Title: HILLARY RELEGATED TO THE DUSTBIN OF HISTORY Source:
Freaking News URL Source:[None] Published:Jul 10, 2019 Author:Freaking News Post Date:2019-07-10 12:04:44 by IbJensen Keywords:None Views:1539 Comments:12
With Xlinton's extensive flights on pedo-tycoon Epstein's jet, the Lolita Express, en route to international destinations - including Epstein's Orgy Island - in the presence of underage girls and other Dem pedo-celebs like Kevin Spacey on the same flight, I'd love to see the usual politician perp walk for Xlinton with Hillary in tow, belting out a fresh chorus of "Stand By Your Man" and baking cookies while accusing some VRWC (vast right wing conspiracy) of having hated and pursued the Xlintons legally ever since Arkansas. Which, notably, is fairly true. LOL.
The Clingons were the conspiracy. One so evil and deep that it finally has risen to the surface of the murky swamp. They are criminals of the first order. Dangerous enough to order scores of murders and running a money laundering scheme they call a 'Foundation" That has distributed less than five percent to charity cuases (i.e. Haiti) and keeping the rest to enrich their sordid filthy lives. Ugly-as-a-mud-fence daughter Chelsea is firmly involved in their nefarious schemes as well.
Who among us didn't think it odd that the Chinese bought the Worthen Bank in Little Rock after Billy Goat was elected governor? They took over handling these (red) star crossed duo after the USSR folded. In short, the dynamic duo are guilty of treason and belong in a federal pen.
Liberals are like Slinkys. They're good for nothing, but somehow they bring a smile to your face as you shove them down the stairs.
There is something comedic in watching these bloody puppeteers getting away with murder again and again over many years without a scratch and what difference does it make?
I may be mistaken, but the voice of the VRWC like a Greek chorus is rising in intensity and this farce seems to be moving toward a tragic climax some time soon.
These days I'd avoid traveling on an aircraft together if I were either one of those two.
There is something comedic in watching these bloody puppeteers getting away with murder again and again over many years without a scratch and what difference does it make?
I was laughing only at the fact that the VRWC has, just as Hitlery accused, been after the Xlinton gang ever since Arkansas. One of the few things she didn't lie about constantly.
It isn't paranoid if people really are out to get you. And the same could be said for Trump. Certainly, a lot of people are out to get him too.
I know or knew a number of people who Hitlery's namesake was after. (His first name is spelled with an -f, not a -ph, for those who hadn't noticed.) These people all outlived him, but they are all gone now I believe. From their stories I learned that what Hitler's folks were after was some serious business indeed and no damned joke.
Nevertheless not long ago, after reading of some twenty documented attempts on that man's life, a number of which failed by pure chance, in the end I had to laugh. It wasn't "funny" but I couldn't escape an ironic sense of comedy in the thing.
Sometimes I feel that there are strange other than human forces at work in history that are out of the reach of our conventional understanding.
Yeah, more of history can be chalked up to just dumb luck - either good or bad - than can be attributed to wise rulers.
Look at the bizarre comedy of errors by the Brit parliament and monarch that led to them losing the American colonies. Barbara Tuchman wrote about it in one of her books. By the time you finish reading about it, you think the entire British ruling classes were suicidal or insanely inbred and incompetent. Yet it happened and for no good reason.
Of course, I'm glad it happened. But it was completely perverse as an outcome. A petty little rebellion led to the loss of the richest continent in the last several thousand years. And, what, for nothing? There's no explaining how Britain failed so badly and lost the colonies. Eventually, the loss bankrupted the British empire, following their overcommitments in WW I.
The book is about "one of the most compelling paradoxes of history: the pursuit by governments of policies contrary to their own interests."[1] It details four major instances of government folly in human history: the Trojans' decision to move the Greek horse into their city, the failure of the Renaissance popes to address the factors that would lead to the Protestant Reformation in the early sixteenth century, England's policies relating to American colonies under King George III, and the United States' mishandling of the conflict in Vietnam.[2][3] More than half of the book deals with US intervention in the Vietnam War, while the other three case studies are shorter.
Woh, it's quite pricey even now at Amazon. It was popular back in the day and she did a book tour as usual. Other professional historians weren't totally impressed but they never liked the fact that she made some big money off her popular histories. For casual readers of history, Tuchman wrote well enough, trying to give the reader a sense of the era and the people, of what historical records reveal with some certainty, how much of what we know about many historical events of the era is somewhat speculative or so narrowly sourced as to be a little suspect, etc.
The book she wrote about the 14th century was interesting, just in giving a flavor of what life was like. History is all in the details after all. A lot of centuries get almost no attention historically. For instance, how many facts about the 11th century could any of us recite off the tops of our heads? Or the 8th century? Not many, I think.
On ebay it's four bucks soft cover and ten bucks hard cover used.
I pick up a lot of used stuff like that on ebay. Particularly books that I've loaned out and never gotten back. I do tell myself that it's my little contribution to the circulation of ideas.