Posted on 12/22/2002 7:48:55 PM PST by Paul Atreides
Hillary Clinton is using the Trent Lott controversy to claim the Republicans are racist.
But those that know Hillary well say she just to look in her own home to find people that tolerate and employ racist and anti-semitic language.
In a special audio program, "Hillary: UpClose" retired Arkansas state trooper Larry Patterson says Hillary and Bill Clinton frequently mouthed racist, bigoted and other intolerant remarks.
During the six years Patterson guarded the Clintons, he said their deep-seated anti-Semitism became apparent in slurs they hurled at each other. Bill Clinton also frequently told Jewish jokes.
Patterson explains in "Hillary: UpClose" that during his tenure with the Clintons, the pair was in constant, heated arguments with one another behind closed doors.
As their conversations degenerated into arguments, Bill and Hillary would begin making demeaning remarks to each other.
Patterson said that during these verbal brawls "it was quite common" for both Bill and Hillary to refer to each other as "a Jew mother f-cker" or a "Jew Bastard."
Bill Clinton also liked ethnic humor. Patterson recalled that "a lot of jokes were made about the Jewish people."
The trooper had no explanation of why the Clintons made derogatory comments or jokes about Jews.
But in "Hillary: UpClose", Patterson says Bill and Hillary had little nice to say about African Americans, though the pair counted the black vote as the bedrock of his support.
In "UpClose" Patterson said that Bill Clinton made derogatory remarks, which included the use of the "N" word, against black critics and opponents.
Clinton also tolerated the use of the "N" word by political leaders and business leaders he dealt with, Patterson recalled.
"When [Bill Clinton] had black political leaders in the state and he disagreed with them, he would frequently use the N word," Patterson said.
Patterson said Clinton never made the remarks directly to any African American but, on occasion, "after he got out of the meetings."
Patterson cited the example of Say McIntosh, a local civil rights activist and restaurant owner in Little Rock.
McIntosh "printed all kinds of flyers about Bill Clinton and there were a lot of confrontations between Say McIntosh [and Clinton]."
Patterson said Clinton referred to McIntosh as a "N--ger" after "one of these confrontations in a public forum, after we got in the car."
Clinton also used the "N" word in 1992 when referring to Jesse Jackson, Patterson said. Patterson said he was not present when the remark was made, but was informed by other troopers.
Patterson also learned from two troopers, including L. D. Brown, that Clinton made particularly vulgar remarks about an African American state trooper who had died in the line of duty.
According to the troopers, as Governor Clinton left the service for the slain officer he remarked that "it was just a G-d damned m-ther f--ker cop that had been killed." Patterson said the two troopers also reported Clinton had referred to the dead officer as a "pig."
Are such remarks typical for the Clintons? Patterson claims that the Bill and Hillary Clinton you see on television are not the people he came to know.
Patterson said the Clintons private faces are "180 degrees" different than those seen in public.
Each other?
To the happy couple!
Hmmmm ... I think that statement might apply to most politicans, and most people if the truth be known.
I am SHOCKED... the "greatest president in American history" calling Americans-that are-of-African-Heritage using the "N-WORD?" Accusations of derogatory nature referring to Anti-Semantic attitudes?
This just can not be true of the great leader of the "All-Inclusive-Party-of-the-Big-Tent"
Sooner we get the garbage out, sooner the stench fades away.
toad·y
pl. toad·ies
A person who flatters or defers to others for self-serving reasons; a sycophant.
Inflected forms: toad·ied, toad·y·ing, toad·ies
ETYMOLOGY: From toad.
WORD HISTORY: The earliest recorded sense (around 1690) of toady is a little or young toad, but this has nothing to do with the modern usage of the word. The modern sense has rather to do with the practice of certain quacks or charlatans who claimed that they could draw out poisons. Toads were thought to be poisonous, so these charlatans would have an attendant eat or pretend to eat a toad and then claim to extract the poison from the attendant. Since eating a toad is an unpleasant job, these attendants came to epitomize the type of person who would do anything for a superior, and toadeater (first recorded 1629) became the name for a flattering, fawning parasite. Toadeater and the verb derived from it, toadeat, influenced the sense of the noun and verb toad and the noun toady, so that both nouns could mean sycophant and the verb toady could mean to act like a toady to someone.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Oops! I TOTALLY forgot... clintons office is in Harlem... Right? ooooooo, my bad!
I just know that he spends AT LEAST 40 hours per week in HIS OFFICE IN HARLEM... right?
I am Soooooooooo forgetful!
< /scarcasm >
hehehehehehehe!
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