Well shit, I dunno. If you agree with some of  the posts thrown up around here lately, she was the most important 27  year old lawyer in the world back around when Nixon was impeached. She  was telling everybody what to do, about how to violate the Constitution.  And, you just know all those old boys in the Senate and the House were  just under her control and spell. But...somehow....somehow....th  ey  resisted her and all of her 27 year old powers and everybody that she  had behind her as a 27 year old....uhh....recent law school graduate.  So...setting aside all those incredible powers and accomplishments that  you guys have already bestowed on her....try this on for size moron.  And, remember...a smart lawyer never ever ever asks a question that he  doesn't already know the answer to....
 
First Lady Biography: Hillary Clinton
 
 HILLARY DIANE RODHAM CLINTON 
 
Birth:
 
HILLARY DIANE RODHAM CLINTON 
 
Birth: 
Place: Chicago, Illinois 
Date: 1947, October 26 
 
Father:
Hugh Ellsworth Rodham, born 1911, April 2, Scranton, Pennsylvania,  graduate of Pennsylvania State University, small textile supply owner;  died, 1993, April 7 in Little Rock, Arkansas 
Mother:
Dorothy Emma Howell Rodham, born 1919, Chicago, Illinois; married to Hugh Rodham, 1942 
 
Ancestry:
Welsh, French, Scottish, Native American, English; Hillary Clinton's  paternal grandfather Hugh Rodham was born in 1879 in Northumberland,  England and immigrated to Pennsylvania to work at the Scranton Lace  Company. Her maternal great-grandparents, the Howells, were immigrants  from England and settled in California. Her maternal grandmother, Della  Murray migrated from Canada to Illinois and married secondly to Max  Rosenberg who was born in Russia in 1901. 
 
Birth Order:
Eldest of three; two brothers, Hugh E. Rodham, Jr. (born 1950) and Anthony Rodham (born 1954) 
 
Physical Appearance:
5' 6", blonde hair, blue eyes 
 
Religious Affiliation:
Methodist 
 
Education:
Eugene Field Elementary School, Park Ridge, Illinois, 1953-1957; 
Ralph Waldo Emerson Middle School, Park Ridge, Illinois, 1957-1961; 
Maine Township High School, East and South, Park Ridge, 1961-1965, National Honor Society member; 
Wellesley College, Wellesley, Massachusetts, 1965-1969, Senior Class president, addressed graduating class; 
Yale Law School,  New Haven, Connecticut, 1969-1973, member of the board of editors, Yale  Review of Law and Social Action, graduated with honors; 
Yale Child Study Center, 1973-1974, one post-graduate year of study on children and medicine 
 
Occupation before Marriage:
As a young woman, Hillary Rodham worked as a babysitter both after  school and during her vacation breaks, sometimes watching the children  of migrant Mexicans brought to the Chicago area for itinerant work. She  applied to NASA and was stunned when she was told that girls were not  accepted for the astronaut program. Although she was active in young  Republican groups and campaigned for Republican presidential candidate  Barry Goldwater in 1964, she was inspired to work in some form of public  service after hearing a speech in Chicago by Reverend Martin Luther  King. She worked at various jobs during her summers as a college  student, once in a canning factory in Alaska, in 1969. In 1970, she  secured a grant and first went to work for the Children's Defense Fund.  The following summer, she first came to Washington, D.C. working on  Senator Walter Mondale's (Minnesota Democrat) subcommittee on migrant  workers, researching migrant problems in housing, sanitation, health and  education. In the summer of 1972, she worked in the western states for  the Democratic presidential candidate George McGovern's campaign. During  her second year in law school, Hillary Clinton volunteered at Yale's  Child Study Center, learning about new research on early childhood brain  development, as well as New Haven Hospital, where she took on cases of  child abuse and the city Legal Services, providing free legal service to  the poor. Upon graduation from law school, she served as staff attorney  for the Children’s Defense Fund in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In the  spring of 1974, she returned to Washington as a member of the  presidential impeachment inquiry staff advising the Judiciary Committee  of the House of Representatives during the Watergate Scandal. After the  Nixon resignation in August of 1974, she became a faculty member of the  University of Arkansas Law School, located in Fayetteville, where her  Yale Law School classmate and boyfriend Bill Clinton was teaching as  well. 
 
