COLLECTIVE MADNESS


“Soft despotism is a term coined by Alexis de Tocqueville describing the state into which a country overrun by "a network of small complicated rules" might degrade. Soft despotism is different from despotism (also called 'hard despotism') in the sense that it is not obvious to the people."

Friday, January 25, 2013

John Kerry, dry-mouthed, showing his lack of depth of integrity, squirming, nervously playing with his pen, getting his long skinny lying ass handed to him by Rand Paul.




Jan 24, 2013 6:50pm ABC NEWS


A Day After Attacking Clinton, Rand Paul Grills Kerry

Yesterday Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.) told Secretary of State Hillary Clinton that if he were president, he would have fired her over her handling of the Benghazi crisis.

Today, in a confirmation hearing in which nearly every senator, Democrat and Republican, heaped glowing praise upon their colleague  John Kerry (D., Mass.), who’s been nominated for secretary of state, Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.) posed contentious questions to Kerry about the U.S.’s role on the world stage. It quickly became apparent that the two senators not only had different political opinions, but different world views. Rand seems to see the world in absolutes; Kerry maintains intervention in world affairs be judged on a case-by-case basis.

Paul, who was publicly critical of President Obama’s authorizing U.S. action in Libya to help depose Mohamar Gadhafi, wanted to know Kerry’s take on a president’s authorizing military action without congressional approval. Kerry responded that, although he is a strong supporter of the War Powers Act, which requires the president to seek congressional authority to declare war, he also supports the right of a president to act in  an emergency.
“I supported Ronald Reagan when he sent troops into Grenada. I supported George H.W. Bush when he sent troops into Panama. I supported President Clinton when, against the will of the Congress, he did what was needed to be done in Kosovo and Bosnia, so forth. And in this particular instance, I think the president behaved in that tradition,” said Kerry.
Paul suggested Kerry is cherry-picking the Constitution. He pointedly asked Kerry to defend his anti-war stance in the 1970s against Richard Nixon’s decision to bomb Cambodia, on the one hand, and President Obama’s actions in Libya on the other. Kerry responded that the circumstances of the conflicts were different: Vietnam had been waging for years without Congressional approval, unlike the situation in Libya.

Paul was unmoved.

“Length of time, but similar circumstances: a bombing campaign unauthorized by Congress,” he said. “See, the Constitution really doesn’t give this kind of latitude to sometimes go to war and sometimes not go to war.”

Kerry said he respected that position in theory, but in practice always requiring Congressional approval for every military action was not practical.

“You can be absolutist and apply it to every circumstance. The problem is, it just doesn’t work in some instances,” said Kerry. “When 10,000 people are about to be wiped out by a brutal dictator and you need to make a quick judgment about engagement, you certainly can’t rely on a Congress that has proven itself  unwilling to move after weeks and months.”

The two men went on to spar over aid to Egypt, given Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi’s comments from 2010 that have recently been made public calling Israelis “blood suckers” and “descendants of apes and pigs.”
“Do you think it’s wise to send them F-16s and Abrams tanks?” asked Paul.
Kerry called the comments “reprehensible” but again pointed to the fact that Egypt remains a critical lynchpin for a peaceful Middle East. The senator also pointed to the ways Morsi’s administration has been helpful — supporting the peace agreement with Israel and working with the U.S. on security in the Sinai peninsula.

“This is always the complication in dealings in the international sector — not everything lends itself to a simple clarity, black/white, this/that every time,” said Kerry.

Paul also pressed Kerry on whether he would support cutting Pakistan’s aid if the country does not free Shakil Afridid, the Pakistani doctor serving 33 years in prison who was convicted of running a vaccine program in Abbottabad to help the U.S.  obtain DNA from Osama bin Laden’s relatives. Paul said Dr. Afridi’s detention could act as a deterrent for future informants and that Pakistan, as an ally, should be cooperating.

