Although I do not agree with him about abortion (which would not change under any of them), and although I do not agree with his conclusion, Mike Harris writes:
There is a politician who until recently was lukewarm on
gay rights, in favour of the death penalty, a wilful liar whose
most noted achievement (proposing healthcare for some uninsured) meant
millions of her fellow citizens would still have no access to healthcare.
This
politician won’t defend abortion without the adding “rare”
and won’t commit to a minimum wage in America (the world’s richest nation) as
high as a British conservative Chancellor will.
This politician is to the
right, socially, of almost every serving Conservative member of parliament and,
economically, far to the right of the Labour party.
So why do so many on the liberal-left
in Britain get excited about Hillary Clinton?
I don’t get it.
Labour friends of mine, good people,
are active supporters of Hillary Clinton. Not "Facebook status
update" fans, but "fly across the Atlantic to canvass for Hillary in
the snow" fans.
Across the Labour party, people flew over to campaign for
Hillary in 2008 and will do so again in 2016.
These are people who will defend
the NHS to their last breath, but see no contradiction in supporting a
candidate whose chief spokesperson has gone out of his way to attack universal
healthcare systems.
The
ultimate establishment figure
Hillary is a politician who could not seem more out of place in 2016.
Hillary is a politician who could not seem more out of place in 2016.
In an era of the anti-establishment politician, for good or ill,
we have the ultimate establishment figure: one half of a power couple who have
remained at the top of American politics for nearly three decades.
But the
anti-establishment mood exists for a reason. Americans get very little from
their government, yet some people do very well from government largesse, in
particular the financial services industry.
Between 2000-2008, when the Clintons pleaded they were “dead broke” the Clinton family earned $109
million with a significant portion of this coming from speeches to
Wall Street.
Since the financial crisis, the Clintons have given paid speeches
at American Express (AXP), Bank of America Corp. (BAC), Deutsche Bank AG (DB),
Goldman Sachs, HSBC Holdings plc (HSBC), JPMorgan and JPMorgan Chase, Jefferies
LLC, the Mortgage Bankers Association, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Pershing LLC, TD
Bank (TD), the Vanguard Group, UBS AG and Wells Fargo & Company (WFC).
Chutzpah
doesn't come close
And while the Clinton’s feel protected by the American
establishment, they persecute others for sins they themselves have committed.
In a televised debate with Bernie Sanders, Clinton said of
whistleblower Edward Snowden, “He stole very important information that
has fallen into the wrong hands” and called for him to face trial under
legislation that would deny Snowden a public interest defence.
Clinton’s
assertion was based on a single article in the Sunday Times, with a lone
uncorroborated MI6 source. Journalists behind the disclosure of the Snowden
files have rubbished this
claim.
But we do know it is likely that Clinton’s private emails while she was
secretary of state have fallen into the “wrong hands” – in particular,
Russia and China – because the former Defense Secretary Robert Gates
has said so.
It says much about Clinton’s
character that she feels free to open a line of attack on data security and
hound a whistleblower at the same time her lack of protection of US state
secrets is being investigated by the FBI. Chutzpah doesn’t come close.
There remains no better demolisher of the Clintons than the late Christopher Hitchens and no better place to quote from than his scathing 2008 take on Hillary’s last bid for the Democratic nomination:
"What would it take to break this cheap little spell and make us wake up and inquire what on earth we are doing when we make the Clinton family drama – yet again a central part of our own politics?"
There remains no better demolisher of the Clintons than the late Christopher Hitchens and no better place to quote from than his scathing 2008 take on Hillary’s last bid for the Democratic nomination:
"What would it take to break this cheap little spell and make us wake up and inquire what on earth we are doing when we make the Clinton family drama – yet again a central part of our own politics?"
He needn't worry.
ReplyDeleteShe's no longer "lukewarm on gay rights" as he put it. She's onboard with the Left on gay marriage now while every Republican candidate facing her is a declared opponent of gay marriage.
No, they are not. And they couldn't do anything about it, even if they were. Once the Supreme Court declares its authority over anything, then that's that. And that Court considers itself bound by its own precedents. So that's that. God Bless America.
Delete"in favour of the death penalty."
ReplyDeleteGet over it. So is Obama and the vast majority of Americans.
If he, or anyone else, opposes it then they can try persuading American voters.
It wouldnt work.
They are smart enough to know that the liberty of the innocent (particularly their freedom to bear arms, abolished here since we abandoned the death penalty) depends on a justice system that properly punishes the guilty.
Take it up with Bernie Sanders, the man whose barnstorming victory in New Hampshire ought to knock her out of active politics altogether.
DeleteAbolishing the death penalty across Europe and the Old Commonwealth did not involve persuading the voters. As the most recent surveys, such as the BSA, are now showing, it is the long absence of capital punishment that changes the public mind, in that order.
That article has the most shocking, nonsensical ending since Monty Python's Holy Grail.
ReplyDeleteHe'll Feel the Bern eventually.
Delete