Marriage:
27 years old, married 1975, October 11, Fayetteville, Arkansas to  William Jefferson "Bill" Clinton, born 1946, August 19, Hope, Arkansas,  professor of law, at their home; before he proposed marriage to Hillary  Rodham, Bill Clinton secretly purchased a small house in Fayetteville  that she had noticed and remarked that she had liked. When he proposed  marriage to her and she accepted, he revealed that they owned the house.  They married and lived here, briefly, before relocating to the state  capital of Little Rock, Arkansas, from which he conducted his first  campaign, for U.S. Congress. 
 
Children:
One daughter; Chelsea Victoria Clinton, (born 1980, February 27) 
 
Occupation after Marriage:
A year after her marriage, Hillary Clinton, retaining her maiden name  for work, joined the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock, Arkansas. President  Jimmy Carter appointed her to the board of the Legal Services  Corporation in 1978. That same year, Bill Clinton was elected to the  first of five terms as Governor of Arkansas. The following year she  became a full partner at the Rose Law Firm. She was twice named to the  list of “The 100 Most Influential Lawyers in America.” She also  represented and later served on the board of Arkansas businesses  including TCBY ("Too Good to Be Yoghurt"), and Wal-Mart. As First Lady  of Arkansas for twelve years, she chaired the Arkansas Educational  Standards Committee, co-founded the Arkansas Advocates for Children and  Families, and served on the boards of the Arkansas Children's Hospital,  Legal Services, and the Children's Defense Fund. Mrs. Clinton wrote a  weekly newspaper column entitled "Talking It Over." 
 
Presidential Campaign and Inauguration:
During the 1992 Democratic primaries, several incidents occurred which  proved to be the primary basis for much of the controversy and criticism  that would be leveled at Hillary Clinton as First Lady. Before the New  York primary, former California Governor Jerry Brown challenged Arkansas  Governor Bill Clinton with suggestions that Hillary Clinton's work as  an attorney involved state funds was unethical, hinting in general terms  that she had somehow profited from her husband's position. Clinton  himself remarked at the time that his wife would be a full partner if he  became President, terming it a "two for one" deal. Finally, in response  to some of these questions, Hillary Clinton sharply retorted to a  journalist's question at a public appearance that was being covered by  broadcast media that the only way a working attorney who happened to  also be the governor's wife could have avoided any controversy would  have been if she had "stayed home and baked cookies." The remark,  frequently replayed on television as a single clip from her more  explicit response, sparked public debate as to whether she was intending  to demean the role of stay-at-home mother. It was further fueled by  Republican party supporters who sought to claim that Hillary Clinton was  not in line with "family values" a phrase that was often used in the  campaign of 1992. At the Republican National Convention, several  speakers, including conservative columnist Pat Buchanan and Vice  Presidential wife Marilyn Quayle either mentioned Hillary Clinton by  name or made allusions to her as an example of what their party was  running against. In a lighter tone, 
Good Housekeeping magazine  sponsored a cookie contest asking readers to vote for their choice of  recipes used by the wives of the two presidential candidates. During the  1996 campaign, Hillary Clinton addressed the Democratic convention,  underlining some of the Administration's policy gains and aspirations in  children's and women's issues. At the 1993 Inauguration, the Clintons  created a new precedent by having a president-elect's child, their  daughter Chelsea, join at the podium at the moment of the oath-of-office  administration. 
 
First Lady:
1993, January 20 - 2001, January 20 
45 years old 
 
Within the first five days of becoming First Lady, Hillary Clinton was  named by her husband to head the President's Task Force on Health Care  Reform, overseeing research, investigatory trips, financial reports,  numerous committees composed of medical and insurance professionals,  lawmakers and other government officials, public service leaders, and  consumer rights advocates. In this capacity, she became the third First  Lady to testify before Congress, appearing to the House committee on  health insurance reform in September 1993. When the plan devised was  attacked as too complicated or an intention leading to "socialized  medicine" the Administration decided not to push for a vote and it never  came to a vote in the Senate or House, abandoned in September, 1994.  Hillary Clinton's interest in the subject, however, had helped raise  national consciousness about the problem of citizens who lived without  any medical insurance and she began to address an assortment of other  medical problems facing many citizens. Perhaps the most successful  component of her accomplishments as First Lady was initiating the  Children's Health Insurance Program in 1997, a federal effort that  provided state support for those children whose parents were unable to  provide them with health coverage. She also successfully sought to  increase the research funding for illnesses such as prostate cancer and  childhood asthma at the National Institute of Health. The First Lady  also gave voice to the illnesses that were affecting veterans of the  Gulf War, with the possibility of their suffering the toxic side effects  of chemical "Agent Orange" used in warfare. 
 
