It's nice to have a president who is not so sleazy that not a
single Supreme Court justice shows up for his State of the Union
address (Bill Clinton, January 1999, when eight justices stayed
away to protest Clinton's disregard for the law and David Souter
skipped the speech to watch "Sex and the City").
Speaking of which, the horny hick's wife finally ended the
breathless anticipation by announcing that she is running for
president. I studied tapes of Hillary feigning surprise at
hearing about Monica to help me look surprised upon learning that
she's running.
As long as we have revived the practice of celebrating
multicultural milestones (briefly suspended when Condoleezza Rice
became the first black female to be secretary of state), let us
pause to note that Mrs. Clinton, if elected, would be the first
woman to become president after her husband had sex with an
intern in the Oval Office.
According to the famed "polls" -- or, as I call them, "surveys
of uninformed people who think it's possible to get the answer
wrong" -- Hillary is the current front-runner for the Democrats.
Other than the massive case of narcolepsy her name inspires, this
would cause me not the slightest distress -- except for the fact
that the Republicans' current front-runners are John McCain and
Rudy Giuliani.
Fortunately, polls at this stage are nothing but name
recognition contests, so please stop asking me to comment on
them. "Arsenic" and "proctologist" have sky-high name recognition
going for them, too.
In January, two years before the 2000 presidential election,
the leading Republican candidate in New Hampshire was ... Liddy
Dole (WMUR-TV/CNN poll, Jan. 12, 1999). In the end, Liddy Dole's
most successful run turned out to be a mad dash from her husband
Bob after he accidentally popped two Viagras.
At this stage before the 1992 presidential election, the three
leading Democratic candidates were, in order: Mario Cuomo, Jesse
Jackson and Lloyd Bentsen (Public Opinion Online, Feb. 21,
1991).
Only three months before the 1988 election, William Schneider
cheerfully reported in The National Journal that Michael Dukakis
beat George Herbert Walker Bush in 22 of 25 polls taken since
April of that year. Bush did considerably better in the poll
taken on Election Day.
The average poll respondent reads the above information and
immediately responds that the administrations of presidents
Cuomo, Dole and Dukakis were going in "the wrong direction."
Still and all, Mrs. Clinton is probably the real front-runner
based on: (1) the multiple millions of dollars she has raised,
and (2) the fact that her leading Democratic opponent is named
"Barack Hussein Obama." Or, as he's known at CNN, "Osama." Or, as
he's known on the Clinton campaign, "The Soft Bigotry of Low
Expectations."
Mrs. Clinton's acolytes are floating the idea of Hillary as
another Margaret Thatcher to get past the question, "Can a woman
be elected president?" This is based on the many, many things
Hillary Clinton and Margaret Thatcher have in common, such as the
lack of a Y chromosome and ... hmmm, you know, I think that's
it.
Girl-power feminists who got where they are by marrying men
with money or power -- Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, Arianna
Huffington and John Kerry -- love to complain about how hard it
is for a woman to be taken seriously. Continued... |