Last
week I wrote about Donald Trump, concluding that he was not fit to be
president. So today I'll comment on the other major party candidate.
I made two mistakes last week and I'll try not to repeat them.
First of all, I waited for his acceptance speech to make my judgment,
but all that did was to give him some extra time to smooth out the
rough edges. He didn't, but even if he had accomplished the
rhetorical feat, it wouldn't have changed his previous record. In
addition, I saved my conclusion for the end, as I was instructed to
do by a high school English teacher. It's good advice to let the
strength of the arguments make the conclusion inevitable, but
WYSIWYG, “truth in advertising” and similar issues mean that I
should tell you my view, rather than put you in the position of
drawing your own conclusions. After all, you may make a mistake. If
my arguments are not powerful enough to lead you to the Truth, I
don't want you to draw the wrong conclusion.
To
reveal the punch line first, then, the former Secretary of State is
not fit to be president either. In fact, she wasn't fit to be
Secretary of State. Even her nomination is tainted by the leaks of
e-mails demonstrating efforts to undermine the candidacy of Senator
Sanders. (Lest I be misunderstood, it's my view that his nomination
would be a disaster as bad as that of the Secretary of State.) It
appears that the Democratic Party is somewhat less democratic than we
have been led to believe. But we were foolish if we accepted the
idea that either political party was really interested in us.
But,
as William Claude Dukenfield said, “I digress.”
Our
questions begin with Whitewater and Castle Grande, the business
dealings in which she participated in the 1970s and 1980s. While
despite her involvement, no charges were filed against her, according
to Breitbart (and I leave it to the reader to evaluate the source),
In the mid-1980s, federal bank
regulators started taking a closer look at Madison Guaranty [a
bank she represented] and concluded that Castle
Grande was a sham, a crime, and part of a pyramid scheme to enrich
insiders and hide the S&L's disintegrating finances. According
to the newly obtained document [an
unredacted version of the “original Office of Independent Counsel
(OIC) memorandum in the Whitewater affair obtained by Judicial
Watch.”], “Hillary Clinton and Webster
Hubbell [an
Arkansas businessman also involved in the “sham” deal] concealed
their involvement in Castel Grande.”
Despite
contrary documentary evidence, Ms. Clinton denied any involvement.
“I don't believe I knew
anything about any of these real estate parcels and projects.”
Memory is a strange thing.
Similarly,
when questioned about her own e-mail server and the transmission of
secret documents on it, her defense was that she didn't know the
documents were classified, and besides, those before her had done it
too. It is troubling that someone with her security clearance could
not recognize a sensitive document (some subsequently judged too
secret to reveal in the report of the problem) and take the proper
precautions, and that she wasn't aware that the practice was then
illegal though it had not been so during the terms of her
predecessors. In terms of both the Arkansas business dealings and
the e-mail controversy it is worth remembering that President Nixon
was almost impeached not for the Watergate break-in, but for trying
to cover it up. Ms. Clinton worked hard to cover up her involvement
in the two scandals.
Another
concern relates to the Secretary's performance during the episode in
Benghazi, Libya. During the entire period of its happening, the
State Department took no action. What it might have done would
possibly have failed, but it did nothing, so we'll never know if the
deaths could have been avoided. And, at least initially, the
Secretary blamed conservatives in the United States (who had produced
an anti-Islamic video) for the whole affair, although based on e-mail
she sent at the time she knew that wasn't true. Another cover-up.
Ms.
Clinton would have us accept her judgment that these matters have
already been discussed, and “it's time to move on” from them –
they're past performance items that we should ignore when we evaluate
her – while she raises questions about decades-old business
practices of her opponent.
Her
past performance raises questions about her judgment and her
trustworthiness. This is not an example of “genderism.” (More
on that term in “Mixed Grill” which will appear on
October 23rd.) She should not be elected president for
her service in that office would put us all at risk. But that leaves
us with unfit nominees from both the Democrats and the Republican
parties. Where do I go from here?
I'll
have more to say on that subject in my next essay.
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