Kerry again said that the relationship with Pakistan is complex, and pointed out the other ways the country has helped the U.S. in its war against terror.
“I intend to raise the issue of Dr. Afridi with them. I can promise you that,” said Kerry. “But I am not going to recommend, nor do I think it is wise, for American policy to just cut our assistance. We need to build our relationship with the Pakistanis, not diminish it. ”

96 comments:

  1. NATO, baby.

    Treaty obligated to defend Italy ...
    ... and France.

    Besides the 14SEP2001 Authorization oF Force resolution.

    JFKerry is as bright as boobie, a dimwit.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. JFKerry is brighter than crapper, who is a real dimwit, and a nasty little prick as well.

      Delete
    2. What is Rand's position on Central America?

      Would he have been in favor of intervening there?

      Delete
    3. .

      NATO?

      Nonsense, unless through vebal manipulation and pretzel logic you are somehow able to construe Libya as a defensive war.

      .

      Delete
  2. Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul said Monday that Republicans can win in New England and on the West Coast if they’re willing to drop a “we need to bomb everybody tomorrow” foreign policy. That works for me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Senator Rand Paul is hallucinating if he really thinks that, which he probably doesn't.

      Delete
    2. Really, Rand Paul should defer to the genius, of Clinton & Clinton, Reagan, Bush and Bush, Carter & Kerry, Obama and Leon Panetta and continue to deliver the delicious fruit of US foreign policay and military intervention?

      Delete
    3. Well his dad was an old demented racist, so that helps.

      Delete
    4. Anti-semitic too boot, so that's two dings in favor.

      Delete
    5. .

      So evidently Bob is for the “we need to bomb everybody tomorrow” foreign policy.

      .

      Delete
  3. But, Jenny, the Republicans are not willing to do that.

    One rouge Senator does not reposition J McCain and his cohort of behind the curve DC elitists. No, Rand Paul does not speak for the GOP.

    That works for me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. If only Rand had the balls of Boehner, the fury of J McCain licking Hillary's Fat Ass, and the face of the GOP leader in the Senate that looks like a diabetic elephant.

      Delete
  4. Rand Paul trying to stick out from the rest of the elite rulers.
    For the good of the country or just to keep his mug in the media.
    Probably both.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Time to go to work.
      See you when I get there :)

      Delete
    2. If they all did both, the USA could start again @ A-OK.
      ...but that was long ago and far away.

      Delete
  5. As much as I don't care for political familys, I think the Pauls display more integrity than the rest.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I met one of Mondale's sons once.
      Total asshole.

      Delete
    2. I met a nephew of Hubert Humphrey once. Said Hubert was an asshole.

      Delete
    3. I'm bettin the nephew is the Asshole.

      Hubert was one the few half-human Dems still extant at the time.

      Now?
      Can't think of one.

      Delete
  6. Rand Paul comes over as not being outwardly insane, like his father, at least.

    The mother must be a cut above the old man in the mental department, like Princess Di was above Prince Charlie.

    Don't judge a man just by his father.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anybody that has a first name after an idiot writer, and doesn't change it, is out for me.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Which has been a bigger threat to the actual security of US citizens, all hostages to the Pirates of the Potomac, Iran getting a nuclear weapon for defense, or US politicians along with our good friends the Saudis having nurtured the creation of Al Qaeda?

    Al Qaeda has actually killed 3000+ Americans and scored trillions in damages to the US; a direct result of US meddling in Afghan 1 and establishing miitary bases throughhout Arabia.

    We are daily compounding the chances of creating avengers for the next attack on the US.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Bob thinks the problem is Rand Paul’s given name. Ron Paul who wants to prevent US citizens from getting killed is bad for America. Lincoln (aptly named after crazy Abraham) who actually got 600,00 Americans killed was a genius and worthy of adulation and deification.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oooh, that hurt.

      All I can say is, if my name were Rand, I'd change it.

      That damn Lincoln, freeing all those blacks.

      May he live in infamy.

      How dare he.

      Can't get over it.

      It was a wonderful relationship they had going there in Virginia. The very promise of the Declaration, right there in the cotton fields. The very height of human interaction.

      The whites could sit in the shade, and sip mint juleps, and watch the blacks work themselves to death, as they were born to do, just like Aristotle said, and turn to the finer things in life.

