Jan 12, 1951 - Feb 17, 2021
American radio host, conservative political commentator and political leader
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[Bill] Clinton's voice, his manner of speaking and his terminology, \'Back in those days... Yeah, back those days... You know, we didn't have the internet back then.\' My grandfather said, \'Back in those days, we didn't have automobiles\'.
I think it's always been an arrangement that had political objectives and goals, which is fine. Get married for whatever reason you want, as far as I'm concerned.
Her family had no such ties. She was able to forge her way into that world. And then to those people, the idea of going to Arkansas, if you're gonna stop and think about it, you don't do it. It wouldn't have made any sense. It's like going to Mississippi. Why would you go to Alabama? You wouldn't go. You wouldn't... That would be throwing your life away! For some reason, Hillary Clinton wanted to latch on to this guy [Bill Clinton] - and for some reason, this guy wanted her to latch on to him.
That's what the Ivy League is. And many of the people there are legacy. Their families went there; their families are in government. The kids go there.
Hillary Clinton lived at Wellesley and Yale. Her circle of friends was that Ivy League bunch, and they were all being trained for lives in government. They were all being trained for lives of government: CIA, State Department.
In 1970, you went to school to find your husband.
You want to be a corporate success; you want to be an entrepreneurial success. That's the beginnings of the feminist movement which sought to emulate men.
We have the beginnings of feminism starting to rear its head, where all of that got blown up. The whole point of going to college became not to find a husband - screw that! - feminism became, \'You don't want anything about a man to be defining you, and you don't want your relationship to define, you! You don't want a relationship to be your happiness. You certainly don't want marriage to be the sole determining reason you live\'.
The Hillary Clinton story basically is this. And see how similar this sounds to the old days before the modern era of feminism raised its head. You're a girl, you're a young woman, what do you do? You go off to college. That's what she did. Why do you go? To meet your husband. That's what she did. She wouldn't be where she is if it weren't for her husband.
[Bill] Clinton was able to defeat conservatives, Republicans, at every turn. And so he was given wide latitude, leeway. He could do whatever he wanted and not be condemned for it. But young people today are not prone to rewarding that kind of behavior.
The feminazis celebrated Bill [Clinton], all because he was able to just manhandle us.
We also have to acknowledge that there are Millennials who don't know of the Clintons of the nineties, and we've always suspected that once they found out that... I mean, Bill Clinton's behavior was celebrated by Democrats in the nineties. Even by the feminazis!
Why does The Smartest Woman in the World [Hillary Clinton], who could carve her own career, who was on the Watergate committee - and got thrown off of it, by the way, for wanting to deny Richard Nixon his constitutional rights.How does a woman who has become a fixture in northeastern liberal politics find herself in the backwoods of Arkansas?
How is it that she [Hillary Clinton] ends up in Arkansas with a philandering husband who makes 25 grand a year as governor, and she has to provide the income for the family at the Rose Law Firm, in Arkansas? How does this that happen?
The reputation Hillary Clinton had at Wellesley and Yale was, \'My God, this woman single-handedly could end up running the world! This is the smartest woman!\'
Hillary Clinton has been The Smartest Woman in the World in her circle since 1970 when she went away to college.
I have long had a theory Bill Clinton-Hillary Clinton relationship. Not how they met, not that story, not the courtship or any of that. But how it happened that this once-in-a-lifetime woman.
I thought we were gonna get \'Smooth Operator.\' That song was big in the '90s.
Bill Clinton described himself as he's \'the big dog.\' He's out hunting, and he found something. Some woman was emitting some, you know, come-to-me smell or whatever, and he was picking up on the scent.
I know a lot of Millennial women who don't listen to the program, anyway, when you mention my name - they've heard so much gunk and so many things that are not true - they say, \'I never listen to that!\' Say, \'You've got to.\'
I have not forgotten my story I want to tell Millennial women. I'm still waiting for them all to gather out there. I sent out a request for people to call Millennial that they know.
This woman [Hillary Clinton] is as steeped and deep inside the establishment as anybody in this campaign.
We're not hearing any Hollywood people talk about the Crime Family Foundation. We're not talking about any specific details about Hillary Clinton's work on the foundation.
I mean, I think it would humanize Hillary [Clinton] incredibly to detail how she was involved in the family charitable organization.
I still don't understand why you don't mention the family charitable foundation, the Clinton Global Initiative. The Clinton Global Initiative is actually like a Morning Call for women all over the world. When the Clinton Global Initiative comes, that's a signal to women all over the world to come to New York.
Is there anybody out there that will point to Hillary Clinton and say, \'Gosh, my life is so much better because of her\'? Why aren't they on stage?
If you ask, you're a boor. Just accept it. Hillry Clinton loves children! She helped children! She village'd children. She raised children. She wrote a book about it.
Hillary Clinton worked with Marian Wright Edelman in Children's Defense Fund. That's all you need to do know.
Hillary Clinton's been around for 30 years. Why do these stories need to be told? It isn't all of this widely known?
[Hillary] Clinton glossed over a lot of things, left a lot of things out that people are gonna be filling in the blanks today, like [Donald] Trump. \'I kept waiting on the one chapter I wanted to hear,\' he said, \'and I didn't hear it. I kept waiting.\'