The Hillary Papers, or the Diane Blair papers, whom Hillary Clinton once described as her closet friend wasn’t supposed to get out into the public. What the Hillary Papers reveal about Clinton is just how ruthless she really is. Prior to this release, Hillary Clinton was best known for being fired from Watergate committee for fraud, ethics violations. But tonight, the Free Beacon reveals in never before seen memos what Hillary Clinton is truely all about. There’s even the Clinton ‘Sex Files’ which has yet another woman named Kathleen Willey who claims that BJ Bill Clinton sexually assaulting her. This was in 1997, before the whole Monica Lewinsky fiasco.
The Free beacon’s uncovering of these Blair memos reveals so much about Hillary Clinton. Progressive liberal will love the fact that she’s for a single-payer health care system, like they have in Cubs. Hillary Clinton also didn’t like all those ‘whiny women’ back in her days as first lady, because she needed Republican Senator Bob Packwood to help her get HillaryCare passed.
Hillary Clinton’s blunt assessments were not confined to Monica Lewinsky. In a Dec. 3, 1993, diary entry, Blair recounted a conversation with the first lady about “Packwood”—a reference to then-Sen. Bob Packwood, an influential Republican on health care embroiled in a sexual harassment scandal.
“HC tired of all those whiney women, and she needs him on health care,” wrote Blair. “I told her I’d been bonding w. creeps; she said that was the story of her whole past year. Fabio incident—sweeping her up, sending her roses.”
Privately, the Clinton White House was acutely sensitive to public perceptions of President Clinton’s treatment of women.
Supreme Court nominations were not immune from such considerations. In a three-page May 11, 1994, memo, Blair recounted her phone conversation with President Clinton about reservations he had about his preferred nominee to the high Court, the late Arkansas Judge Richard Arnold.
Noting Clinton allies had “really been trying to keep the women’s groups in line since Paula Jones filing,” Bill Clinton, according to Blair’s account, was concerned feminist groups “might blow sky high” if he appointed Arnold to the Supreme Court. Arnold had ruled that the Jaycees club could bar women from full membership—a decision later overturned by the highest court in the land.