      GODDAMN LINCOLN THAT TRAITOR TO THE GOOD THE TRUE AND THE BEAUTIFUL!!

      It was all because of him my ancestors lost the slave plantation. The prick.

      Delete
    2. If my name were Rand, I'd change it to my last name, and adopt
      "Remington" as my first name.

      Delete
    3. I liked the shaver so much, I bought the company.

      ...and named myself after My Company.

      Delete
    4. 1949 – Remington Rand produces 409, the world’s first business computer.

      The 409 was later sold as the UNIVAC 60 and 120 and was the first computer used by the Internal Revenue Service and the first computer installed in Japan.

      Delete
  10. Yes, yes, it is all our fault, come to think of it. It is all the result of giving those Stingers to the freedom fighters in Afghanistan, and helping them out.

    Spain should give Andalusia back to the muzzies too. It angers them that they won't do that. The muzzies were there once. If they would just give it back, the muz wouldn't bomb the subways in Spain. And all would be well in the garden.

    Every mullah should have nukes, it is only fair.

    There should be nukes in Gaza. After all, Israel has them right across the border. What's good for the goose is good for the gander, and up in Lebanon too, they muz there needs nukes. It is only fair.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Yes, yes, it is all our fault, come to think of it. It is all the result of giving those Stingers to the freedom fighters in Afghanistan, and helping them out.

    In Bob’s world the Mujahadeen taking down Russian airplanes loaded with Russian draftees are freedom fighters. The same crew taking down four US planes loaded with US civilians are terrorists, both crews products of the Mujahadeen, bought and paid forby guess who?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tongue in cheek deuce. We should have not had anything to do with Afghanistan.

      Delete
    2. May we all walk in hindsight.

      I am willing to bet you supported the effort at the time too, if you think back about it.

      You supported crapper's efforts in central America, I recall you saying.

      Delete
    3. No. My thoughts and prayers were with the use in pairs of some of our otherwise useless tactical nuclear warheads. Two per training camp. You see, all is art. I wanted the world to see the iconic value in the photographs of two mushroom clouds per camp juxtaposed to the two towers coming down.

      Further mental masturbation had the Saudi Ambassador reporting to share his deeply felt sympathies and being handed a bill for $500 billion, with a weekly vig of an additional B.

      All completed in two weeks.

      Delete
    4. I did my little part to assist the contras fighting for their freedom against the thuggery of the community organizers in Nicaragua. We actually had an interest in what happened in Central America. It was a micro decision.

      Delete
  12. Lincoln's Land Grant welfare program made boobie richn.
    Little wonder boobie deifies Lincoln

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bwahahahahaha

      You are a gas, crapper.

      Sitting down there on Apache land, the main employer in your life being the Feds.

      But I feel a rehash of old drivel here, and no one but you is interested in it.

      Delete
    2. those in America that have fed off the government tit their entire lives, who now squat on an actual another people's land have the balls to call Israel a "settlement"

      Delete
  13. MADRID (MarketWatch) -- Apple Inc.'s AAPL +0.50% 12-month price target was cut to $660 from $760 a share on Friday by Goldman Sachs.

    In a seperate report, Goldman Sachs also predicts the sinking of the Titanic.

    ReplyDelete
  14. We had a good example of Potomac responsibility with Hillary taking full responsibility for the Benghazi fuck-up. The consequences didn’t even cost her lunch. None of them ever take responsibilty.

    Just one remoresful suicide would be refreshing, wouldn’t you agree?

    No, the only ones who do that are the chumps that fall for their flag waving, pay the price, and end their miserable post-military lives because they can no-longer stand the memory of the deeds done to them and by them for their rulers and masters, all who always take full responsibility and have them all in their thoughts and prayers don’t you know?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You use the phrase 'rulers and masters' often, like it is a bad thing.

      But when a group of whites and a guy like Lincoln determine to really get rid of the worst kind of rulers and masters then that is a bad thing.

      Delete
    2. Read Little House on the Prairie for greater insight.

