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		|  12-26-2012, 11:05 PM | #1 |  
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				Join Date: May 20, 2010 Location: Wichita 
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				 Where's Hillary? 
 
			
			Enquiring minds want to know.http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/...ry_692014.html 
Seriously. She's been a camera hog since Day 1. Now she has to testify on Benghazi, and she's nowhere to be found. Senate Republicans are refusing to allow a vote on Kerry until she testifies. So what's up? If she's that sick, we should know about it. If she's not, she needs to get to Capitol Hill and testify.
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		|  12-26-2012, 11:21 PM | #2 |  
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			Hillary is BCD with the “Benghazi-Flu”.  *cough* *cough*
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		|  12-26-2012, 11:50 PM | #3 |  
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			I don't think we can elect a president who can't do their work with a little concussion or fever.  Hillary is just like a woman; weak and frail.  *snick*
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		|  12-27-2012, 05:56 AM | #4 |  
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				Join Date: Dec 23, 2009 Location: Central Texas 
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			I know where she's at. She's getting ready to be the next President of the United States!HILLARY 2016
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		|  12-27-2012, 06:05 AM | #5 |  
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			You would thinck she is fucked but she is the poster child for commie socialist and the Dems just love her to death.
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		|  12-27-2012, 06:16 AM | #6 |  
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			Same place the rest of the fucks were .enjoying the Christmas break...
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		|  12-27-2012, 06:34 AM | #7 |  
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			She is first and foremost Mrs Bill Clinton. That makes her pretty much invulnerable in the Democrat Party.
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		|  12-27-2012, 08:18 AM | #8 |  
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	Hillary got her 3AM phone call, BigKoTex, and the bitch slept while the phone rang, rang and rang!!!!  It's still ringing, BigKoTex,and  the bitch still hasn't answered!!!Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by bigtex  I know where she's at. She's getting ready to be the next President of the United States!HILLARY 2016
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		|  12-27-2012, 08:26 AM | #9 |  
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				My ECCIE Reviews      | 
 
			
			
	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by bigtex  I know where she's at. She's getting ready to be the next President of the United States!HILLARY 2016
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I used to think that she would run but now, well, she's just getting fairly old.  She probably wishes to rest.  Plus, if she had a concussion, perhaps it's really made her feel poorly.
 
Age causes all of us to not be up and "at 'em" like we used to be!  I would think that it would be very difficult to run for President at the age of what?  Almost 70'ish?
 
She's, hopefully, trying to enjoy the holidays season like the rest of us!  And just because she's working doesn't always mean that she is going to be in the news.
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		|  12-27-2012, 08:26 AM | #10 |  
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			I think lover lover Donkey Punched her too hard.
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		|  12-27-2012, 08:51 AM | #11 |  
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				Join Date: Jan 1, 2010 Location: houston 
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	Quote: 
	
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					Originally Posted by ElisabethWhispers   Age causes all of us to not be up and "at 'em" like we used to be! I would think that it would be very difficult to run for President at the age of what? Almost 70'ish?
 
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Reagan, McCain, Mitt were all pushing 70. Our right wing nuts like'em old!
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		|  12-27-2012, 09:08 AM | #12 |  
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			It appears that Politico was expecting our Far Right Wing-Nuts to start another one of their patented idiotic threads.  When will the right start hating Hillary Clinton again? By: Maggie Haberman
 December 27, 2012 04:34 AM EST                                                              
Her poll  numbers are staggering. Fellow Democrats fear her. So do some  Republicans. The main question now is, when will the right start hating Hillary Clinton again and kick a “Stop HRC” movement into high gear?
 
 You could hear the sounds of the ignition being turned during the  past 10 days as an illness that led to a concussion (under circumstances  that the public still knows little about) forced Clinton to cancel  Senate testimony about the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi.  That led to charges of a cover-up from some dependably anti-Clinton  quarters, such as the New York Post and former U.N. Ambassador John  Bolton.
 
 A blog post Wednesday by The Weekly Standard — promptly blared across the Drudge Report with the headline, “Where’s Hillary?” — questioned the scant explanation out of Clinton’s camp of her two-week public absence this month.
 
