Is Hillary
Morally Unfit to Be President?
By Patrick
Buchanan
July 08,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Does Hillary Clinton possess the integrity
and honesty to be president of the United States? Or
are those quaint and irrelevant considerations in
electing a head of state in 21st-century America?
These are
the questions put on the table by the report from
FBI Director James Comey on what his agents
unearthed in their criminal investigation of the
Clinton email scandal.
Clinton
dodged an FBI recommendation that she be indicted
for gross negligence in handling U.S. security
secrets, a recommendation that would have aborted
her campaign. But Director Comey dynamited the
defense she has been offering the country.
Comey all
but declared that Clinton lied when she said she had
State Department approval for the email server in
her home.
He all but
declared that she lied when she said she had only
one server, and that no classified or secret
material was transmitted. He also implied that she
lied when she said she had used only one device and
had turned over all of her work-related emails to
State. The FBI found "several thousand" more.
Clinton
said her emails were stored in a secure area. This,
too, was false. Hostile actors and hostile regimes,
said Comey, had access to email systems of those
with whom she communicated.
Comey said
he found no criminal "intent" in what Clinton did.
Yet, he
charged her with having been "extremely careless"
with U.S. national security secrets, a phrase that
seems synonymous with the gross negligence needed to
indict and convict.
While
recommending against prosecution, Comey added, "This
is not to suggest that in similar circumstances, a
person who engaged in this activity would face no
consequence. To the contrary, those individuals are
often subject to security or administrative
sanctions."
Translation: Were Clinton still the secretary of
state and were such recklessness with secrets to be
discovered, she could have been forced to resign and
stripped of her security clearance forever.
Yet if
Clinton is elected president, our commander in chief
for the next four years, and her confidantes Huma
Abedin and Cheryl Mills, will all be individuals the
FBI has found to be reckless and unreliable in the
handling of national security secrets.
We will
have security risks running the armed forces of the
USA.
Nor is this
the first time Clinton’s truthfulness has been
called into question. Twenty years ago, she
fabricated a tale about crossing a tarmac in Bosnia
"under sniper fire," and running with "our heads
down." Photos showed a peaceful arrival featuring a
smiling little girl.
Family
members of the dead heroes of Benghazi’s "13 Hours"
say Clinton told them she would see to it that the
creator of the anti-Islamic video that incited the
mob that killed their sons would be run down, all
the while knowing it had been a planned terrorist
attack.
In 1996,
The New York Times‘ William Safire went over all
of the statements Clinton had made in Whitewater and
related scandals of Bill Clinton’s first term,
compared them with subsequently revealed truth, and
pronounced Hillary Clinton a "congenital liar."
She has
claimed she tried to join the Marines in 1975, and
long contended she was named for famed mountaineer
Edmund Hillary, who conquered Mount Everest. Only
Sir Edmund climbed Everest when Hillary was 6 years
old. The perfect running mate for this serial
fabricator would be the Cherokee lass Elizabeth
Warren.
Still, a
question arises as to Comey’s motives in airing the
findings of an FBI investigation. Normally, the
bureau passes on the evidence it has found, along
with its recommendation, to the Justice Department.
And Justice decides whether to prosecute.
Instead,
Comey called a press conference, documented the
charge that Clinton was "extremely careless,"
contradicted, point by point, the story she has told
the public, then announced he was recommending
against prosecution.
What was
behind this extraordinary performance?
By urging
no prosecution, but providing evidence for a verdict
of criminal negligence in handing classified
material, Comey was saying:
I am not
recommending prosecution, because, to do that, would
be to force Hillary Clinton out of the race, and
virtually decide the election of 2016. And that is
my not decision. That is your decision.
You, the
American people, should decide, given all this
evidence, if Clinton should be commander in chief.
You decide if a public figure with a record of such
recklessness and duplicity belongs in the Oval
Office.
Comey was
making the case against Clinton as the custodian of
national security secrets with a credibility the GOP
cannot match, while refusing to determine her fate
by urging an indictment, and instead leaving her
future in our hands.
And,
ultimately, should not this decision rest with the
people, and not the FBI?
If, knowing
what we know of the congenital mendacity of Hillary
Clinton, the nation chooses her as head of state and
commander in chief, then that will tell us something
about the America of 2016.
And it will
tell us something about the supposed superiority of
democracy over other forms of government.
Patrick
J. Buchanan is the author of the new book "The
Greatest Comeback: How Richard Nixon Rose From
Defeat to Create the New Majority." To find out more
about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other
Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators
website at www.creators.com.
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