuscation, the only thing that one can
take away from this embarrassing performance is that Hillary Clinton
envisioned her own personal server for just such contingencies: to trash
a large percentage of her incoming and outgoing e-mails after becoming
the sole arbitrator of what constituted her own, and her government’s,
business, and thus the preserver or destroyer of all her communications.
Some depressing details:
Hillary
used a U.N. forum as a prop to address a private scandal, largely
because she assumed the press pool might be a little different and she
could suggest that the e-mail scandal was incidental rather than
essential to her more important global messaging. But in typical Clinton
fashion that gambit proved counter-productive: She inappropriately used
the U.N. prop, and the reporters were not necessarily D.C. pets, as she
learned when she abruptly cut off their questions.
Then
she reviewed her feminist credentials, omitting her own role in
gender-pay inequalities, the misogynist nature of the benefactors to her
foundation, and, of course, her husband’s recent troubles in regard to
feminist issues.
Then she accused Republican senators of either wishing to help the Iranians or to undermine their commander-in-chief.
That was a warm-up to her defiant replies:
1)
She confuses device and account: Many people have one device and two
e-mail accounts. In the private sphere, one does not need two devices to
have two different e-mail accounts. Teenagers can set up two in 30
seconds. If not, Hillary should make the case that one cannot do that
with government accounts and that the problem affected her alone and not
others of similar status. When her fable of the one phone/two phone
dilemma is reviewed, her veracity will be again questioned, as it will
when we learn she still probably used multiple phones like most D.C.
grandees do.
2)
She seems to think that her dilemma was unique and no other high
government official faced the same private/public quandary that required
her special solution; if she were correct, then almost any other
cabinet member would have had only a personal account with his own
private server to conduct all government business. No one apparently has
ever had a BlackBerry with a separate government and a private account
without a private server.
3)
There will be no third-party adjudicator to determine which of her
e-mails were private and which non-private, and those she determined
were private are now apparently already destroyed.
4)
She confused, again deliberately, State Department rules. When Hillary
refers to “my practice was” that is not the same as the law demands: She
seems to think not turning over all her e-mails on her sole account
when she left office was okay because the State Department and / or the
government in theory could always spend thousands of hours to hunt down
all the recipients of her supposedly purely government e-mails. Try that
with the government, as for example not paying your taxes on April 15
on the theory that you can always pay when and if the government hunts
you down and comes after you and fills out your 1099 for you.
Her
final message? It’s over; get over it; and the messages are destroyed
even if you had wanted to have determined that I lied about the
private/public divide. What are you going to do—hound the likely next
president of the United States?
What’s
next? We are back to 1998–99 where the law does not apply to the
Clintons; and if it did, it pales in importance to their progressive
efforts on our behalf; and if you doubt it, there are plenty of
hirelings who can make life miserable for you right-wing conspiracists
and disbelievers.
ANONYMOUS COMMENT: Her final message? It’s over; get over it; and the messages are destroyed even if you had wanted to have determined that I lied about the private/public divide. What are you going to do—hound the likely next president of the United States?
ReplyDeleteWhat’s next? We are back to 1998–99 where the law does not apply to the Clintons; and if it did, it pales in importance to their progressive efforts on our behalf; and if you doubt it, there are plenty of hirelings who can make life miserable for you right-wing conspiracists and disbelievers.