The Hildebeast says there was no abuse of power because Monica Lewinsky was a consenting adult
BarkGrowlBite
October 15, 2018
Hillary Clinton appeared on CBS Sunday Morning. In light of the #MeToo movement, she was asked if Bill should have resigned as president over the Monica Lewinsky affair, something New York’s Democratic Senator Kirsten Gillibrand had recently suggested. “Absolutely not!” was her reply.
The Hildebeast defended her philandering hubby, saying there was no abuse of power because Monica was a consenting adult when she gave Bill blowjobs in the Oval Office. She was dismissive of the affair, pointing instead to the numerous women who have said Donald Trump sexually abused them.
Of course, Hillary was not asked about allegations of sexual abuse or harassment made by three women against Bill, and a rape charge by a fourth victim. Here from Business Insider are the allegations:
Juanita Broaddrick has made the most serious allegations against Clinton, accusing him of raping her in 1978 while Clinton was Arkansas' attorney general.
Broaddrick, then a 35-year-old nursing-home administrator, met Clinton when he visited her nursing home on a campaign stop. After Clinton asked to meet with her on her next trip to Little Rock, the two set up a meeting in a hotel coffee shop.
Broaddrick, who first made the accusation publicly in 1999, told BuzzFeed News last year that when Clinton arrived at the hotel he asked to meet in Broaddrick's room instead and, after he arrived, violently raped her. Broaddrick said he bloodied her lip by biting it.
"There was no remorse," Broaddrick told BuzzFeed News. "He acted like it was an everyday occurrence. He was not the least bit apologetic. It was just unreal."
The Washington Post reported that two people close to Broaddrick said she described the rape to them at the time.
Kathleen Willey said Clinton kissed her, fondled her breasts, and forced her to touch his crotch during a meeting in the Oval Office in 1993, while Willey was a volunteer in the White House correspondence office.
Willey made her allegations public in 1998, and Clinton "emphatically" denied that the interaction was sexual, arguing that he hugged Willey and may have kissed her on the forehead.
Willey says she was "friends" with Clinton and confided in him during the meeting that she and her husband were having financial troubles. She asked him for a promotion from her volunteer position to a paying job and says that Clinton was sympathetic and asked to talk with her in a small room off of the Oval Office. Willey says Clinton cornered and assaulted her in that room.
"My mind was racing and I thought: 'Should I slap him? Or should I kick him? Or knee him?'" Willey recalled thinking during an October 2016 interview with the Fox News host Sean Hannity. "What do I do? Scream? Is the Secret Service gonna come in and descend upon me with guns?"
Paula Jones, a former Arkansas state employee, said that in 1991, at a government quality-management conference that Clinton attended, she was approached by the state police and told that Clinton, then the governor, wanted to meet with her. Jones said that a police officer escorted her to Clinton's hotel room in Little Rock and that Clinton then propositioned her for sex and exposed his genitals to her.
"He sat down, pulled down his pants, his whole everything and he was exposed, and I said, 'I'm not that kind of girl, and I need to be getting back to my desk,'" Jones recalled to Hannity.
Jones said the state police officer was standing just outside the hotel room during the encounter.
She said that she tried to leave after Clinton exposed himself but that Clinton rushed over and grabbed the door.
"He said, 'You're a smart girl — let's keep this between ourselves,'" Jones said.
She said when she left the room the state trooper was smirking.
Jones made her allegations public in 1994 and brought a sexual-harassment lawsuit against Clinton. A federal judge dismissed the lawsuit in 1998 on the grounds that Jones didn't prove that she was harmed, either personally or in her career, by the incident, and Jones appealed the ruling.
Clinton ultimately paid Jones $850,000 as part of an out-of-court settlement agreement but did not admit guilt or apologize to Jones.
Leslie Millwee, a former television reporter, came forward publicly for the first time in October 2016 to accuse Clinton of sexually assaulting her in 1980.
Millwee says Clinton, then the governor of Arkansas, groped her on several occasions at the now-defunct TV station she worked at in Arkansas.
"He followed me into an editing room," Millwee told the far-right website Breitbart News in an October 2016 interview. "It was very small. There was a chair. I was sitting in a chair. He came up behind me and started rubbing my shoulders and running his hands down toward my breasts. And I was just stunned. I froze. I asked him to stop. He laughed."
Millwee says the incidents escalated.
She said of a second incident: "He came in behind me. Started hunching me to the point that he had an orgasm. He's trying to touch my breasts. And I'm just sitting there very stiffly, just waiting for him to leave me alone. And I'm asking him the whole time, 'Please do not do this. Do not touch me. Do not hunch me. I do not want this.'"
She recalled a third time in which, she said, she wasn't aware Clinton was in the building when he found her in the editing room.
Millwee says she did not report it to authorities because he was the governor of Arkansas at the time and she worried about what would happen if she came forward.
At the time Hillary defended Bill by attacking and smearing his accusers and declaring they were part of a “vast right wing conspiracy.”
By comparison, Bill Clinton makes Brett Kavanaugh look like a Boy Scout. Had the #MeToo movement existed at the time, Bill would not only have been forced to resign, but he and the Hildebeast would have been irreparably disgraced for all time.
But then again, who can blame Bill for fucking around when he is married to a bitch like the Hildebeast.
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