The case against Hillary Clinton could have been written before the recent WikiLeaks and FBI disclosures. But these documents do provide hard textual backup.
The most sensational disclosure was the proposed deal between the State Department and the FBI in which the FBI would declassify a Clinton email and State would give the FBI more slots in overseas stations. What made it sensational was the rare appearance in an official account of the phrase “quid pro quo,” which is the currently agreed-upon dividing line between acceptable and unacceptable corruption.
This is nonetheless an odd choice for most egregious offense. First, it occurred several layers removed from the campaign and from Clinton. It involved a career State Department official (he occupied the same position under Condoleezza Rice) covering not just for Clinton but for his own department.
Second, it’s not clear which side originally offered the bargain. Third, nothing tangible was supposed to exchange hands. There was no proposed personal enrichment — a Rolex in return for your soul — which tends to be our standard for punishable misconduct.
And finally, it never actually happened. The FBI turned down the declassification request.
In sum, a warm gun but nonsmoking. Indeed, if the phrase “quid pro quo” hadn’t appeared, it would have received little attention. Moreover, it obscures the real scandal — the bottomless cynicism of the campaign and of the candidate.
Among dozens of examples, the Qatari gambit. Qatar, one of the worst actors in the Middle East (having financially supported the Islamic State, for example), offered $1 million as a “birthday” gift to Bill Clinton in return for five minutes of his time. Who offers — who takes — $200,000 a minute? We don’t know the “quid” here, but it’s got to be big.
In the final debate, Hillary Clinton ran and hid when asked about pay-for-play at the Clinton Foundation. And for good reason. The emails reveal how foundation donors were first in line for favors and contracts.[...]
Of course, we knew all this. But we hadn’t seen it so clearly laid out. Illicit and illegal as is WikiLeaks, it is the camera in the sausage factory. And what it reveals is surpassingly unpretty.
I didn’t need the Wiki files to oppose Hillary Clinton. As a conservative, I have long disagreed with her worldview and the policies that flow from it. As for character, I have watched her long enough to find her deeply flawed, to the point of unfitness. But for those heretofore unpersuaded, the recent disclosures should close the case.
A case so strong that, against any of a dozen possible GOP candidates, voting for her opponent would be a no-brainer. Against Donald Trump, however, it’s a dilemma. I will not vote for Hillary Clinton. But, as I’ve explained in these columns, I could never vote for Donald Trump.
The only question is whose name I’m going to write in. With Albert Schweitzer doubly unavailable (noncitizen, dead), I’m down to Paul Ryan or Ben Sasse. Two weeks to decide.
Kruthammer attacks Hillary hard:
ReplyDelete“In sum, a warm gun but nonsmoking. Indeed, if the phrase “quid pro quo” hadn’t appeared, it would have received little attention. Moreover, it obscures the real scandal — the bottomless cynicism of the campaign and of the candidate.”
The expression, a warm gun, tells what’s going on. A gun is a weapon to fight an enemy that threatens one’s existence. Our, in Israel, chief justice used that expression today: http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/219743
MainAll NewsInside Israel'You have placed a gun on the table'
'You have placed a gun on the table'
Chief Justice Miriam Naor struck back at the new legislative attempt to curb the power of the Supreme Court.
Chief Justice Miriam Naor, herself, would never have been appointed if standing Supreme Court Judges didn’t control the judicial selection committee. Why? Because she’s so Left.
Petulant and silly. תמות נפשי עם פלישתים.
ReplyDeleteconsidering his track record - you can't dismiss him with name calling
ReplyDeleteI'm not calling him names. I'm saying his opinion on this is crazy, especially to someone who cares about the safety of ארץ ישראל.
ReplyDeleteI have to hold my nose too. I'm not a gung ho Trump supporter but I'll happily vote for him over this horrible anti-Semite.
Try staying on topic, please.
ReplyDeletePlease explain why you think she is a "horrible anti-Semite". Is she worse than Nixon? Is she worse than Jimmy Carter?
ReplyDeleteHer closest adviser is a hard right Islamist whose parents still run a Sharia-based newspaper. Imagine if Trump's closest adviser's parents ran a white supremacist newspaper. The mind boggles.
ReplyDeleteThe Wikileaks emails show her attitude toward us and toward Israel. Obama has big plans for his last couple of months and one of them is reportedly to turn on Israel at the UN. Trump will undo anything Obama does. Hillary will not.
that is the best you can do? That hardly qualifies as being an anti-Semite. I assume you consider all non-Zionistic Jews as anti-Semites?!
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of petulant and silly, it's really burning RDE that Trump is going to win.
ReplyDeleteTry to start coming to terms with the words "President Trump," please.
ReplyDeleteAnd Krauthammer is an idiot. People somehow think that he is a genius just by virtue of his physical disability.
