"Political candidates for high office are virtual illusions
assembled out of media dust. They are solidified cartoons presented on
television. The real lives of the people who are thus animated by media
are of no concern. Indeed, it is the job of the candidates to conceal
their real lives and thoughts and emotions, to avoid frightening the
stunted children who vote for them on Election Day. Political
leadership roles were never designed for authentic persons. Such
persons, in significant numbers, would crash the system and expose it as
a complete fraud. The art of building the political system depends on
mass minds tuned to caricatures, minds that can't carry the freight of
anything heavier. Therefore, society's architects set about their work:
thinning out consciousness itself." (The Underground, Jon Rappoport)
---I recall. No, I don't recall. What difference does it make? Let's
move on. There are more important issues facing the American people---
When a sleazy politician of the first order is faced with her own lie, there is always "something more important to discuss."
And of course, she simply "misspoke." Misspeaking is an action reserved
for the few. It doesn't apply to everyone else. Everyone else lies.
Sharyl Attkisson wrote an instructive article about Hillary's perilous
1996 "sniper" trip to Bosnia. Instructive, because she was there with
Hillary.
Attkisson writes:
"The trip in 1996 would later become grist for the political mill when
presidential candidate Clinton claimed-in 2008-that we had dodged sniper
fire on that trip.
"I not only had a different memory, but I still had the video from the
event and it clearly showed no snipers. In fact, there were children on
the runway in Bosnia to greet Clinton. Sheryl Crow was on the trip with
us, as was comedian Sinbad (to entertain the US troops). Sinbad, too,
pointed out he didn't recall sniper fire.
"CBS News assigned me to do the story on Clinton's mistaken memory. When
she doubled down the next day, we followed up with a second day story.
"Some analysts said it was the final nail in the coffin that caused her
to drop out of the race in 2008, clearing the path for Barack Obama to
take the nomination for Democrats. Clinton never fully explained whether
she knew she wasn't telling the truth, or whether she actually somehow
believed her own concocted story. She simply explained that she'd been
overtired."
Hillary eventually confessed, if you can call it a confession: "So I
made a mistake," she said. "That happens. It proves I'm human, which you
know, for some people, is a revelation."
And then, on another occasion: "I was sleep-deprived, and I misspoke."
Made a mistake. Misspoke.
If you landed at an airport, walked across the tarmac without incident,
and years later told your friends you dodged sniper fire...would they
believe you "misspoke" and "made a mistake" after they learned the
truth?
Of course not.
Would they then form a different opinion of you? Of course. But when
politicians do this sort of thing, their supporters don't form a
different opinion; they shrug, spin, deny, ignore.
Let's see. A) Walked across the tarmac and nothing happened. B) Walked
across the tarmac and dodged sniper fire. You know, bullets. From
rifles. Dodging. Running. Could die any second.
When Brian Williams was caught inventing war stories that never
happened, NBC fired him. They had to. He was the face of the news. He
was supposed to be above credibility issues.
But when Hillary tells a straightforward lie about snipers, nobody fires
her. It's business as usual. And she could gain a title slightly more
important than national news anchor: president of the United States.
Is the sniper lie the biggest Hillary has told? Not by a long shot.
But it's very instructive, because it was about a direct and specific
issue of fact that could be contradicted easily by available evidence.
Which raises the question: since it was such a foolish lie to float, why did she go with it?
There are several possible answers:
She felt immune, in general, as people with a certain amount of power do. Untouchable.
She is incapable of separating her lies from the truth.
She misestimated, by a mile, the likelihood that she would get away with lying.
In any of these cases, she would be quite dangerous as a sitting President.
Equally dangerous, perhaps more so, is the public's perception of her as
a viable candidate. That perception is based on a PR profile which has
been built for her over the course of many years. For the general
public, she is that package.
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