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Article

Hillary’s Waterloo

Charles Krauthammer | Primetime Politics 13 Comments Discuss
Added: April 04, 2008

Hillary Clinton met her Waterloo at Tuzla. She’d been regaling audiences with tales of a dangerous landing under sniper fire in Tuzla 12 years ago and then running for cover. None of this occurred. When CBS provided the tape, she was forced to admit to “a misstatement.”

Now, confabulation is a fairly common psychological phenomenon. We all have internalized childhood stories so oft repeated by elders that we come to falsely “remember” the actual experience. Adult memories are less susceptible to such unconscious inventions, but past experiences embellished over time by repeated recounting can reach the point where we actually believe the elaborate trappings of our own retellings.

Clinton’s problem, however, is that a corkscrew landing under sniper fire is the kind of thing that is hard to forget and harder still for memory to invent. This is confabulation on a pathological scale.

A Clintonian scale. And that’s the problem. Barack Obama has been gaining on Hillary in part because Tuzla reminds Democrats what they had largely succeeded in banishing from consciousness: the Clintons’ rather arm’s-length relationship with truth. The great New York Times columnist William Safire once called Hillary Clinton “a congenital liar” and made it stick. And that was more than a decade before snipergate.

The revulsion at the Clintons’ lack of scruples remained latent as long as the focus was on her relatively unknown opponent, a blank slate being filled in with Tony Rezko’s shady dealings and Jeremiah Wright’s racist rants. Tuzla not only provided a distraction from Obama’s problem with the raving reverend, it created the perfect setting for the press to pronounce the Wright affair closed.

In his swoon-inducing Philadelphia speech, Obama had instructed the nation from on high that America was greatly in need of a national conversation on race — a need curiously absent before his pastor’s words sent his campaign into a tailspin — and that he, Barack Obama, was ready to lead it. Everything was now on the table, except his association with Wright. Because to “play Rev. Wright’s sermons on every channel, every day and talk about them from now until the election” would simply be a “distraction” from the suffering of the American people which, of course, is the work of the usual suspects: corporate outsourcing and “the special interests in Washington.”

This invitation to move on, as it were, has been widely accepted. After the speech it became an article of faith that even referencing Wright’s comments was somehow illegitimate, the new “Swift-boating.”

It is not just that Obama surrogate Rep. George Miller denounced the Clinton campaign for bringing up Wright when talking to superdelegates as trying to “work the low road.” You expect that from a campaign. Or that Andrew Sullivan called Hillary’s commenting on Wright “a new low.” You expect that from Andrew Sullivan.

But from the mainstream media? As National Review‘s Byron York has pointed out, when Clinton supporter Lanny Davis said on CNN that it is “legitimate” for her to have remarked “that she personally would not put up with somebody who says that 9/11 are chickens who come home to roost” or the kind of “generic comments (Wright) made about white America,” Anderson Cooper, the show’s host and alleged moderator, interjected that since “we all know what the (Wright) comments were,” he found it “amazing” and “funny” that Davis should “feel the need to repeat them over and over again.”

Davis protested, “It’s appropriate.” Time magazine’s Joe Klein promptly smacked Davis down with “Lanny, Lanny, you’re spreading the — you’re spreading the poison right now,” and then suggested that an “honorable person” would “stay away from this stuff.”

Amazing. We’ve gone beyond moral equivalence to moral inversion. It is now dishonorable to even make note of Wright’s bigotry and ask how any man — let alone a man on the threshold of the presidency — could associate himself for 20 years with the purveyor of such hate.

Watching such a display, you get a full appreciation of Hillary’s challenge. The mainstream media are back in the tank. The Saturday Night Live skits parodying media obsequiousness toward Obama, followed closely by the revelation of the Wright tapes, temporarily forced the media to subject Obama to normal scrutiny. But after the “speech” and Tuzla, they have reverted to form as protectors of the myth of Obama.