      Delete
  15. I think a second lapel pin is in order, for the other lapel, “they are in our thoughts and prayers”

    I wonder when they think and pray, perhaps during lunch.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ah, c'mon Deuce, aren't you being a bit hard on the poor leaders? They are just doing what they think is right - being righteous dontcha know? Waging war, sending kids off to slaughter and be slaughtered, with their toned and morally upright leaders standing behind them, well behind them (a contintent away at least), taking full responsibility for their decisions what with being the righteous, morally upright, leaders that they are!

      Delete
  16. Maybe when they are toning their beautiful bodies in the tax-payer funded gym.

    ReplyDelete
  17. We need to elect Chris Christie to the Senate, or the Presidency, get him toned up a bit.

    That would be money well spent.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Can anyone think of any historical example like our Civil War when one group of one race fought another group of the same race to free a group of another race from slavery?

    Cause I can't. And that is why I think it is remarkable.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Well, of course you can't, because it never happened, ever. You've fallen for the mythology of the Civil War as written by the victors. In fact, it never actually happened that way.

      Delete
    2. Wrongo, the abolitionist sentiments in much of the north were white hot.

      But it can be argued forever.

      So why waste the time.

      There's no convincing anyone of anything by anyone else around here anyway.

      Delete
    3. Sure, but your starry eyed 'America is so great and virtuous' portrayal of the Civil War being a fight where "one group of one race fought another group of the same race to free a group of another race from slavery?" is just utter revisionist bullshit - the stuff of kindergarten 'your homeland is moral and virtuous' history.

      Delete
    4. That's why it isn't worth arguing about, Ash.

      Let's face it. The abolitionists didn't really exist. It was all about the price of cotton. You are right.

      Delete
    5. In fact 'slavery' didn't really exist. It was all a wonderful wonderful guided paternal relationship, like good father and thankful obedient son, and for the best for everyone, the height of human relationships up to that time.

      Delete
    6. Which is exactly the line peddled by Doug Wilson, and that Lorenzo freak that deuce posted.

      It was a national tragedy of the first order to see it go.


      Did you know the dung beetle guides itself, when pushing the dung along, by the light of the Milky Way?

      One must guide oneself by whatever light is given to one by the Lord.

      Delete
    7. You got to admit, Ash. agree or disagree, my little analogy there was clever.

      Delete
  19. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpZ3jPMM5Ac

    :)

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  20. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Good God look at this -

    http://hotair.com/archives/2013/01/25/an-attack-on-israel-is-an-attack-on-the-us-says-rand-paul/

    If this doesn't damp down the enthusiasm here in some quarters for Rand Paul nothing will.

    'an attack on Israel is an attack on the United States'

    Maybe I can get to like the guy too. Though maybe Rand is just playing to 'the Jewish lobby'. They are heavy in Kentucky, centered around Lexington, where they all own fancy race horses, and spend time buying influence with the Kentucky Legislature. They are even out here in Idaho, all over Boise. You think the Mormons have influence? Think again. Behind the scenes it's all Jewish money. The Mormons are destitute compared.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It aint the money honey...

      It's the correctness of the issue.

      Delete
    2. You know I'm just mocking the usual bullshit there. But maybe I'll take another look at Rand. And I agree it is the correctness of the issue.

      Hey, big news. Shocker. Tina Turner turns from tourism, turns in passport, is becoming Swiss, living on Lake Geneva. I always liked Tina.

      Delete
    3. http://www.france24.com/en/20130125-tina-turner-become-swiss-give-us-passport

      Delete
    4. i know, but I just wanted to piss in the wind against the EB establishment that the reason Israel has BI-partisan support aint money,

      It's the correctness of the issue,

      No other issue UNITED Americans as the support for Israel.

      It's actually quite refreshing and amazing when you understand how many billions are spent to demonize Israel and how the cheerleaders against Israel control both the State dept and the Executive branches of our nation...

      Delete
    5. What a Queer Concoction:

      Israel gets support from both Pub and Democrat Bisexuals.

      Who The Fuck cares?

      Certainly not the Saudi Lobbi.

