Among the things I would never wish on you or anyone else: a
day in the mind of Hillary Clinton.
Apparently, Hillary has thrust herself back into the news by
attacking Tulsi Gabbard and Jill Stein as Russian assets. The ghost of Joe
McCarthy is smiling.
Many candidates are attacking Hillary for her failure to
keep her mouth shut. And for inserting herself into a political conversation
that she should long since abandoned.
And yet, Matt Taibbi points out in Rolling Stone, Hillary is
doing nothing more than repeating the theme that has animated the anti-Trump
movement for years now:
Hillary
Clinton is nuts. She’s also not far from the Democratic Party mainstream, which
has been pushing the same line for years.
Less
than a week before Clinton’s outburst, the New York Times — once a symbol of stodgy, hyper-cautious
reporting — ran a
feature called, “What, Exactly, is Tulsi Gabbard Up To?” The piece
speculated about the “suspicious activity” surrounding Gabbard’s campaign,
using quotes from the neoconservative think-tank, the Alliance For Securing
Democracy, to speculate about Gabbard’s Russian support.
This
was the second such article the Times had
written. An August piece, “Tulsi Gabbard thinks we’re doomed,“ hit nearly all
the same talking points, quoting Clint Watts, an ex-spook from the same
think-tank, calling Gabbard “the Kremlin’s preferred Democrat” and a
“useful agent of influence.” The Times article
echoed earlier pieces by the Daily Beast and
NBC.com that said many of the same things.
After
Clinton gave the “Russian asset” interview, it seemed for a moment like
America’s commentariat might tiptoe away from the topic. Hillary Clinton has
been through a lot over the course of a career, and even detractors would say
she’s earned latitude to go loonybiscuits every now and then. A few of the
Democratic presidential candidates, like Beto O’Rourke and Andrew Yang, gently
chided Clinton for her remarks. But when Gabbard (who’s similarly been through
a brutal media ordeal) snapped back and called Hillary “Queen of the warmongers,” and Donald Trump followed by
calling Clinton “crazy,” most pundits doubled down on the “asset” idea.
Neoconservative-turned-#Resistance
hero David Frum blasted Trump for defending Stein and Gabbard, noting
sarcastically, “He was supposed to pretend they were not all on the same
team.” Ana Navarro on CNN said,
“When both the Russians and Trump support someone, be wary.” An MSNBC panel
noted, in apparent seriousness, that Gabbard “never denied being a Russian asset.” CNN media critic Brian
Stelter tried to suggest Hillary only seemed wacko thanks to a trick of the red
enemy, saying, “It feels like a disinformation situation where the
Russians want this kind of disinformation.”
As though that were not bad enough, the radical American
left is enamored with the Russian scum idea. This means, just in case you
missed it, that Barack Obama was a Russian stooge, willing to do the bidding of
his Kremlin masters. Only, don’t tell anyone:
Everyone
is foreign scum these days. Democrats spent three years trying to prove Donald
Trump is a Russian pawn. Mitch McConnell is “Moscow Mitch.” Third party candidates are a Russian plot.
The Bernie Sanders movement is not just a wasteland of racist and misogynist
“Bros,” but — according
to intelligence agencies and mainstream pundits alike — the beneficiary of an
ambitious Russian plot to “stoke the divide” within the Democratic Party. The Joe
Rogan independents attracted to the mild antiwar message of Tulsi Gabbard are
likewise traitors and dupes for the Kremlin.
If
you’re keeping score, that’s pretty much the whole spectrum of American
political thought, excepting MSNBC Democrats. What a coincidence!
We are, Taibbi continues, giving Donald Trump way too much
credit. His candidacy was not a carefully calibrated political campaign. It was
slapdash, put together on the fly by a man who never really imagined that he
was going to win:
This
witch-hunting insanity isn’t just dangerous, it’s a massive breach from
reality. Trump’s campaign was a clown show. He had almost no institutional
backing. His “ground game” was nonexistent: his “campaign” was a TV
program based almost wholly around unscripted media appearances. Trump
raised just over half the $1.2 billion Hillary pulled in
(making him the first presidential candidate dating back to 1976 to win with a funds deficit). He
didn’t prepare a victory speech, for the perfectly logical reason
that he never expected to win.
But then, how did it happen that the great Hillary Clinton
managed to lose to Donald Trump. Did you every suspect that she really wanted
to lose, that she was afraid of the American presidency, that the office would
expose her for the incompetent fraud that she has always been? Donald Trump could not have won without the connivance of Hillary herself. So, she got her wish, and is perhaps secretly relieved. After all, not being president allows her to travel the country and the world in splendor, shooting off her mouth, saying whatever is on her mind. And it ensures that she does not need to depend on her husband for behind-the-scenes guidance. Why not live on
her laurels, laurels that she in no way earned, rather than risk taking on a job that would have been much too big for her feeble mind?
Even if she had been doing it to advance the feminist cause, perhaps the cause is better served by allowing people to imagine her successful presidency than by showing herself to be a miserable failure in office.
I recognize that many oh-so-savvy commentators are convinced
that Hillary Clinton will jump in the race at the last minute, the better to
save the Democratic Party from ignominious defeat. But, would a rescue scenario
begin with the dowager Duchess of Chappaqua trying to traffic in an absurd
conspiracy theory? The net effect of her stupid suggestion might well be to
protect her against any calls that she enter the race. Call it her insurance policy.
"After all, not being president allows her to travel the country and the world in splendor, shooting off her mouth, saying whatever is on her mind."
ReplyDeleteUm, why would being president have stopped from doing that anyway? Trump certainly does it big time, and in his case I consider it a feature, not a bug of his presidency, since I voted for him enthusiastically.
"Less than a week before Clinton’s outburst, the New York Times — once a symbol of stodgy, hyper-cautious reporting — ran a feature called, “What, Exactly, is Tulsi Gabbard Up To?" Question: When did that stop? What about Walter Duranty's columns on Russia in the '30s? Was that "stodgy and hyper-cautious"? Taibbi: What has he been smokin' Or ingesting or injecting?
ReplyDeleteThe mind of Hillary! That would be horror show that would NOT lead to sex. Man does that turn the stomach.
ReplyDelete