At this point, there are--or should be--a whole host of people who are muttering something along the lines of "We told you so" in response to Hunt's surprise. Bill Clinton has always been as dissolute as he has been gifted and his dissolution was on clear display, for all to see during the time that he was President. The difference, of course, is that there was no YouTube to play Clinton's Worst Moments virally on the Internet, for all to see, whenever it is that they want. I can't remember who wrote this, but I agree with the observation that if YouTube was around in 1992, there would have been little chance that Bill Clinton could have been elected President. He made the same inconstant and eyebrow-raising statements in the past that he makes now. It's just that with 24 hour a day cable news and viral video, he can't get away with papering over his outburst, his half-truths and his outright untruths the way he did in the past.
Sensing that the "Clinton was always this way, you just didn't notice" argument could be . . . er . . . problematic, Hunt tries to head off headaches at the pass with this whopper:
His performance has also afforded political conservatives an opportunity for a we-told-you-so moment, that Clinton is behaving as disreputably as they always claimed.
That, of course, ignores the reality that special prosecutor Kenneth Starr, surrounded by partisan zealots, conducted a political witch-hunt against Clinton. And there were lavishly funded and surreptitious "hit jobs" against him.
How very laughable. Kenneth Starr's investigation would not have been possible without Bill Clinton's conduct (not to mention Janet Reno's consent for the development of the investigation at each and every turn). And Clinton always had a reputation--well-deserved, as it turns out--for having had a poor relationship with the truth, with reality and with anything that ran against his own personal narcissism. Incidentally, there are no more "lavishly funded and surreptitious 'hit jobs'" against Clinton nowadays. Has that lack of "hit jobs" caused him to act angelically?
Well, if it did and he had, Hunt would have had nothing to write about, nyet? And indeed, every instance in which Bill Clinton's behavior has been found wanting constituted an unforced error on his part, both during his Presidency and now, during his wife's campaign for the Presidency.
Al Hunt clearly doesn't want to admit this. But save two paragraphs in which he takes a desperation shot at the VRWC, he basically cops to the fact that Bill Clinton was never the hero that Hunt and others made him out to be. You can't chronicle all of Clinton's misdeeds both in and out of office and then claim that Ken Starr was responsible. Many people would not have heard of Ken Starr if it weren't for Bill Clinton. And long after Starr departed the public scene, Clinton has remained, causing people like Al Hunt to write columns that vacillate between savaging the 42nd President of the United States for his ethics, his behavior and the company he keeps, and trying vainly to make excuses that don't involve admitting that the VRWC had a point.













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