Although she assumed a less open political role after the failure of the  health care reform plan, the efforts on behalf of which she focused  were fully public. She cited the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997  as the achievement she initiated and shepherded that provide her with  the greatest satisfaction. Beginning with an article she wrote on  orphaned children in 1995, through a series of public events on the  issue, policy meetings with Health and Human Service officials, private  foundation leaders, the drafting of policy recommendations, and  eventually lobbying with legislators led to its passage. The First Lady  led a second effort, the Foster Care Independence bill, to help older,  unadopted children transition to adulthood. She also hosted numerous  White House conferences that related to children's health, including  early childhood development (1997) and school violence (1999). She lent  her support to programs ranging from "Prescription for Reading," in  which pediatricians provided free books for new mothers to read to their  infants as their brains were rapidly developing, to nationwide  immunization against childhood illnesses. She also supported an annual  drive to encourage older women to seek a mammography to prevent breast  cancer, coverage of the cost being provided by Medicare. 
 
Hillary Clinton was the only First Lady to keep an office in the West  Wing among those of the president's senior staff. While her familiarity  with the intricate political issues and decisions faced by the  President, she openly discussed his work with him, yet stated that  ultimately she was but one of several individuals he consulted before  making a decision. They were known to disagree. Regarding his 1993  passage of welfare reform, the First Lady had reservations about  federally supported childcare and Medicaid. When issues that she was  working on were under discussion at the morning senior staff meetings,  the First Lady often attended. Aides kept her informed of all pending  legislation and oftentimes sought her reaction to issues as a way of  gauging the President's potential response. Weighing in on his Cabinet  appointments and knowing many of the individuals he named, she had  working relationships with many of them. She persuaded Treasury  Secretary Robert Rubin to convene a meeting of corporate CEOs for their  advice on how companies could be persuaded to adopt better child care  measures for working families. With Attorney General Janet Reno, the  First Lady helped to create the Department of Justice's Violence Against  Women office. One of her closest Cabinet allies was Secretary of State  Madeleine Albright. Following her international trips, Hillary Clinton  wrote a report of her observations for Albright. A primary effort they  shared was globally advocating gender equity in economics, employment,  health care and education. During her trips to Africa (1997), Asia  (1995), South America (1995, 1997) and the Central European former  Soviet satellite nations (1997, 1998), Hillary Clinton emphasized "a  civil society," of human rights as a road to democracy and capitalism.  The First Lady was also one of the few international figures at the time  who spoke out against the treatment of Afghani women by Islamist  fundamentalist Taliban that had seized control of Afghanistan. One of  the programs she helped create was Vital Voices, a U.S.-sponsored  initiative to promote the participation of international women in their  nation's political process. One result of the group's meetings, in  Northern Ireland, was drawing together women leaders of various  political factions that supported the Good Friday peace agreement that  brought peace to that nation long at civil war. Hillary Clinton was also  an active supporter of the United States Agency for International  Development (USAID), often awarding its micro-loans to small enterprises  begun by women in developing nations that aided the economic growth in  their impoverished communities. Certainly one of her more important  speeches as First Lady addressing the need for equal rights for women  was international in scope and created controversy in the nation where  it was made: the September 1995 United Nations Fourth World Conference  on Women in Beijing, China. 
 
Hillary Clinton had encountered controversy from practically the beginning of her tenure. 
By her having assuming a more overtly political role than any of her  predecessors, Hillary Clinton was an easy target for the political  opposition; oftentimes it was she personally that was attacked, beyond  the words she spoke or actions she took. Much as Nancy Reagan had served  as a target for her husband's opponents, so too did Hillary Clinton  become a target for those who disagreed with the Administration. The  American Conservative Union, for example, solicited money to fight what  they termed the First Lady's "radical agenda." Not all of the  controversy she engendered, however, was political. The same 
New York Times  columnist, William Safire, who had attacked Nancy Reagan, now attacked  Hillary Clinton. Much like Eleanor Roosevelt, the First Lady she most  emulated and had studied, Hillary Clinton expected the partisan attacks  as a result of activism. Like Eleanor Roosevelt, she wrote a newspaper  column, a weekly syndicated piece, and made hundreds of speeches,  oftentimes without notes. Also like Eleanor Roosevelt, she authored  books during her tenure. For the spoken word version of her book  regarding family policies, 
It Takes a Village, Hillary Clinton was the recipient of the recording industry's Grammy Award. 
 