 But there was a cautious quality to much of that criticism. The  language used by the Post, a longtime Clinton antagonist, was tough but  not disrespectful. And Sen. Lindsey Graham said conservatives peddling  the idea that Clinton faked her illness to get out of testifying need to  knock it off. “I think that’s inappropriate and not true,” the South  Carolina Republican said last week.
 
 That all fed a sense that the engine of the once vaunted anti-Hillary machine still seems stuck in neutral.
 
 She is scheduled  to have a rain date before the Senate in January, but some of the  passion over Benghazi may have dissipated by then. A special report led  to the resignation of lower-tier State Department officials and did not  target Clinton. And when she testifies, some of her old Senate  Republican colleagues may be mindful of being too tough at a public  hearing, meaning that unless she makes a misstep, she likely will get a  respectful greeting.
 
 Which leaves a status quo in place that would have been unthinkable  for conservatives just four short years ago: The anti-Hillary Clinton  industrial-entertainment complex, a source of income and headlines for  conservatives over much of the past two decades, has been dormant while  she’s been at the State Department. There has been no Clinton in elected  office, a constant in American political life since the 1990s, for four  years. The secretary of State has generally become an apolitical and  deeply popular figure — and Republican nominee Mitt Romney spent much of  2012 lionizing the Clinton legacy.
 
 Some Republicans believe it’s only a matter of time before she  appears in more direct-mail appeals. A second Hillary presidential  campaign seems eminently possible, and it’s already prompting a  fundraising appeal from the PAC ActRight, helmed by National  Organization for Marriage President Brian Brown, who recently wrote to  his list: “The time to start planning for the defeat of Hillary Clinton  is right now.”
 
 Still, absent a clear point of attack against her  — a policy position she’s staking out, or a candidate she endorses —  it’s not clear whether the anti-Hillary cottage industry will ever exist  the same way it once did.
 
 “Hillary’s not … a high-profile candidate now,” said conservative  leader Richard Viguerie. “We’re not thinking Hillary. We’ve got all we  can do to handle the Senate Democrats and Harry Reid and Barack Obama.”
 
 “I don’t think that it will come back in the same form that it did,”  agreed John Podhoretz, the former New York Post editorial page editor  who now writes for Commentary magazine.
 
 Podhoretz, who wrote a book about Clinton called, “Can She Be  Stopped? Hillary Clinton Will Be the Next President of the United States  Unless …” in 2006, said he learned the hard way that the anti-Hillary  energy was already dissipating. There was a “disconnect” between the  anti-Clinton wave he and his publisher were counting on, Podhoretz said,  and the partisan energy that existed at the time.
 
 Since her presidential effort flopped and she joined the Obama  administration, Clinton has been absent from the partisan fray. Her  husband has been very much a Republican critic, serving as an early and  often surrogate on Obama’s behalf, but he, too, is not perceived in the  vitriolic terms he once was. When she begins campaigning again or being  political again, she will get criticism, Podhoretz said, but not of the  outsized type she used to receive.
 
 “I just don’t think that there’s the same kind of heat,” Podhoretz  said, noting that beyond Obama’s health care legislation, she has stayed  largely out of domestic issues. “And I think whoever the Democratic  nominee in 2016 is will generate counter passions, but I don’t think  she’s going to do it anymore than anybody else is and possibly less. … I  think that will all be generated on the spot by what she says and what  she does.”
 
 What is still unclear about the Benghazi fallout is whether it  represents a relative blip on the screen or the beginning of a change in  approach to her by Republicans.
 
 Faith & Freedom Coalition head Ralph Reed, who worked to turn out  evangelical voters in the last cycle, believes the return of  Hillary-hating is a when, not if.
 
 “The intensity of the opposition to Hillary Clinton on the right has  abated somewhat during her years at the State Department for obvious  reasons,” he said. “She’s been a diplomat, not a candidate. But should  she begin to test the waters of a presidential candidacy, there will be  renewed scrutiny by both the media and her critics, and at least some of  the old dynamic will likely return, perhaps with renewed vigor.”
 