ReplyDeleteNo is he not an idiot. His comments generally show solid insight. Calling him an idiot is not helpful
ReplyDeleteI would wager any amount you want on Clinton winning next week.
ReplyDeleteKrauthammer is an idiot? That has to rank as one of the most idiotic comments I have read in an election season rife with idiocy.
ReplyDeleteNo, he is absolutely not an idiot. Neither is George Will. But this Never Trump business is really misguided.
ReplyDeleteOf course not. I learned in Brisk. Let me rephrase. She's both horrible and an anti-Semite. Not a "horrible anti-Semite."
ReplyDeleterephrasing doesn't constitute evidence
ReplyDeleteI will rewrite for those of you who do not comprehend hyperbole:
ReplyDeleteKrauthammer is a smart person but is dead wrong in this specific matter. In general, I believe that people give him too much credit.
How much did you want to wager?
ReplyDeleteWell, too bad you didn't take me up on it then.
ReplyDeleteI am both saddened and shocked by the results of this election. I thought Americans were better than that.
This is what I predicted. All the polls were not reality based. The index of internet activity for Trump was orders of magnitude greater than for Hillary.
ReplyDeleteAmerica can now look forward to reversing all the evil policies that Obama has forced upon America.
Ha!
ReplyDeleteYou mean evils like making sure that a larger portion of the country has health care than any time in its history? Or evils like the most uninterrupted quarters of employment growth in America?
ReplyDeleteI thought Americans were better than that.
ReplyDeleteOr, perhaps, some people's elitism is just not as good as they are. I have met the enemy and he is me.
Perhaps it is worthwhile to reconsider the way you approached it on here. Was all that attacking, belittling and snarky comments really worth it? Perhaps, instead of attacking the "stupid" country, a mirror is in order. If someone thinks that half of the country needs to be saved from themselves - through attacks, obfuscation and snark talk - and that free choice is bad for the country, then perhaps they should consider whether they think that democracy is the best form of government. And if they don't think that democracy is good for the American people, then they should realize that they have no right to try to impose and force their views upon anyone else.
Some food for thought. Good luck.
Well said.
ReplyDeleteNot understanding how educated people could vote for a candidate who built his brand using incendiary language while criticizing entire races and religions is not elitism. Not understanding how they could vote for a candidate who demonstrated time and time again that he has no grasp of any policy issues facing the U.S., whether domestic or foreign, is not elitism. Not understanding how they could vote for a candidate who has shown himself to be vindictive and unable to let any insult go unanswered is not elitism.
ReplyDeleteBut, as Secretary Clinton said, we must have an open mind and give him a chance.
You must be joking. Obamacare is a world class disaster and removing it is one of the main reasons that people voted for Trump. There are reports all over of people not being able to keep their doctors or their plans and having to pay sky high premiums for very high deductible policies. Some poor section of the population may have gained by Obamacare, but the average American has found that they can no longer afford or find decent insurance. Businesses have reduced employee hours or not hired employees in order not to incur the Obamacare penalty. Insurance providers have dropped out and many exchanges are failing. Obamacare is a total loser.
ReplyDeleteOne of the main reasons that Trump won Michigan and Pennsylvania was because of the mass unemployment of the average American middle class worker who voted for him in droves to get their jobs back. The anemic inflated job figures which don't count the people who have given up looking for work is one of the worst failures of Obama's record.
Did you ever listen to what Trump actually said in its complete context? The media would play a very short portion of his words and claim what he said was incendiary. Those who supported Trump listened to him in the entirety! Those are educated people, not the elitists who picked and chose what they wanted to make their biased claims about him.
ReplyDeleteBaloney! Obamacare has cost many people the healthcare they had. And far more have lost their jobs under Obama than have gained.
ReplyDeleteYou are entitled to your own opinion, but not to your own facts.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_insurance_coverage_in_the_United_States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jobs_created_during_U.S._presidential_terms
And one more point: I am a loss to understand how middle and lower-class voters who are disgusted with the "elites" think that they found a champion in a billionaire who has made a career out of stiffing middle-class contractors, has used dubious loopholes to avoid paying taxes for decades, and whose business caters to those very elites that they are railing against.
ReplyDeletePseudo-intellectual eggheads usually are lacking in basic common sense. That explains you and DT and the other Frum Jews who thought that it was their duty to support Clinton. You had good company, by the way. Madonna, Cher, Miley Cyrus, Obama, Bernie Sanders et al and the rabid anti-Israel left. That alone should have given you pause.
ReplyDeletePut it to rest. Realize that no matter how much stupidity, obfuscation and dishonesty you throw out, the people have spoken. You are, however, free to go burn down Walgreens in the name of freedom. You can go join the paid protesters and rioters.
ReplyDeleteWe also had the company of both living Republican presidents and the vast majority of the major figures of the Republican party under both Bush administrations.