Just five months into the Administration, with the firing of the White  House travel office staff, followed to months later by the suicide of  Vincent Foster, White House counsel and friend and former law partner of  the First Lady, Hillary Clinton found herself implicated in numerous  investigations. At the end of 1993, a story broke in the media that a  Justice Department investigation into a failed Arkansas real estate  venture, concerning a potential development in the Ozarks called  "Whitewater," mentioned her as a potential witness in the inquiry; there  were immediate suggestions in the opposition press that she had somehow  illegally profited. There was similar media speculation when it was  disclosed that she had greatly profited in trading cattle futures  through an experienced investor. All of this concerned matters long past  to the 1992 campaign and the First Lady held an April 22, 1994 press  conference in which she explained the details as proof of her not having  taken any illegal actions. Political pressure, however, led to the  President's appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the  charges, a move the First Lady opposed. On January 26, 1996, she  testified before a grand jury concerning the Whitewater scandal. Over  time, the parameters of the investigation would enlarge to include other  charges made against the President and First Lady that were  questionable in their validity. In every case, the investigations led to  no criminal charges against Hillary Clinton. In time, the personal  behavior of the President during an illicit affair with White House  intern Monica Lewinsky would be the only charge in which he would be  found guilty, leading to the historic articles of impeachment brought  against him in late 1998, of which he was acquitted in February of 1999.  During the Lewinsky scandal, Hillary Clinton supported her husband's  contentions of innocence regarding marital infidelity, believing the  rumors, along with the other charges, to be the result of a "vast  right-wing conspiracy." In August 1998, however, when independent  counsel Kenneth Starr questioned the President directly in the White  House, he confessed that he had lied regarding the extent of the affair.  Hillary Clinton later admitted to being deeply wounded personally yet  focusing on the public repercussions of the President's disclosure, made  a strong statement of commitment to him and the Administration,  believing a private matter had been wrong turned into a political  attack. Her support of him at that critical juncture was believed by  many media commentators at that emotionally heightened time to be an  important factor, if not the greatest factor, in preventing a call for  his resignation. 
 
Hillary Clinton did not ignore the traditional role of First Lady. With a  lifelong interest in regional American history, she initiated the Save  America's Treasures program, a national effort that matched federal  funds to private donations to rescue from deterioration and neglect, or  restore to completion many iconic historic items and sites, including  the flag which inspired the Star Spangled Banner, and the National First  Ladies Historic Site in Canton, Ohio. As part of the Millennium Project  which she initiated, monthly lectures that considered both America's  past and forecasted its future were held in the East Room, and one of  these became the first live simultaneous webcast from the mansion. In  the White House, she initiated the first Sculpture Garden, which  displayed large contemporary American works of art loaned from museums  in the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden on a rotating basis. In the White House  state rooms, she placed on rotating display the donated handicrafts  (pottery, glassware, etc.) of contemporary American artisans. She  oversaw the restoration of the Blue Room on the state floor, and the  redecoration of the Treaty Room into the President's study on the second  floor. Using a unique venue of large white tents on the South Lawn that  could accompany several thousand guests, she hosted many large  entertainments, such as a St. Patrick's Day reception, a state dinner  for visiting Chinese dignitaries, and a contemporary music concert that  raised funds for music education in the public schools. For all the  foods served in the White House, she hired a chef whose expertise was in  American regional cooking. She also hosted a massive New Year's Eve  party on the turning of the 20th century into the 21st century, as well  as the November 2000 Bicentennial of the White House state dinner, an  event at which more former Presidents and First Ladies were gathered  together in the mansion than at any other time in its history. 
 
In 1999, Hillary Clinton formed an exploratory committee to pursue the  possibility of running for the U.S. Senate seat to be vacated by Daniel  Patrick Moynihan (New York Democrat) and she officially declared herself  a candidate for the position several months later. On November 7, 2000,  Hillary Clinton became the first First Lady ever elected to public  office, winning the U.S. Senate seat from New York State. 
 
 
Post-Presidential Life:
US SENATOR
 
Sworn in as a U.S. Senator on January 1, 2001 but remaining First Lady  until January 20 of that year, Hillary Clinton served simultaneously for  twenty days as a member of one branch of government while married to  the leader of another branch. She would not indulge the immediate media  and public speculation that she would run for President of the United  States in 2004, and then in 2008; instead she focused on and publicly  discussed her work, assuming the lower public profile typical of most  freshmen Senators. 
 
