Bill Clinton gets angry

I stumbled across this at Andrew Sullivan’s blog, it’s quite humerous:

3 Responses to “Bill Clinton gets angry”

  1. Bill Clinton, a.k.a. The Perfect Liar, ill-advisedly admits knowledge of the Nevada doings, and even takes the position that he knows the most about the situation. Why? I mean, the Clinton Campaign is not party to the suit…

    He’s off his game this time. This latest Elmer Gantry couldn’t cheat a widow out of a wooden nickel. He’s just as bald-facedly shameless as he always was, only now he’s obviously rusty at concealing his tawdry machinations and looking the country straight in the eyes and explaining that in fact he did not have sexual relations with the NEA on behalf of his wife or her criminaloid brother’s criminal clients.

    If the country falls for another Clinton, then that’s what it deserves.

  2. The Bay Area media needs more credit for sticking it to everyone and anyone. For goodness sake, it was our media who caused hell for our super star baseball player. No mercy!

    Being that I grew up in ol’ Napa, it was kind of cool seeing the Opera House in the background there.

  3. Yes, I noticed that view of downtown Napa. And the weather looked lovely too, especially from here in Atlanta, where it had just snowed.

    I’m not at all sure that the Chronicle sticks to anyone who shares its distinct politics, and there’s really no other Bay Area outlet I know of that does. KSFO, maybe, from the Right (the folks who started the gubernatorial recall), and maybe the successor to Pacifica on the Left. The Chronicle and Mercury generally are about as Republican as Ralph Nader, as conservative as Noam Chomsky, though the Mercury does some rather expensive and disinterested investigative reporting, and keeps a seriously high-grade business reporting and analysis team in fighting shape. For its part, the Chronicle has a nice food section on Wednesdays. Investigating Bonds and then sticking to their guns took more gumshoe than gumption, as Bonds, an SOB of the first order, was unpopular among Chron readers well before the steroid allegations made it into the headlines, and even when the stories broke the readers’ response was, “Duh!” What I did admire about Bay Area reaction to the Bonds fiasco is that so many people were thoughtful about what the story said about race. The Chron editors shared that concern too.

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