ReplyDelete1: It is certainly undeniable that the ACA is flawed. But the main blame for this rests with the obstructionists Republicans in Congress, who for years now have refused to allow any legislative tweaks to the law that would help in fixing the problems with it, preferring instead that the program not be effective so that they can use it as a campaign issue. This was true before 2012, and was true even after 2012, despite Romney saying that the election would be a referendum as to whether or not the American people wanted the ACA to remain in force.
ReplyDelete2: Trump has no plan to bring back manufacturing jobs other than slapping a 35% tariff on imports, which will drive up prices for the hundreds of millions of Americans who do not work in the manufacturing sector. Those workers need to be re-educated and retrained, not promised that their obsolete jobs will be brought back.
Facts? I'll give you facts! My widowed sister has not been able to get ANY health coverage AT ALL since the so-called Affordable Care Act became effective. It has so many complexities her situation isn't covered nor subsidized. That's not my "opinion" that's a "fact"!!!
ReplyDeleteAs far as I could tell, the Republicans have done very little to stop Obamacare. Obama hasn't blamed them so he must not have anything to use as an excuse.
ReplyDeletehttp://usconservatives.about.com/od/healthcare-issues/tp/10-Reasons-Obamacare-Is-and-Will-Continue-To-Be-A-Failure.htm
http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2015/10/29/why-obamacare-co-ops-are-failing-at-a-rate-of-nearly-50/#74eda8821b0a
Obama killed a great number of jobs by needlessly killing the coal industry and trying to replace it with the failing solar and windmill replacement. Much of his activity was based on the false doctrine of global warming. Bringing back coal would recover many jobs. The excel pipeline will generate a myriad of jobs. A general policy of promoting American industry and reducing the tax burden on businesses will lead to a rapid rise in employment. Rather than taxing the working public to death to give freebies to illegal aliens and deadly criminal Muslims and other unsavory types, the invigoration of business and industry will lead to a new boom in jobs.
I am sorry for the situation of your sister, and hope that she can find someone who knows the system well enough to help her. But in the larger scope of things, that is neither here nor there. Tens of millions of people have health insurance as a result of the ACA. Far far fewer have lost it.
ReplyDeleteAnd the Robin Hood approach of taking away something away from those who have it already to give to someone else who doesn't yet have it is justified?? The ACA was the wrong method and that is why those who lost their insurance or had their premiums skyrocket voted Donald Trump into the Presidency.
ReplyDeletePeople fell through the cracks in the ACA. That is true. Many Republican governors refused to implement the Medicaid expansion in their states. The Democrats in Congress tried for years to fix other problems with the law, and the Republicans blocked every attempt, instead passing meaningless "repeal" votes over and over. Had there been a good-faith attempt to help fix the bugs in the law, I believe that your sister would be covered.
ReplyDeleteBecause the ACA was a TAX. That's what the Supreme Court ruled. It was flawed from the beginning for that reason and more. My sister is in NY where it is implemented in full under a DEMOCRAT governor. It's like the 18th Amendment to the Constitution. Herbert Hoover referred to it as "the noble experiment." The experiment failed and was repealed. Obama had a second term to get his experiment and it too has failed. More than anything else the impact of Obamacare on taxpayers is what got Trump elected.
ReplyDeleteOnce again, I cannot speak to the particulars of the case of your sister, as to why she fell between the cracks. But do you really mean to suggest that a law that resulted in a net gain of 20 million more people with insurance should not have been implemented if it results in your sister losing her health care? Any law implemented with have a positive benefit for some and a negative impact on others. One must take a global view and decide what to do, not refuse to act if even one person will be harmed. As an example, Trump wants to slap a 35% tariff on companies who manufacture overseas. This will have a negative impact on tens of millions of consumers in the form of higher prices, but he hopes that this will help tens of thousands of workers to keep their jobs. One can agree with him or disagree, but one cannot deny that the decision involves a calculus of what serves a greater good. The ACA is no different.
ReplyDeleteThe ACA had a heck of a lot of cracks. And because so many people have suffered from those cracks, Trump is the new President
ReplyDeleteJust as it is a gross oversimplification to say that the reason Obama won in 2012 is because America was happy with the ACA, it is an oversimplification to say that the reason Clinton lost is because America was unhappy with it. There are many factors that contributed to the result of this election, and even after all the data comes in, it will be well-nigh impossible to state definitively how much of the vote was pro-Trump, how much anti-Hillary, how much low turnout due to her being an uninspiring candidate, how much is due to sexism, not to mention several other factors.
ReplyDeleteBaruch Hashem the ACA as it was conceived by Obama is going away. In the words of Bernie Sanders: Sanders said. "I don't think it makes a
ReplyDeletewhole lot of sense to do Monday-morning-quarterbacking right now. The
election is over. Donald Trump won." ... " "What good does it do now?"