Kenneth T. Cornelius
Active member
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2005
- Messages
- 255
- Reaction score
- 4
I read that URL. Here is a little item that caught my notice that is of more contemporary interest:Pacridge said:Began to imply? Monica didn't "imply" anything of the sort. According to the tapes she out and out said that. "You can't tell any one." There's no impling.
Why would she need to protect her self from an investigation? What charges could result from a man having an affair? And if she was indeed worried about hindering some investigation, which at the time didn't exist, how does recording a private conversation, which was illegal, help her?
You're facts are a little off. Here's an article on Tripp that expands on who she was and what her background was, may give a little insight into her motives:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/clinton/stories/tripp012598.htm
"The Linda Tripp I knew was old school, someone with old-fashioned values," said Tony Snow, a conservative commentator who worked closely with her when he was a Bush speechwriter and she was an assistant in the White House's media office. On her resume, Tripp boasts that during that time one of her assignments was to ghostwrite opinion pieces supporting the controversial nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court.[my emphasis]"
Evidently, the Bushes have been ghost writing material for the media for quite a while. Nothing new at all.