Muscatine

Republican Women

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  • mallory
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There there, dear.  The evidence is splattered all over the news world for years and you don't want to believe it.  It's okay. 

 

Kind of like when Robert dropped the pan of rhubarb pie filling and it flew all over the kitchen walls.  You know it's there, but you just don't want to clean it up. 

 

 


Allegations, accusations and allusions all over the place but no facts.   Just list the prosecutions and convictions.

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  • BDEye
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Of course, dear.  All those tarts can't possibly be telling the truth.  Are we supposed to believe women over the dear Mr. Willy?  Why that Broaddrick woman who he raped never did get paid off like Miss Lewinsky.  What'd she end up with.....850,000$?  Dear, dear....that's a lot of money just to get one dress dry-cleaned.  Remember old Mr. Quackenbush back in Aledo.  NO, the other one.  Mr. Q. was the neighborhood window peeker if you'll recall, and even though all the women folk had the same story, nobody believed them because Mr. Quackenbush was such a convincing teller of tall tales, much like Arkansas Bill.  Finally, the neighborhood husbands got together and caught the rascal in the act, beat the tar out him, and then called the local constable.  Wasn't much left of him to put in the slammer, but lock him up they did regardless.   

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  • hiroad
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Of course malodery would take Slick Willy's word over Juanita Broaddrick's any day of the week.   In malodery's world, Juanita must be lying.   Let's see......what would be her motive for lying?    Her motive?   ........mmmmm.....her......motive?   How did she profit from all this????????   This ex Clinton campaign worker?   Did anyone else believe her?   The better question would be, can anyone find anybody familiar with  Slick Willy that doesn't believe her?:

 

Ms. Juanita Broaddrick, a nursing home administrator and successful professional, had been a campaign volunteer in Clinton’s 1978 campaign when then-Attorney General Clinton was running for governor. Lisa Myers of NBC first reported her story for television (no video link available.) But at a later date Broaddrick sat down with the Wall Street Journal’s Dorothy Rabinowitz andtold her storyagain.

Here are the key parts of the Broaddrick story as she told them to Rabinowitz:

The story: In 1978, 35-year-old Juanita Broaddrick—a Clinton campaign worker—had already owned a nursing home for five years. Since her graduation from nursing school she had worked for several such facilities and decided she wanted to run one of her own. It was that home that Attorney General Clinton visited one day, on a campaign stop during his run for governor. He invited Juanita, then still married to her first husband, to visit campaign headquarters when she was in Little Rock. As it happened, she told him, she was planning to attend a seminar of the American College of Nursing Home Administrators the very next week and would do just that. On her arrival in Little Rock, she called campaign headquarters. Mrs. Broaddrick was surprised to be greeted by an aide who seemed to expect her call, and who directed her to call the attorney general at his apartment. They arranged to meet at the coffee shop of the Camelot Hotel, where the seminar was held—a noisy place, Mr. Clinton pointed out; they could have coffee in her room.

They had not been there more than five minutes, Mrs. Broaddrick says, when he moved close as they stood looking out at the Arkansas River. He pointed out an old jailhouse and told her that when he became governor, he was going to renovate that place. (The building was later torn down, but in the course of their searches, NBC’s investigators found proof that, as Mrs. Broaddrick said, there had been such a jail at the time.) But the conversation did not linger long on the candidate’s plans for social reform. For, Mrs. Broaddrick relates, he then put his arms around her, startling her.

“He told me, ‘We’re both married people,’” she recalls. She recalls, too, that in her effort to make him see she had no interest of this kind in him, she told him yes, they were both married but she was deeply involved with another man—which was true. She was talking about the man she would marry after her divorce, David Broaddrick, now her husband of 18 years.

The argument failed to persuade Mr. Clinton, who, she says, got her onto the bed, held her down forcibly and bit her lips. The sexual entry itself was not without some pain, she recalls, because of her stiffness and resistance. When it was over, she says, he looked down at her and said not to worry, he was sterile—he had had mumps when he was a child. “As though that was the thing on my mind—I wasn’t thinking about pregnancy, or about anything,” she says. “I felt paralyzed and was starting to cry.”

As he got to the door, she remembers, he turned. “This is the part that always stays in my mind—the way he put on his sunglasses. Then he looked at me and said, ‘You better put some ice on that.’ And then he left.”

Her friend Norma Rogers, a nurse who had accompanied her on the trip, found her on the bed. She was, Ms. Rogers related in an interview, in a state of shock—lips swollen to double their size, mouth discolored from the biting, her pantyhose torn in the crotch.“She just stayed on the bed and kept repeating, ‘I can’t believe what happened.’” Ms. Rogers applied ice to Juanita’s mouth, and they drove back home, stopping along the way for more ice.

Broaddrick also told Rabinowitz that after her interview with NBC’s Myers, NBC had balked at airing it. The Clinton impeachment proceedings were in full swing, and there was an apparent sentiment within the network not to add to Clinton’s woes. According to Broaddrick., Myers had said to her:

“The good news is you’re credible. The bad news is you’re very credible.”

There is, of course, much more to this story. NBC finally aired the Myers-Broaddrick interview — long after Clinton was acquitted by the Senate in the impeachment trial. At one point early on Broaddrick had even denied the story in an affidavit out of fear. But when the lawyers for Clinton’s special prosecutor Kenneth Starr came to her, realizing lying to a federal prosecutor in a presidential impeachment trial was at a whole other level, Broaddrick came forth with her story.

But the first impeachment jury — members of the U.S. House —read of her tale. Broaddrick’s testimony to the special prosecutor was known as “Jane Doe No. 5” and kept in a closed “evidence room”where Congressmen had to go, read the material, and leave. One of those was Connecticut’s moderate Republican Christopher Shays, who later gave this interview to a local radio station. Said Shays of Clinton and the rape allegation from Juanita Broaddrick:

“I believed that he had done it. I believed her that she had been raped 20 yrs ago. And it was vicious rapes, it was twice at the same event.”

At one point, interviewer Tom Scott bluntly asks of Shays:“Do you personally believe our president is a rapist?”

Shays responded: “I would like not to say it that way. But the bottom line is that I believe that he did rape Broaddrick.”

Some were rape.  Some were consensual and merely immoral considering he was a married man.  Which is worse?  Even if just a few were rapes, does that make it okay in your mind?

Which were rapes?

You obviously have a computer or at least access to one - go looking up stuff on the computer.

 

Look is the verb you're looking for.

 

I don't find any credible evidence that any were raped.
Show me.

FYI - I have been looking up stuff on google for a long time now thank you very much.

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