• March 28, 2024

Bill Clinton’s Ex Lover Reveals Bill and Hillary’s Racism

US President Bill Clinton (R) gives a thumbs up sign with First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton (L) as they took to the stage prior to addressing the people of Buffalo, New York at the Marine Midland Arena 20 January. This is the first official trip of Clinton to Buffalo and comes after his State of the Union speech to Congress.        (ELECTRONIC IMAGE)            AFP PHOTO/Stephen JAFFE ORG XMIT: BUF99
Thanks terrorist nations.  Your checks cleared my bank.

Hillary calls Donald Trump a racist on a daily basis but he never called a group of mentally ill children “f*^#ing retards” and to my recollection he never called Jewish people “stupid K*^es” or “Jewish Ba*^$rd”.  And his spouse nor himself never called Jesse Jackson a “G*d Damned Ni**er”.  Nor did they use the same words to describe Robert ‘Say’ McIntosh, a black activist in Little Rock.  Hillary and her husband have.  Dolly Kyle first met Bill Clinton when she was 11 years old and when they were in high school, they dated.  After graduation, they began sleeping together and that continued even after he married Hillary.

She has now written a book called, “The Other Woman” in which she revealed many secrets of the Clintons.  The Clintons resented McIntosh because he dogged Bill about patronizing black prostitutes, a charge that Clinton never denied.  He was later accused of fathering a child with a black prostitute with a black hooker, but he took a paternity test, which proved he was not the father.  Kyle says that a black news caster used to brag about her relationship with the governor, but it was only oral sex between them.

In 1988, Bill Clinton tried to replace a black politician with a white one.  The Supreme Court ruled against him.

From Newsmax:

“The court, by an 8-0 vote, ruled against an appeal by Gov. Bill Clinton and other Arkansas officials that had challenged the election of Ben McGee as a state legislator,” the Associated Press reported on Dec. 12, 1988. McGee is an African-American.

“The case began when blacks in Crittenden County filed a voting rights lawsuit attacking the county’s at-large system for electing two House members. The suit contended that the system deprived black voters of a chance to elect a black to the House.

A special three-judge federal court had agreed earlier in the year that the system violated the federal Voting Rights Act.

The three-judge court threw out the results of a March 8 primary election in which the black candidate McGee, was defeated by James Stockley, the white candidate handpicked by Gov. Clinton for the Democratic nomination.

“That was tantamount to election on Nov. 8, since no Republican ran for the seat,” the AP said.

Clinton and the other state officials had argued that the federal court improperly threw out the results of the first primary and ordered a new election.

The very next year, Clinton was sued again.  Also from Newsmax:

In the 1989 case, “the evidence at the trial was indeed overwhelming that the Voting Rights Act had been violated,” reported the Arkansas Gazette on Dec. 6, 1989. (The paper later became the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.)

“Plaintiffs offered plenty of proof of monolithic voting along racial lines, intimidation of black voters and candidates, other official acts that made voting harder for blacks,” the Gazette said.

A federal three judge federal panel ordered Clinton, then Arkansas Attorney General Steve Clark and then-Secretary of State William J. Mc Cuen to draw new boundaries to give maximum strength to black voters.

“Until last year,” the Gazette complained at the time, “in more than a thousand legislative elections, the (Arkansas) delta region sent not one black to the legislature. Last year, the federal district court split a multimember district in Crittenden County that had submerged the large number of black voters in the county.”

He was also sued over a racial profiling program that he initiated.  He gave state police permission to stop any car that was being driven by an Hispanic, checking for drugs.  That was ironic.  He was accusing the Hispanic community for the drugs in Arkansas.  Previously, his brother Roger was convicted for drugs and everyone in the supply line were white.

From Newsmax:

But a decade earlier he approved the profiling of Hispanics by Arkansas State Police as part of a drug interdiction program in 1988, the Washington Times revealed in 1999.

“The Arkansas plan gave state troopers the authority to stop and search vehicles based on a drug-courier profile of Hispanics, particularly those driving cars with Texas license plates,” the Times said.

“A federal judge later ruled the program unconstitutional, the paper reported. “A lawsuit and a federal consent decree ended the practice – known as the ‘criminal apprehension program’ the next year.”

Then Gov. Clinton, however, not only criticized the profiling ban, “at one point, (he) threatened to reinstate the program despite the court’s ruling,” the Times said.

“The state’s position was to give away a . . . program that we’re now trying to get back,” Clinton announced at the time, saying the race-based stop and search program was more important than even airport security measures.

Three years later in 1991, Clinton actually did implement a modified version of the profiling program that prohibited the use of ethnic screening but allowed troopers to continue to stop cars on the highway at their discretion.

Hearing Clinton’s condemnation of racial profiling in 1999, Roberto Garcia de Posada, executive director of the Hispanic Business Roundtable, complained that the then-president “had been a strong supporter of racial profiling against Hispanics in the past.”

“He does not have the moral authority to lead a national campaign on this issue. If President Clinton truly meant what he said . . . he should apologize to all those Hispanics who suffered this ‘morally indefensible’ practice, which he publicly supported,” de Posada said.

On Thursday and Friday both ex-President Clinton and his wife, Democratic Party presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton, criticized Republicans for trying to suppress the black vote in states like Arkansas and Florida. But reporters declined to ask either Clinton about the well documented record of black voter disenfranchisement in Arkansas while they ran the state.

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