Hillary Clinton sat on four Senate Committees with a total of eight  subcommittee assignments: Senate Committee on Armed Services with three  subcommittee assignments, on Airland, on Emerging Threats and  Capabilities, and on Readiness and Management Support; Senate  Environment and Public Works Committee with three subcommittee  assignments on Clean Air, Wetlands, Private Property, and Nuclear  Safety, on Fisheries, Wildlife, and Water and on Superfund, Waste  Control, and Risk Assessment; the Senate Health, Education, Labor and  Pensions Committee, with two subcommittee assignments, on Aging and on  Children and Families; and the Senate Special Committee on Aging. After  the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 on the World Trade Center in  downtown New York City, Senator Clinton worked to secure $21.4 billion  in funding to assist clean up and recovery, to provide health tracking  for first responders and volunteers at Ground Zero and to create grants  for redevelopment. In 2005, she issued two studies that examined the  disbursement of federal homeland security funds to local communities and  first responders. Senator Clinton visited American troops in  Afghanistan and Iraq during the U.S. war in those nations. She became a  national advocate both in public and in her Senate work on behalf of  retaining and improving health and other benefits for veterans. As an  advocate for her state, Senator Clinton led a bipartisan effort to bring  broadband access to rural communities; co-sponsored the 21st Century  Nanotechnology Research and Development Act; included language in the  Energy Bill to provide tax exempt bonding authority for environmentally  conscious construction projects; and introduced an amendment calling for  funding of new job creation to repair, renovate and modernize public  schools. Senator Clinton won an extension of Unemployment Insurance,  which passed on the first day of the 108th Congress. She was a vocal  opponent of the Bush Administration's tax cuts. 
 
Her memoirs 
Living History were published in 2003 and sold over 3  million copies both in the U.S. and in other nations; it was eventually  translated into foreign languages including Chinese. When her husband,  former President Clinton required immediate heart surgery in October of  2004, Senator Clinton cancelled her public schedule to be with him. She  resides in Chappaqua, New York and Washington, D.C. 
 