The hagiographic treatment of a newly emerged Democratic leader is a recurring theme in American journalism. At the dawning of the age of Clinton 15 years ago, the cover of The New York Times Magazine featured a woman dressed entirely in white. The heading read: “Hillary Rodham Clinton and the Politics of Virtue.”

Inside, under the title “Saint Hillary,” the late Michael Kelly wrote a brilliantly detached, coolly ironic deconstruction of his celestial subject. Saint Obama awaits his Michael Kelly.

(c) 2008 Washington Post Writers Group

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Comments

It is a shame that this country of 300,000,000+ has elevated these deeply flawed individuals to the position of potential president. What we need is a “none of the above” selection at the voting booth. If “none of the above” wins, they re-run the election with new candidates. Right now, I see nothing good coming from this election.

Posted by LeChat  on  04/04  at  09:02 AM

Since there’s no re-runs and “none of the above” selections available, the choice is clear for McCain. 

Hillary is clearly not the one for this job...she’s just a power hungry life-long politician who has a serious disorder which induces her to lie incessantly and on a grander and grander scale each time. 

Barack’s a freshman with no ideas and no record, just a carte blanche for the media to go nuts over b/c that’s what they do best.  People want to vote for this guy to prove that we’ve beaten racism...yeah that’s a good reason to elect someone president!

McCain, as far as I see it, is the only reasonable one who will keep us safe.  The rest we can figure out later.

Posted by Aceman  on  04/04  at  10:14 AM

I also find it remarkable that the press has managed to bury/ignore the revelations by the general council and chief of staff of the House Judiciary committee during Watergate, Jeffrey Zeifman. Zeifman is a life long democrat so its a bit hard to dismiss his allegations as being politically motivated at the time. He fired Hillory without a letter of recommendation because: “Because she was a liar,” Zeifman said in an interview last week. “She was
an unethical, dishonest lawyer. She conspired to violate the Constitution, the
rules of the House, the rules of the committee and the rules of
confidentiality.” You may read the full story at : http://www.jzeifman.com/

Posted by Brosco Pertwee  on  04/04  at  11:59 AM

I admire McCain as someone who tries to do good for our country; however, I cannot sit back and allow the Bush War to continue. Obama may be untried and new but when he says I want to change the mindset that got us into the war I understood. The problem with the experienced Hillary and McCain, is the old attitude that got us into this mess. We were once admired by nations, but alas, no more. I want my children and grandchildren to be proud of their country and the way it is now, even I find it hard to be. America has a chance to change but it is the people, as Obama has repeated over and over, that have to do the changing. We must stop the mindset that allowed politicians and bankers to virtually distroy the America I loved.

Posted by Butterfly3344  on  04/04  at  12:01 PM

Butterfly, what do you mean Bush War? 

I don’t recall George Bush being the one behind hijacking planes and flying them directly into innocent people who were at work.  These filthy animals have declared a war on us many many years ago and you’re willfully blind to it. 

Open your eyes...throughout the world innocent civilians are literally TORN TO PIECES in the name of Allah, and you’re calling it Bush’s War?  Well then amen to George Bush for being man enough and principled enough to stand up to these murderous thugs. 

As for Obama fulfilling the need to change our country so you’re finally proud of it...what, exactly, is it that makes you not proud of this country?  Is it that we’re on a higher moral ground than any country on earth?  Is it that we give billions in aid around the globe, even though often times we should completely stop giving this “aid.” Is it that we prevent the spread of malaria to children in Africa by providing bug nets to sleep in?  Perhaps the billions we give to help people with AIDS?  Or that we prop up the losers in the UN?

God bless the freedoms we have in this country to sign on to high speed internet and proclaim you can’t wait to change so that we can finally be proud.

