It’s becoming painfully obvious that Hillary Clinton’s definition of a “conspiracy theory” is anything that contradicts her lies
Watching Hillary Clinton run from a hardball question like a roach from Raid should give every American a sense of satisfaction
beams
Benny Huang.
When a reporter asked the former Secretary of State about the Project Veritas undercover videos,
which featured disgraced former Democratic operatives Scott Foval and
Bob Creamer bragging about provoking violence at Trump rallies and
perpetrating mass voter fraud, Clinton panicked and pulled the plug on
the entire press conference. “I know nothing about this,” said Clinton.
“I’m not — I can’t deal with every one of [James O’Keefe’s] conspiracy
theories but I hope you all have something to eat and something to drink
on the way back to New York. Thank you!”
Conspiracy theories? Was she really trying to imply that
videotaped confessions from two of her surrogates amount to a
“conspiracy theory?” Yes, she was. It’s become something of a habit for
her—every time Hillary wants to deny plain facts she calls them a
“conspiracy theory”—which is quite delicious coming from Ms. “Vast
Rightwing Conspiracy” herself.
To call something a “conspiracy theory” doesn’t reveal much about its
validity. Of course, some conspiracy theories are legitimately kooky.
Tune in to Coast to Coast AM for a while to see what I’m talking about, or listen to Jesse Ventura expound on secret US government weather control machines
in Alaska. Most of these loony conspiracy theories originate on the
political Left, by the way, such as the assertion that Lee Harvey Oswald
was “sheep-dipped” to look like a communist so that JFK’s real capitalist/imperialist murderers could make a clean getaway.
But other conspiracy theories are at least plausible. Whenever two or
more people plot in secret, that’s a conspiracy. Anyone who suspects
that a conspiracy’s afoot is by definition a conspiracy theorist. If
you come home from vacation to find a car parked on your lawn and the
back yard strewn with red Solo cups, you might suspect that your
teenaged sons conspired to throw a raging party. That’s a conspiracy
theory. Watergate was a conspiracy among at least the four burglars. The
ensuing coverup was a conspiracy that reached all the way up to the
president. Watergate has been proven to most people’s satisfaction so we
don’t think of it as a “theory” anymore, but there was a time, in the
nascent stages of the investigation, when the whole picture was not yet
known. In other words, it was a conspiracy theory—and yet it turned out
to be true.
Hillary Clinton employs the term “conspiracy theory” because of its
derisive connotation. What she means by it is that a certain
accusation—in this case that her campaign has engaged in illegal
election tampering—is so absurd that it would be a waste of her time to
respond. It’s crazy talk. File it over there with alien abductions and Illuminati shadow governments.
Unfortunately for Hillary, the “conspiracy theory” alleged by Project
Veritas happens to be very credible. Just listen to Democratic
operative Scott Foval’s videotaped confession:
“We’ve been busing people
in to deal with you f***ing assholes [Republicans] for fifty years and
we’re not going to stop now. We’re just going to find a different way to
do it.”
Foval’s “different way” is using rental cars rather than buses
to get impostors from polling place to polling place on election day.
That’s a conspiracy theory for sure but not an unreasonable one. It’s
the same old shenanigans Democrats have been pulling since the heyday of
Tammany Hall. Lying, cheating, and ballot box-stuffing—it’s what
Democrats do. Richard Dailey did it in Chicago, Lyndon Johnson did it in
Texas, and Hillary Clinton’s doing it nationwide.
Hillary Clinton and her media sycophants have gotten a lot of mileage
out of the “conspiracy theory” dodge this election season. When Mrs.
Clinton was haunted by persistent rumors of ill health the media
countered them with accusations of conspiratorial thinking. In a column
conveniently titled “Can We Just Stop Talking About Hillary Clinton’s
Health Now?” the Washington Post’s Chris Cillizza wrote:
“Beyond the Clinton conspiracy theorists who believe she had something
to do with Vince Foster’s death and that she was secretly responsible
for everything from Y2K to the SpaceX explosion last week, it’s hard to
plausibly insist, based on the available data, that Clinton is ill.”
HuffPo contributor Melissa Jeltsen went even further, blaming both
conspiratorial thinking and—you guess it!—bigotry:
“Let’s get real: The wild conspiracy theories around Clinton’s health
are a convenient way to mask misogyny inside ‘legitimate’ medical
concerns.”
As it turns out, those “conspiracy theories” weren’t so “wild” after
all. Hillary Clinton later collapsed after a 9/11 memorial service but refused to go to the hospital
for fear that her critics would be proven right. Thank goodness for
camera phones—if the incident hadn’t been recorded Hillary would be
claiming that it never happened while maligning anyone who said
otherwise as a nutty conspiracy theorist—and the press would be helping
her. After the incident, Clinton admitted (or “admitted”) that she was
stricken with walking pneumonia, a conveniently transitory illness. If
you suspect that she suffers from a more permanent medical condition
you’re probably a “conspiracy theorist.” It’s becoming painfully obvious
that Hillary Clinton’s definition of a “conspiracy theory” is anything
that contradicts her lies.
The “conspiracy theorist” epithet has become the media’s lazy retort
to every possible attack on their candidate—and make no mistake about
it, she is their candidate. Earlier this month, CNN contributor Jackie Kucinich dismissed talk
of Bill Clinton’s sexual assaults on various women as “conspiracy
theory land,” which is frankly outrageous. Bill’s accusers form a line
around the block, almost as long as Bill Cosby’s. We know at very least
that he’s a sexual harasser and, if the most serious accusations lodged
against him are true, a rapist as well. He has a track record that
simply cannot be denied. Oddly enough this “conspiracy theory” would
actually be a conspiracy theory if, as Kucinich implies, the accusers
were lying because it would imply some shadowy group working behind the
scenes to smear Bill Clinton with an endless barrage of slander. The
simpler, non-conspiratorial explanation is just that Bill is a horndog
off his leash.
Jackie Kucinich is in fact a bona fide member of her own little
conspiracy. In April 2015, the Clinton campaign held an “off the record”
cocktail party with friendly reporters
hosted at the Manhattan home of prominent Clinton supporter Joel
Benenson. Among those journalists (if you can call them that) was Jackie
Kucinich. According to a hacked email:
“Much of the group consists of
influential reporters, anchors, and editors. The goals of the dinner
include: (1) Giving reporters their first thoughts from team HRC in
advance of the announcement (2) Setting expectations for the
announcement and launch period (3) Framing the HRC message and framing the race (4) Enjoying a Frida[y] night drink before working more.” [Emphasis added.]
While many reporters on the list have impotently protested that their
presence at the event does not amount to media coordination with a
campaign, it’s hard to make the case that Kucinich is not a Clinton
lackey after she spouted Clinton campaign talking points about Bill’s
predatory nature on national television. It takes a certain gall for
Kucinich, one of Hillary Clinton’s known co-conspirators, to go on
television and whine about “conspiracy theories.”
Nearly everyone on earth harbors “conspiracy theories” because
conspiracies really do happen. Most people, however, prefer not to think
of their own conspiracy theories as such because of the negative
connotation associated with the term. Some conspiracy theories are
downright silly but others are quite plausible. There are enough real
conspiracies in the world to concentrate on the ones that are reasonably
substantiated, such as Hillary Clinton’s coordination with dirty
tricksters Scott Foval and Bob Creamer. As the conspiracy theory
television program The X-Files used to say, “The Truth Is Out There.” Don’t be afraid to pursue it.