      Delete
  22. One thing I learned in Kentucky, talking with people out at the race track there in Lexington, is that there is a lot of Arab money around there. They are into buying those fancy horses, starting price, 50k, and the locals like the business, though not the Arabs. No one mentioned Jewish investors though.

    ReplyDelete
  23. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  24. From the 'we may not be at war with Islam but Islam is at war with us department' -

    Breaking News -

    Hillary Lets the Jihadist Cat Out of the Bag

    http://www.jihadwatch.org/2013/01/robert-spencer-hillary-lets-the-jihadist-cat-out-of-bag.html

    After four years of pretending there is no jihad against the free world, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton blurted out the truth during her testimony on the Benghazi jihad massacre Wednesday: “We now face a spreading jihadist threat,” she said, adding: “We have to recognize this is a global movement.”

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Where is that cat gonna find 72 virgin cats?

      Delete
    2. Not out in the ally that's for sure. Maybe among the under 9 year old crowd at the cat elementary school?

      Delete
  25. How many times has Bill fucked Hill since becoming a politician?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Fucking Hill is rapidly becoming a global movement scale affair.

      Delete
    2. We don't want to get literal about THAT figure.

      Delete
  26. I wonder how long Hill thinks the House of Saud will last.

    Things could really begin to get really thorny for them within the next couple of years.

    ReplyDelete
  27. I wonder how long Obama thinks the US insurance companies will last.

    Things could begin to thorny for them within the next couple of years.

    ReplyDelete
  28. What is The Orion Project and why is it blocked.
    Can anyone here access it?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "On Christmas day, as "a Christmas present to the world," Steven Greer, M.D., and his science advisor, Ted Loder, Ph.D., from the Orion Project, announced on the World Puja Network that the "top secret" inventor they've talked about over the past year has been released early from military seclusion, and has contracted with them to begin bringing various technologies he has developed (in some cases at taxpayer expense) to the world, beginning with a free energy technology in the tradition of Nikola Tesla."

      Didn't Duece post something on this awhile back?

      Delete
    2. http://pesn.com/2009/12/29/9501600_Orion_Project_lands_top_secret_FE_inventor/

      Delete
    3. Nevermind. Just read this> Greer said, "We're dealing with someone who has a track record of thirty years of building these technologies; and being under contract with top secret programs; and has actually built things to the level of things dematerializing, teleporting, and space-time alteration. We're talking really advanced stuff." Greer says that in the military secret ops, such projects are referred to as WSFM which stands for "Weird Science and Freakin' Magic."

      Koo-koo ville

      Delete
    4. We're talking The Cleaning Lady here.

      You might not get my reference. She drank with us for awhile, and was of a sudden teleported out of here by the very same men in black, very rich men, very powerful, secretive men, she was always telling us about, that were going to leave us behind, and start the whole human enterprise elsewhere.

      I remember her saying, dark and mysterious like:

      "Art Bell knows"

      Delete
  29. This here is for that laughable little twit Ash whathisname -

    http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2013/01/natural_rights_and_the_second_amendment.html

    Bob told me once, that when the One broke into the Many, as it's doin' all the time, it done it Dionysian like, whatever that is, emotional he said, without a lot of thought, an' all possibilities was covered, an' there wasn't anything to be done about Ash, except put up with him, somebody had to sit in the dunce chair.

    Buck

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Then I asked him, what 'bout Quirk? He had to think a minute, then said, since we are spiritual bein's, and don't occupy space, 'cept in our understandings an' modes of perception, then more than one dunce can sit in the dunce chair at the same time, which don't exist.

      Buck

      Delete
  30. What did we do to deserve these assholes in DC?

    Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, made comments at a Pentagon press conference on Thursday that will undoubtedly be used by critics of the decision to open up combat roles to women.
    When a reporter mentioned that the Pentagon’s stance appeared to keep open the possibility that some occupational specialties would be off limits to females, Gen. Dempsey responded: “[I]f we do decide that a particular standard is so high that a woman couldn’t make it, the burden is now on the service to come back and explain to the secretary, why is it that high? Does it really have to be that high?”

    CNS News reports that the policy shift by the Defense Department could potentially open up 230,000 positions to female service members.