 Whether she becomes a lightning rod for a broad swath of the party is  an open question. Twelve years ago, Republican Rick Lazio was able to  raise millions off a fundraising appeal by pointing out that his  opponent was the most polarizing figure of her day.
 
 “It won’t take me six pages to convince you to  send me an urgently needed contribution,” he wrote, adding, “It will  take only six words: I’m running against Hillary Rodham Clinton.”
 
 There are other reasons for Republicans to be mindful of how hard  they attack her — their own brand issues, put on plain display after the  2012 cycle, including among women.
 
 “Right now, Hillary Clinton is not only secretary of State and the  leader in waiting of the Democratic Party, she is also the leader of the  women’s movement in America,” said Republican strategist Alex  Castellanos, who cautioned she still is seen as a bridge to the past,  not the future.
 
 But he added, “She is the most powerful symbol of American women’s  success in a man’s world. It is going to be tough for Republicans to  attack her without also attacking what she represents. My guess is that  being represented as the party that opposes American women’s success is  not a great political idea.”
 
 This does not mean that Clinton will get a pass should she start  becoming more political in the immediate future — wading into the 2013  campaign cycle, for instance. Longtime Clinton ally Terry McAuliffe is  seeking the governor’s office in Virginia, a race that some  conservatives see as an opportunity to road-test attacks on the former  first family.
 
 “Conservatives are going to want to make sure that the American  people, using the [McAuliffe candidacy] as a vehicle, remember” the  Clinton-era scandals of the 1990s, said Citizens United head David  Bossie, whose unsuccessful efforts to air a movie about Hillary Clinton  in 2007 led to the Supreme Court case that allowed the super PACs of  2012 to exist.
 
 “If I was [Republican candidate] Ken Cucinelli I would be reminding  people of it,” said Bossie. (McAuliffe backers point out that this is a  flawed concept for a number of reasons, one of which is that anyone for  whom these attacks would resonate are likely already voting for the  Republican).
 
 Yet Bossie conceded it’s not a sure thing that criticizing Hillary  pays the dividends it once did. “That question will answer itself over  the next six months or a year as organizations talk about her,” he said.
 
 In the mid-2000s, former New York congressman and conservative John  Leboutillier, now a Fox News host, tried to raise funds for a  “Counter-Clinton Library” in Little Rock, Ark. It flopped – and he  expects similar efforts now will, too.
 
 “She will not be the lightning rod she was 20 years ago, for reasons  to do with her and more to do with conservatism, which is, I don’t need  to tell you, deeply troubled,” he said, calling it “an exhaustive, spent  volcano at the moment. That encapsulates everything except the tea  party, and they don’t have anything to do with Hillary Clinton.”
 
 Mike McKeon, a Republican strategist and longtime adviser to former  New York Gov. George Pataki who witnessed her 2000 campaign up close,  said that she’s still catnip for parts of the conservative base.
 
 “It’s a reflex they can’t ignore, not a voluntary act,” he said. “I  am really not trying to be snarky. But Hillary still drives that kind of  reaction, and the more she moves away from foreign affairs and does  things like [support] gay marriage, the more they will not be able to  resist.”
 
 One Republican strategist, speaking of the Hillary-hating industry,  was more blunt: “If she works in the mail and on the phones with small  donors, she’ll get hit. We’ll look stupid. But when did that ever stop  us?”
 
                                                                                                                                                       © 2012 POLITICO LLC
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		|  12-27-2012, 09:14 AM | #13 |  
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			thanks for sharing.   If they hate on her enough, she'll win in 2016 without a primary challenge.
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		|  12-27-2012, 09:25 AM | #14 |  
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			The last sentence of the above referenced article was a classic. 
 ---One Republican strategist, speaking of the  Hillary-hating industry,  was more blunt: “If she works in the mail and  on the phones with small  donors, she’ll get hit. We’ll look stupid. But  when did that ever stop  us?”
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		|  12-27-2012, 09:36 AM | #15 |  
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