Clinton, not knowing there were recordings, denied the affair under oath.
Personally, I’d call this a perjury trap.
He tried to get Lewisnky to return his gifts so the prosecutors wouldn’t get them.
He asked his secretary leading questions like “She and I were never alone, right?” (he "coached" her testimony).
Clinton also:
💠Approved of a prosecutor hired to investigate him, and he cooperated fully
💠When investigators looked into the Clintons' business deals, he turned over all financial records.
Republicans argued that Clinton was a danger to democracy because he was undermining rule of law itself.
See ⤵️ from theguardian.com/us-news/2019/a…
Hypocrisy doesn't begin to describe this.
Something more is going on.
The current backlash, in fact, began with Brown v. Board of Education, and the women’s and civil rights movements, which led to the 1960s protest.
Regulatory agencies and rulings like Brown v. Board of Education curtailed white male "liberty."
They resent it and are trying to take us backwards.
That’s why reason and logic don’t work, and why they’re not moved by evidence of their own blatant hypocrisy.
Some of Trump’s supporters are duped.
Others are knowingly on board.
Others are cowed by fear.
The abolitionists, Susan B. Anthony, MLK Jr., and all the progressive heroes have been fighting the same forces since the start of the nation—that small impassioned minority on the far right end of the spectrum.
Plus our institutions are holding out against the onslaught.
(Institutions include courts and agencies—look at all the people who marched into Congress to testify against Trump’s orders.)
terikanefield-blog.com/things-to-do/
The fight is always hard. It also never ends.
We push forward; the reactionaries push back.
People in a panic right now made a mistake in their thinking that @TimothyDSnyder explains in one of his lectures.
I get it, because I made the same mistake.
To begin with, remember that this whole "equality for all" thing is fairly new.
But now the Democratic Party stands for inclusiveness and includes minority communities—a direct threat to the paranoid right.
US history is an arc bending toward greater justice as more people come to be included in "we the people."
The assumption is that that expansion will naturally continue.
We're on a conveyor belt leading us to a more diverse future.
When the reactionaries do their thing (as they've always done) and try to loop us backwards, progressives panic.
Nope. We have to keep working for it.
Every day, every year, every generation.
We've [almost] always had a conservative / reactionary judiciary.
In the 1960s, federal judges were being confirmed who openly supported segregation (the citation is somewhere on my blog)
We've actually only had two. . .
A few terms with a Democratic White House and Senate will turn this around.
I just answered another question about how much power judges have: They have some discretion, but they have to apply the law. Even SCOTUS has to apply legislation (unless they rule on constitutional grounds)