Posted by Aceman  on  04/04  at  12:59 PM

I do not call the battle to rid the earth of Bin Laden “Bush’s War”. We must stop terrorist I agree. I call an invasion of another country that was promoted by lies “Bush’s War”. Are you proud we have detained people and tortured them for years without allowing any representation to assertain their guilt? Are you proud we are bullying Iran instead of talking to them? Are you proud our vice president’s company is making billions while killing our own sholdiers? Are you proud we bail out a company that has swindled millions of people by fraud in the sub-prime market and yet refuse to even give the homeowner a chance in bankruptcy court to save their home? Are you proud that a chemical company has sold third world farmers seeds geneticaly engineered to not reproduce, thus causing massive hardships? The same company through their mighty dollar also has managed to convince the goverment people have no right to know if the food we eat has been altered for profit? Are you proud our dollar is worthless thanks to a corrupt Fed Bank that sold our Gold and refuses to back our money with anything but debt? Are you proud the United States is owned by everybody but us? If every country that has bought our debt called the marker in we are done. So yes I would like to be proud of my country but we must act like we are something to be proud of. And we can. There is hope if people decide they have had enough of the corruption. Instead of defending the US, let’s make it a country to be proud of so we don’t have to defend it’s corruption.

Posted by Butterfly3344  on  04/04  at  01:17 PM

You’re damn right I’m proud of all that!

Invasion of another country promoted by lies? 

Nonsense, don’t just repeat silly lines you see on placards carried by Code Pink...when the nation was just attacked and the rest of the freedom loving world is telling you their intelligence asserts we’re in for it and all of congress gives you a long list of reasons to go to war with iraq, not just WMD’s (which they found, by the way...huge tubs of chemical and biological weapons cause mass destruction), you go to war.  Enjoy this read http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson200404230833.asp

Bullying Iran instead of talking to them?  This is not bullying, this is bull shit.  Bombing the hell out of them and sending their weapons program back centuries is bullying...and that’s what we should do. 

You and your corner, who may very well win this election, can talk till you’re blue in the face.  The result will be “diplomacy” in english and then spitting venom about the downfall of the united states in arabic.  Then, when a nuclear bomb goes off and Israel is no longer, hindsight will be the judge of those diplomatic efforts. 

I’d love nothing more than to be proved wrong, but I’m not seeing that as much of a possibility.

Posted by Aceman  on  04/04  at  01:38 PM

Gotta agree with Aceman in this argument!  Well said!

As for Obama, I’m sorry Butterfly but the man is just another politician like every other we see on the tv every day.  All he does differently is tap into your emotions much more effectively.

For all the issues you mentioned in your comments Obama has nothing different up his sleeve from Hillary or any other Democrat.  To think he’s gonna talk his way into America’s hearts and make everyone come together, please, that’s dangerously naive.  Look at his record!  Look at his policy prescriptions!  There’s nothing new.  You’re being had by a great salesman.

Krauthammer touches on something in this article that you shouldn’t allow yourself to deny.  That is, substantive criticism of Obama should have an effect on a voter’s perception of him, but the media is doing its best not to let it.  The Rev. Wright affair?  That wasn’t a freak, that was the first glimpse you actually got through the window of hope.  You shouldn’t deny it exists.

Posted by Nobama  on  04/04  at  01:54 PM

I suppose you think a black preacher has no business damning your country. I am white and I have seen the things this country has done. Rev. Wright has done so much for the community and for his country. He wore a uniform and served his country well. Funny, all anyone opposed to Obama can throw is the Wright issue. McCain is a fine man, he even condemned the Wright bashing, which shows you he has sense enough to know an unjustified attack when he sees one. I admire McCain; however, I cannot condone the fight fight fight mentality. I am all for protecting our country but you can’t force our views and religions on the whole world. Instead we can lead by example and by promoting education and freedom. Look what a little media access has done for China. They can no longer cover up as much as they did in the past and people there are slowly opening their eyes to a new way. We must change our thinking and be smarter than our enemies. They are very sophisticated and must be defeated using better tactics. We will lose a war on terror if all we use are our guns! They do not value life so they are better armed with suicide bombers and teaching hate in school. We must step away from the table and think!!! A strong man can fight and win over several other men but there is a limit to how many he can take on and even hope to come out alive. Brute strength is not enough. We must change the mindset of the war. 4,000 + men have died and the middle east is still a hate filled terrorist place. I say let’s fight a better fight. Please don’t tell me there is no hope for a better future for our country because if you start out negative you only end up negative. Can’t Can’t do anything! But change that to I will do EVERYTHING in my power (that includes fighting a different kind of war) to succeed and we just might make it.

