Politics and Religion

"Actual" Quotes? Really? How do you know? Do you swallow...
BigPapasan 3 Reviews 184 reads
posted

...everything you read like a five dollar whore swallows...?

From Snopes:

We have attempted to trace each entry back to its first print source, provide a reasonably full context for the given quote, and note where the print source came by its information:  

"Where is the G-damn f**king flag? I want the G-damn f**king flag up every f**king morning at f**king sunrise."

While this quote is included in more than one book about the Clintons, its original source was a January 1994 American Spectator article by David Brock, who interviewed four state troopers who had worked for the Clintons while Bill Clinton was governor of Arkansas. The quote was taken from information provided by Arkansas state trooper Larry Patterson:  
The troopers were also objects of Hillary's wrath. Patterson recalled the early morning of Labor Day in 1991, when Hillary came out of the mansion, got in her car, and drove off. Within a minute or so of leaving the gate, her aging blue Cutlass swung violently around and came charging back onto the grounds, tires squealing in the dust. "I thought something was terribly wrong, so I rushed out to her. And she screamed, 'Where is the goddamn f -- -ing flag?' It was early and we hadn't raised the flag yet. And she said, 'I want the goddamn f -- -ing flag up every f -- -ing morning at f -- -ing sunrise.'"
But in 1998, David Brock himself expressed skepticism about the validity of some of the claims made in his American Spectator "Troopergate" article:  
I guess that I should confess that as the author of the infamous piece, I think "proving Troopergate" may be a tall order. I was as sure of that story when I wrote it as any journalist can be of any story. But in the years since then, the troopers have greatly damaged their credibility.  

I'm sure you remember that during the Senate Whitewater hearings, the troopers made fools of themselves with improbable claims about the circumstances of Vincent Foster's death. One of the two troopers who went on the record with me, Larry Patterson, helped promote the infamous Clinton Chronicles, a crackpot video accusing [Bill Clinton] of drug running and murder. Patterson was also recently cited as a source for The Secret Life of Bill Clinton, by British journalist Ambrose Evans-Pritchard. So I've had occasional pangs of doubt: Is it possible that they took me for a ride, embellishing their account for fame and fortune?

"F**k off! It's enough that I have to see you shit-kickers every day, I'm not going to talk to you too!! Just do your G*damn job and keep your mouth shut."

This quote is taken from Christopher Andersen's 2004 book, American Evita:  
[Hillary] also resented [the state troopers'] constant presence and the loss of privacy that entailed. At times, a simple "Good morning, Mrs. Clinton" could provoke an attack. "Fuck off!" she would bark. "It's enough that I have to see you shit-kickers every day. I'm not going to talk to you, too. Just do your goddamn job and keep your mouth shut."
The endnotes for the corresponding chapter reference a number of conversations and print articles but don't indicate which might have been the source for this putative quote.  

"If you want to remain on this detail, get your f**king ass over here and grab those bags!"
This quote appears in Joyce Milton's 1999 book, The First Partner, but no source is provided for it — the statement is simply reported (without detail) as a comment the First Lady purportedly made to an unnamed "agent":  
One [Secret Service] agent, who politely explained to Mrs. Clinton that his duties did not include toting suitcases from their airplane to their limo, was shocked when she replied, "If you want to remain on this detail," get your fucking ass over here and grab those bags."

"Stay the f**k back, stay the f**k away from me! Don't come within ten yards of me, or else! Just f**king do as I say, Okay!!!?"

This quote is taken from (the 1998 edition of) former FBI agent Gary Aldrich's 1996 book, Unlimited Access. The passage in which it appears is part of a section detailing President Clinton's supposed habit of sneaking out of the White House to evade his Secret Service detail while on his way to trysts at a nearby hotel and is attributed to an unnamed source identified as "a senior law enforcement officer with more than twenty years' service in a federal agency":  

 
My source used the term "the first family" rather than simply "the president" because he says Hillary Clinton is as bad as the president. She has told her Secret Service Protective Detail agents in public to "Stay the f--k back, stay the f--k away from me! Don't come within ten yards of me, or else!" When the agents have tried to explain to the first lady that they cannot effectively guard her if they must remain so far away, her reply is, "Just f--king do as I say, okay?"
In 1997, David Brock, author of the American Spectator "Troopergate" article cited above, wrote of Aldrich's book:  
In his best-selling exposé on the Clinton White House, Aldrich reported as fact a wild rumor about Bill Clinton sneaking out of the White House to a Marriott hotel to meet women for trysts. Because Aldrich had been assigned to the White House during the first two years of the Clinton presidency, I had asked him about this piece of gossip, which I'd heard while I was digging for damaging material for my own book. He told me then that he knew nothing about the rumor. [After Unlimited Access was published,] I called Aldrich, who verified that I, in fact, was the sole source for his supposed scoop.  

My public comments, other glaring holes in the book, and Aldrich's loopy tales of X-rated ornaments on the White House Christmas tree led the mainstream press to deep-six Unlimited Access. But as someone who tries hard to practice credible journalism from a conservative perspective, I was outraged when conservative outlets ... let Aldrich brazen it out and perpetrated a hoax on the public by celebrating Unlimited Access as legitimate and well-researched

"Hillary for Pres music videos".
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Sudw4ghVe8

When I searched for Trump for Pres music videos what little found was hugely negative.  

Go do a search of Bernie for Pres music videos and see what you get. You can spend the afternoon listening/watching black, white, Asian young and old get into the 'spirit' of an election.

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