Sunday, December 6, 2015

If Women Believe Hillary Is In Their Corner, Ask Paula Jones, Juanita Broadrick Or Kathleen Wiley

Hillary rape 2
ELECTIONSLATEST NEWSMUDSLINGINGPOLITICIANSTHE ISSUES
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Hillary Wants Us to Believe All Rape Victims – Unless Those Victims Did This 1 Thing


In support of a campaign to end sexual assault on college campuses, Hillary Clinton recently sent a message to survivors of sexual assault via Twitter. According to her, “every survivor of sexual assault” has “the right to be believed.”
Let’s forget for a moment that what Hillary is calling for is the automatic condemnation of people who have been accused of rape — without giving them the benefit of due process. The thing that exposes her statement as pure pandering is her own history of maligning those women who have accused her husband, Bill of varying degrees of sexual assault. Including rape.
In every single case where Bill Clinton was accused of sexual assault or some type of sexual misconduct, Hillary was the hand operating the wrecking ball that laid waste to the lives and reputations of the accusers.
Here is a sampling of the more widely publicized cases:
Paula Jones. In 1991, she claimed that then Arkansas governor Bill Clinton propositioned her for sex and then exposed his penis to her. The lawsuit was settled for $85,000. Bill was found in contempt of court for lying and was disbarred in Arkansas.
Juanita Broaddrick. Accused Bill of raping her in a Little Rock hotel in the early 1980’s.
Kathleen Willey. She was a White House aide who accused Bill of sexually assaulting her in the Oval Office in 1993.
Then, of course, there’s this tape of Hillary discussing a case where, when she was a lawyer back in Arkansas, she represented a man accused of raping a 12-year-old. According to the Washington Free Beacon:
Hillary Clinton weighed in on her 1975 legal defense of an accused child rapist on Saturday, her first comments on the case since it came under scrutiny following a Washington Free Beacon report last month.
Clinton spoke in clinical, legal terms while explaining her defense of the rapist, who Clinton helped to avoid a lengthy prison term by relying on a technicality relating to the chain of evidence of his blood-soaked underwear, as well as arguing at the time that the 12-year-old victim may have exaggerated or encouraged the attack.

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