On another note, we are bankrupt. We can’t afford to keep spending spending spending on a losing battle. Instead of spending all our money on more and more torture devices and bombs, we should have given Iraq simple things like food and electricity. Health care so their children don’t keep dying. Schools so their children can learn a better way but instead we trashed their country and their lives. No wonder they keep trying to kill us. We have destroyed what little they had. We must approach the war on terror differently and yes we must fight with men and weapons but also with intelligence.

Posted by Butterfly3344  on  04/04  at  02:20 PM

Butterly, your first paragraph was filled with some pretty good points and some pretty good reasoning. 

The second paragraph, I’m afraid you either fall off the deep end or black out and start sputtering out useless platitudes you’ve heard before. 

Spending money on more and more torture devices and bombs?  What’s this torture device thing?  As for torturing our prisoners of war...since the beginning of this war we’ve waterboarded THREE PEOPLE...THREE.  And one of those was KSM, who was behind the 9/11 attacks...and these torturing sessions have helped stop other attacks and save American lives. 

Give things like food and electricity to Iraqis before we get rid of the terrorists and insurgents (who are interchangeable in my book)?  You suppose they’ll just let the local populations eat their food in peace?

Schools for their kids?  Thanks for the tip, try reading up on the school and hospitals we’ve been opening up for years now. 

We haven’t destroyed what little they have, we toppled an oppressive, terrorizing regime that attacks its neighbors unprovoked.  We’ve allowed a people in the middle east to voice their opinions, vote, and live in a free country for the first time in history.

Posted by Aceman  on  04/04  at  03:53 PM

And I wait to hear some comment on HOW MANY actually do beleive what the Rev, Wright says; how this reflects on thier voting habits; and, more appalling how the democrats permit this type of thinking-include HIllary here- when catering for thier votes.

Posted by romy  on  04/24  at  12:12 PM

I have spoken to men who have come back from this free country you talk about. It is not free according to them. Corruption is abundant in the Iraqi government, militants strike on innocent people trying to pray or get a job, our military changes directions and is not consistant, the so called security companies try to plow through people walking (and with the immunity guaranteed by our great gov’t no wonder they show no sign of caring) and there is still no running water or electricity in many places! This is from observation and not Washington/Media BS. But you are right some things in places are much better, we have built schools and such but not everywhere. And now the same Washington/Media are spouting Iran, Iran, Iran loud and clear soooo we are at war with Iran now. We cannot fight everyone. Diplomacy must be attempted before war! That is all I am saying. I firmly believe the Iraq war was all about oil (Thanks Cheney!) and NOT about our safety. As for only three waterboarded are you CIA or are you in the secret locations? If you are just repeating Washington/Media BS I don’t believe you really know for sure. Even Bush has admitted torture was approved by him and others.

Posted by Butterfly3344  on  04/24  at  03:56 PM

As for Wright, because he is black it is “Offensive”. The white televangalists can spout their hate all day long and it is accepted. I’m white and find this racist. Wright has done many many things for the community as well as served in the Marines. I don’t agree with him but I don’t agree with a lot of things my preacher spouts no matter how many years he repeats it. It is time for America to become colorblind. We are all in this together and noone is better because of who or what color his skin is.

Posted by Butterfly3344  on  04/24  at  04:01 PM

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