I call Bill Clinton a rapist on the basis of my personal interpretation of said consensual affair. Throw in a dash of lying under oath for effect.
Again, I don't completely absolve Trump of doing anything. I don't know how much more clear about the subject I can be.
Kyle GriffinVerified account @kylegriffin1
6h6 hours ago
Franken: "There is some irony in the fact that I am leaving while a man who has bragged on tape about his history of sexual assault sits in the Oval Office."
I disagree with you about Clinton. ML has had 20 years to change her tone - rethink her consent. As far as we (I) know, she hasn't.
So I will take her at her word.
She would be in her 40's now
those that did accuse -- perhaps there is/was fire with the smoke
but, they are rarely brought up - unless Fox or Trump uses them for exploitation or to embarrass HRC
.............
you left Clarence Thomas off of your list
It doesn't matter to me about how Monica viewed/views it. She was a doe-eyed, hot-to-trot, subordinate that he used, abused, and tossed aside. It's defenseless.
Throw him on it, especially if there were/are others accusing him. I can't remember if there were.
The difference here is that I'm not telling you that your stance is incorrect, or calling it cowardly or wrong-headed or slimy. I acknowledge that your belief could be perfectly on-point. But I have a different take that I've reasoned out in what I think is a pretty rationally unassailable format. You submit that there's reasonable suspicion here - but posit two cases that are ... flimsy, at best. Your chief evidence is the Access Hollywood tape. You can weigh that how you want.
And, with Lewinsky, did her behavior afterwards reflect opportunism?
Clinton admitted wrongdoing, publicly.
It's just not a good comparison.
(I also perversely enjoy that a man with "the greatest memory in the world" can fail to remember, or only vaguely remember, so many women he's definitively met.)
They are many more than two cases—I just cited two that had formal lawsuits attached, and one that likewise involved legal divorce proceedings, because that was your goalpost (one that, due to the well-documented statistics with respect to reporting-rates for sexual misconduct/assault, along with the obvious psychic/emotional burden entailed by coming forward against powerful men, I think is a silly goalpost anyways—but I digress). Expanding our scope to what I'd argue we should consider, there are actually nineteen separate documented allegations, without even including the bizarre Jane Doe / Jeffrey Epstein "case" from 2016—and that set actually includes a formal, legal complaint about which I'd forgotten: the ongoing defamation suit brought by Summer Zervos after Trump called her (and the eighteen other women, at various times) liars.
So my "chief evidence" is not a mere tape—which, even by itself, should carry some evidentiary weight—but the intersection of that direct admission of a type of behavior with nineteen different women alleging cases of misconduct that conforms to the behavior self-described by President Trump. That is a lot less trivial of a case for reasonable suspicion than you make it out to be; I'd say it is, moreover, a case for strong suspicion.
It doesn't matter to me about how Monica viewed/views it. She was a doe-eyed, hot-to-trot, subordinate that he used, abused, and tossed aside. It's defenseless.
Throw him on it, especially if there were/are others accusing him. I can't remember if there were.
More candid and closer to the truth than anyone will ever get out of him under oath.confession[/i]?
All women are "subordinate" in Christianity. Your characterization is an insult to her. Hot to trot???
Monica was an adult. The "used, abused and tossed aside" claim makes no sense unless you think Clinton was supposed to divorce Hillary and marry her after they got caught.
She was sinnin' just as hard as he was.