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE 
On 20 January 2007, two years to the day before the next presidential  inauguration, Senator Clinton filed with the Federal Elections  Commission to declare her formation of an exploratory presidential  campaign committee. Nine months later, she formally declared her  candidacy for the U.S. Presidency. This was unprecedented. Clinton  proved to be the first woman in history who occupied a position of  elective national office as a member of a national party to enter and  remain in a presidential primary race to the end of the season. She was  also, of course, the only wife of a former President to enter any type  of electoral race on a national level and the unusual precedent vied  only with her own record in having run for and been elected to the U.S.  Senate, since no other woman who would be or had been First Lady had  stood for public office. Eleanor Roosevelt’s role at the United Nations  was appointed. The only remotely close situation occurred in the years  of the American Revolution before her husband’s presidency when Abigail  Adams was chosen among several leading Boston women to serve as a  “judgess” in determining the penalty to be imposed on Tory women loyal  to the English monarchy. 
Throughout the end of 2007 and into early 2008, Senator Clinton joined  in several debates with all the other Democratic presidential  candidates. In January of 2008, she began the primary season,  campaigning across the country, and continuing her fundraising, which  would total over $100 million. Although she had been predicted through  2007 as the favored candidate and likely nominee of her party, she found  her Senate colleague Barack Obama, who represented her own native state  of Illinois to be a formidable challenger. Despite her many political  achievements as First Lady, it proved difficult to emphasize them since  she had done so in a position that was neither official nor elective.  Among the states she won in the primaries were New Hampshire,  California, New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, Ohio, North Carolina and  Indiana. Senator Clinton garnered 1,896 delegates; a total of 2,201 were  required for the nomination. 
On 3 June 2008, Senator Obama won the necessary number of delegate  pledges. Hillary Clinton suspended her campaign several days later and  delivered a stirring concession speech in Washington, D.C. to her  supporters, emphasizing that she was not interested in having a cult  personality following but in her party achieving dramatic change in the  executive branch. She addressed the National Democratic Convention and  endorsed the candidacy of Obama. Throughout the fall, she campaigned  vigorously on his behalf and after he won the 2008 election, he named  her as his Secretary of State. 
SECRETARY OF STATE
In January of 2009, Hillary Clinton became the 67th Secretary of State,  the third woman and the only former First Lady to serve in this  capacity. The position’s duties are to serves as the primary advisor on  foreign affairs to the President and also enact presidential policy  decisions through her department, which also includes the U.S. Foreign  Service. She is also responsible for negotiating with foreign leaders on  policy and treaties, granting passports, suggesting and advising the  President on individuals for the posts of ambassador, consul and  minister, and on which foreign government representatives to receive or  dismiss. 
A great part of Secretary Clinton’s public role is leading or joining  global conferences and other international meetings on a variety of  issues. She is also considered responsible for the protection of U.S.  property and citizens that are in foreign countries, and oversees the  administration of U.S. immigration laws abroad. Further, at her  recommendation and approval, warnings and other necessary postings are  made to alert American citizens traveling abroad in case their  well-being is considered to be potentially threatened. 
Halfway through the first term of the Obama Administration, Secretary  Clinton had traveled over half a million miles to 77 countries. She has  employed not only the diplomatic tactics traditionally used by those in  her position, but political skills also learned through her White House  and Senate years. She has often presented a tough stance on behalf of  the United States with both allies and aggressors towards it. She called  the action of U.S. ally Israel of building settlements in disputed  areas with Palestine to be “insulting,” threatened action along with  urging Iran to forego a nuclear weapons development, and harshly  criticized the firing of short-range missiles by North Korea into South  Korea as “provocative and belligerent behavior,” as “threatening peace  and stability in Asia.” A strong supporter of fighting the war on terror  in Afghanistan, stating its long-time security as crucial to global  safety, she vigorously urged that nation’s beleaguered president Harmad  Kharzi into assuming a more pro-active role in reducing the terrorist  influence of the Taliban in his country. She was also the leading  American voice criticizing the 2010 disclosures of confidential  information through Wikileaks. 
As Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton has focused special attention  beyond her required duties to focus on the international rights of  women, economic empowerment in financially depressed regions of the  world, and held “town hall” type meetings with direct questioning from  the public, whether in the United States or other countries. Equal  access to education, employment, health care and legal recourse for  women in all countries has been an unwavering aspect of her career from  First Lady to Senator to Secretary of State. She is aided in this effort  by Melanne Verveer, who had served as Hillary Clinton’s Chief of Staff  during her years as First Lady. Verveer is a State Department  Ambassador-at-Large and runs its Office of Global Women's Issues,  focused on the political, economic, and social empowerment of women.  Another woman who has been with Mrs. Clinton since her White House years  is Huma Abedin, who worked as her primary aide, traveling across the  U.S. with her during the 2008 campaign, and now continues that duty in  the role of traveling chief of staff. 
 
Secretary Clinton has used the venue of an open town-hall type forum to  deliver addresses on policy and also take questions from the press and  public. She gave almost one dozen of these in just her first two years  as Secretary of State in Washington, D.C. She also conducted the  town-hall interviews around the world, giving a sense of the breadth of  her travels: Manama, Bahrain, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, Astana, Kazakhstan,  Melbourne, Australia, Christchurch, New Zealand, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia,  Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Pristina, Kosovo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and  Herzegovina, Islamabad, Pakistan (twice), Tbilisi, Georgia, Kyiv,  Ukraine, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Doha, Qatar, Manila, Philippines, Lahore,  Pakistan, Moscow, Russia, Abuja, Nigeria, Kinshasa, Democratic Republic  of the Congo, Nairobi, Kenya, Bangkok, Thailand, New Delhi, India,  Mumbai, India, Baghdad, Iraq, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic,  Monterrey, Mexico, Brussels, Belgium, Seoul, South Korea, and Tokyo,  Japan.
 
Hillary Clinton has continued to enjoy a diverse and unprecedented  career in public service. In a 15 July 2009 speech to the Council on  Foreign Relations, she offered her forecast of the challenges and  opportunities of the U.S. as it entered the second decade of the 21st  Century: "We are determined to channel the currents of change toward a  world free of violent extremism, nuclear weapons, global warming,  poverty, and abuses of human rights, and above all, a world in which  more people in more places can live up to their God-given potential.” 
Not only the press and public of the U.S. but much of the world  continued its avid interest in the life of Hillary Clinton, from her  career to the July 2010 wedding of her only child, daughter Chelsea.
 
 
 
 
 
 
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