- Feb 3, 2003
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This is a interesting article on our president for 8 years, from a perspective of his senior advisor.
Just to recap, during Clinton's 8 years he presided over a time of unprecedented prosperity, economic growth, and the largest Budget surplus in our Nation's history. Only thing republicans remember him by is getting a hummer from Monica and denying it.
Heres a except from the article:
Just to recap, during Clinton's 8 years he presided over a time of unprecedented prosperity, economic growth, and the largest Budget surplus in our Nation's history. Only thing republicans remember him by is getting a hummer from Monica and denying it.
Heres a except from the article:
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2003/05/05/blumenthal1/index.htmlClinton was a man who came from nowhere; overcame all obstacles by virtue of his own intelligence, skill, and attractiveness; and then, having achieved his goal, gave in to his weakness. It was a mundane weakness, a most ordinary weakness. He did not give in to it for money, power, status, or fame. He did not do it out of mean-spiritedness, resentment, or cruelty. What he did was not a crime. It was part of the same personality that got him to the White House, with his need for affirmation, attention, and affection. He was a character with large appetites and desires, and a surplus of human nature, not unlike Henry Fielding's Tom Jones, the good-natured, life-loving figure who falls into follies of his own making as he tries to fend off the vicious connivances of others. The tragic aspect, the inexorable drama, was that this least unconscious president knew that what he had done was stupid. He understood that he had given in to his weakness. He had known that it was a mistake, but he made it anyway. It hurt his wife, Lewinsky, and himself. He knew, moreover, that this was not like the Kennedy era, when private lives had been kept private. He knew hateful pursuers were seeking to hurt him, and he knew he had the Jones case before him. Yet with this self-centered act he set himself up. And he knew it. Stunned by the situation, he did what most husbands would do: he tried to protect his wife, his daughter, and his own privacy. He acted as a man, not as a president. But the collision of roles could not be avoided.
