Hillary
Rodham Clinton
According
to Edward Klein's vicious new book The Truth About Hillary, our former
first lady, New York state senator and front runner for the Democratic presidential
nomination in 2008 smoked pot while a student at Wellesley college, with
her boyfriend David Rupert. She and Rupert also "marched against the
Vietnam War and talked endlessly about changing society," Klein wrote,
citing as his source Gail Sheehy's book Hillary's Choice.
According
to Klein, Hillary met Bill Clinton at a commune called Cozy Beach, where
her Yale Journal of Law and Social Action co-editor Kris Wilson and
Bill's friend Jeff Rodgers (the son of William Rogers, President Nixon's
secretary of state) lived. Cozy Beach was affiliated with Ken Kesey's Oregon
Hog Farm and the Magic Bus riders were said to be regular visitors. "During
their remaining time at Yale, Bill and Hillary often grooved the night away
at Cozy Beach, spinning the latest Jefferson
Airplane platters and eating Kris Olson's hashish brownies." (Source:
Horn, Rebels in White Gloves) The Spring 1970 debut issue of the
Yale Journal included an article that proposed the migration of like-minded
leftists to one of the fifty states for "the purpose of gaining political
control.... Experimentation with drugs, sex, individual lifestyles or radical
rhetoric and action within the larger society is an insufficient alternative.
Total experimentation is necessary."
Klein
couldn't fault Hillary on her intelligence or dedication; in fact he says
she works 12-14 hour days in the Senate and has been praised even by Bill's
enemies for her firm grasp on the issues. By all acounts a brilliant legal
scholar, Rodham worked at the DOJ during Nixon's impeachment and kept Reagan
from gutting funding for the legal aid offices she'd worked to set up nationwide.
But she's been unimaginative on the drug issue, following the pitiful party
line of the dolorous Dems. During President Bill Clinton's last week in
office, he told Rolling Stone magazine he thought marijuana ought
to be legalized. But in a Senate debate in Manhatton on Oct. 8, 2000, Hillary
took the middle road, advocating drug courts and weekly drug testing for
those with an "addiction." Johnson and Johnson, who funds the
Partnership for a (non-Prescription) Drug-Free America, is one of her corporate
clients and she and Bill have divested themselves of their blind trust which
earned them $5-25 million since he left office by investing in pharmaceutical
companies (GlaxoSmithKline, Prizer, Abbott Laboratories and Eli Lilly) as
well as Dow Chemical, DuPont and Chevron, royal Dutch Shell and Exxon Mobil.
See Presidential Hopefuls on Pot.

Copyright 2007
VERY
IMPORTANT POTHEADS
Debunking
Myths About Marijuana