Reverse engineering Hillary's crimes: media have it backwards
By Jon Rappoport
The Hillary email scandal and the Clinton Foundation scandal have been slithering, segment by segment, into public view.
The
latest revelation, from the Associated Press: "More than half the
people outside the government who met with Hillary Clinton while she was
secretary of state gave money - either personally or through companies
or groups - to the Clinton Foundation. It's an extraordinary
proportion...Combined, the 85 donors contributed as much as $156 million
[to the Foundation]."
The implication is clear. "You want a favor from the State Department? Pay the Clinton Foundation."
The
National Review gives us the tip of the iceberg: "Crown Prince Salman
of Bahrain wanted a sit-down with Secretary Clinton but was rebuffed;
Clinton Foundation executive Douglas Band intervened through [Huma]
Abedin to try to find a work-around for the crown prince, who gave
donations to the Clinton Global Initiative totaling $32 million through
2010. Donations to the Clinton Foundation came in from the kingdom
itself and from the state oil company. Band also intervened to secure a
visa for a foreign athlete held up because of his criminal record, doing
so at the behest of donor Casey Wasserman, a Hollywood
sports-entertainment mogul, whose foundation has contributed between $5
million and $10 million to the Clinton Foundation..."
But let's put all this in the right perspective. Let's reverse engineer this. The media has it backwards.
Heading
up the State Department didn't incidentally afford Hillary the
opportunity to funnel cash into the Clinton Foundation, in return for
granting favors to donors. No.
Head of the State
Department was her side job. She was really an officer of the
Foundation. And as such, she picked out a plum position that would allow
her to expand the Foundation's coffers: she became Secretary of State.
It
would be like the son of a mafia crime boss landing a slot as a judge,
so he could rule in favor of his father's mob associates in court. The
judgeship was just an angle, a way of serving the family. The family
comes first.
Yes, as Secretary of State Hillary
could remain in the public eye---an essential factor for her later run
for President. And she could also exercise her passion for making war
and wreaking havoc: Libya is a prime illustration. But behind it all,
she has been Hillary Clinton of the Clinton Foundation.
Right
now, as the latest chapter in the Clinton Foundation scandal is
exploding, Bill, her husband, is promising to tighten Foundation rules
for accepting donations. He's presenting a typical mafia ploy: "The
Family is getting out of the rackets. We're going completely legit."
Sure
they are. Bill and Hillary have an itch that can never be scratched.
They have to run a racket. They have to pile up money through cons and
schemes and payoffs. That will never change.
Hillary
convincing Obama to give her the Secretary of State job was a champagne
moment for the Clintons. The husband and wife team were in clover. The
State Department would become their satellite office for the Foundation,
and as such, it would go global and suck in gobs of cash from
California to Saudi Arabia.
Annual huddle of the
Foundation: "Well, folks, our marketing arm, also known as the State
Department, has exceeded all expectations. Everything we've been working
for, all these years, is coming to fruition. It's called free money,
and we've got it."
What Hillary has done is
typical for any clandestine agent: she went undercover; her cover story
was, she was Secretary of State; in that role, she achieved hidden
ulterior objectives.
Mission accomplished.
Except,
as usual, she and her husband did sloppy work. They failed to conceal
their operation properly. They wandered off the reservation.
What's
next? Well, how about the Clinton Global Initiative? What might be
discovered during a deep probe of that charity? Now we're talking about
real money: over 2000 projects and 69 billion dollars raised (Reuters,
9/22/11). Who diverted and kept how much of that gargantuan sum? Who
used money from that vault to extract favors?
Doug
Band, the long-time Clinton associate who pulled off this fund-raising
feat, was also, according to reports, the man who convinced Obama to
give Hillary the job of Secretary of State. If true, one wonders if Band
made the President an offer that was hard to refuse: a financial boon
after the Oval Office faded in the rear-view mirror.
Every President needs a nest egg, something to fall back on after rendering public service to the nation.
Why
shouldn't the Clintons throw a few large bags of cash out of a plane
winging over Hawaii, as the Chosen One and his family arrive to build
their new home on a hill?
It's only fair.
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