The Clinton Campaign Goes To Earth
1 comment April 23rd, 2007
Leap-frogging over Al Gore’s environmental credentials, Hillary Clinton has made Earth Day an opportuntity to position herself as the environmental presidential candidate. She even boasts that on Earth Day her campaign will be “carbon neutral.” That must mark the first time that the Clintons have adopted a position of neutrality as being in their political self-interest.
There seems to be no limit to the capacity of pandering and tilting to any whim by Hillary Clinton, in her passion to take on the mantle of the presidency for herself. However, when the environment was not a hot political issue with the public, where was Hillary Rodham Clinton? Where was William Jefferson Clinton? Well, some people in Arkansas knew where the Clintons were on the enviromental question.
At the time Bill Clinton was beginning his term as governor in Arkansas, lawyer Hillary Clinton had a side activity underway. She took $1,000 of her own money, and in ten months, by trading in commodities, she generated a profit of $100,000 from that mere thousand bucks. Now, how does a lady with no prior experience in commodities trading generate a return on investment of 10,000 percent in only 10 months? Perhaps with a little help from friends of the Clintons. One of these “advisors” to Hillary on commodity trading was the chief outside counsel for Tyson Foods Inc. Coincidentally, while Billl Clinton was Arkansas governor, he compromised on state enviromental policies in a way that was of benefit to Tyson Foods. Not exactly carbon neutral, I would say.
Readers of this blog who want to discover more about Hillary’s commodity trading should pick up a copy of my book, “Hillary Clinton Nude,” and read the chapter entitled “Hundred Thousand Dollar Lady.”
So, fellow Americans, on the environment, as with so many other important issues, we have Hillary Clinton engaging in theatrics to “prove” that she really does have a particular conviction, when reality betrays only selfish and self-centered personal calculation.