    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. .

      It's the PC way.

      If enough kids aren't passing in school, lower the standards.

      If combat is too hard, don't fight as hard.

      Good lord.

      .

      Delete
    2. Or requiring a sniper to bench press 500lb is a bridge to far?

      Delete
    3. .

      Are snipers required to bench press 500 lbs, Ash?

      .

      Delete
  31. The Marines did a study concerning the ability of women to meet their standards.

    The wanted around 100 women, two signed up.
    One dropped out on the first or second day.
    The second, a few days later.

    ReplyDelete
  32. Are all eighteen year old women going to have to register with the selective service?

    ReplyDelete
  33. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Washington D.C. now has the highest per capita income of anywhere in our fucked up country and three of the richest counties in the US surround it.

    Best Maserati dealerships around, and, o, the fine wines.

    http://www.maseratiofwashington.com/

    And it is all Lincoln's fault -

    http://www.nps.gov/linc/index.htm

    The Great Emancipator

    "In this temple, as in the hearts of the people for whom he saved the Union, the memory of Abraham Lincoln is enshrined forever." Beneath these words, the 16th President of the United States-the Great Emancipator and preserver of the nation during the Civil War-sits immortalized in marble. As an enduring symbol of freedom, the Lincoln Memorial attracts anyone who seeks inspiration and hope.

    Lincoln grew the government.

    Yet D.C. also has the third highest income inequality in the US.

    It's Versailles on borrowed money, a hall of mirrors, a nightmare, and the promise of destruction for all of us.


    'We are all doomed and we all deserve to be doomed'

    Quote from "The Immortal Words of Jenny", First Edition

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Did I mention the hookers?

      High quality, and for every income level.

      Delete
    2. The Great Emancipator

      "In this temple, as in the hearts of the people for whom he saved the Union, the memory of Abraham Lincoln is enshrined forever." Beneath these words, the 16th President of the United States-the Great Emancipator and preserver of the nation during the Civil War-sits immortalized in marble. As an enduring symbol of freedom, the Lincoln Memorial attracts anyone who seeks inspiration and hope.


      “Temple?" To human murder? The centralized government is worth the death of 600,000? ”As an enduring symbol of freedom, the Lincoln Memorial attracts anyone who seeks inspiration and hope.”

      Freedom from suffering, death, destruction of property, statism, tyranny at the hands of a depraved killer?

      Inspiration and hope?

      Nothing like a vacuous unchallenged assertion, carved in stone, at the base of a gargantuan idol to a mass manipulator and killer, to cleanse the lie and inspire the minions.

      Delete
    3. :)

      I can always get a response.

      Delete
    4. Trying the tactic of 'a picture equals a thousand words' -

      http://www.history.com/photos/slavery-slave-life#

      Delete
    5. http://pinterest.com/lilyvee/slavery-usa/

      Nice pic of a black after a whipping.

      http://www.sonofthesouth.net/slavery/slavery-photographs.htm

      You like galleries -

      http://www.library.pitt.edu/freeatlast/photo_gallery.html

      Easy driving distance too.

      Delete
  35. Depression Daze in Hawaii:

    (Reuters) - Visits to Hawaii soared to a record high last year, boosted by an increase in flights and a weaker dollar, tourism officials said on Thursday.

    Almost 8 million people visited the Aloha State in 2012, more than a third of a million more than the previous record set in 2006 and a rise of 9.6 percent on 2011, the Hawaii Tourism Authority said.

    The surge in visitors to the tropical islands - famed for their pounding surf and lush mountains - was matched by a record $14.3 billion in spending, according to preliminary statistics.

    As well as being a top holiday destination for U.S. visitors, the islands are also a popular spot for Japanese tourists who accounted for nearly 1.5 million of the state's visitors in 2012 - a 17 percent rise.

    ReplyDelete
  36. .

    I only post the following article because if you click on the link you will eventually see 6 or seven other links with Clinton's responses to various senators.

    From the WaPo by Chris Cellizza,

    Clinton Talks Bemghazi

    .

    ReplyDelete