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Sunday, March 23, 2008
Dick Morris and  Eileen McGann :: Townhall.com Columnist
Hillary's Irish Peace Fantasy
by Dick Morris and Eileen McGann
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"I was deeply involved in the Irish peace process"

Those words were uttered by Hillary Clinton — with a straight face!

Ever since she began her campaign for the presidency, Hillary and Bill Clinton have both boldly — and falsely — claimed that she played an important role in the Irish peace process. Suddenly rewriting history, they’ve claimed that her success in bringing peace to Ireland is all part of the vast experience that makes her qualified for the White House.

It’s funny that they both forgot to mention her magical diplomatic skills in their respective memoirs.

But now her recently released White House schedules show that Hillary’s assertions are one big fantasy. Hillary’s role in all of the Irish visits were no different than any other first ladies, the ones who didn’t think that accompanying the president to a foreign country was a major diplomatic coup.

The daily schedules show that Hillary visited Ireland on numerous occasions with the President. For the most part, her role was to stand next to him, shake hands, and occasionally introduce him before he gave a speech. Sometimes, she met with women’s and children’s groups.

For example, on a trip to Ireland in late November and early December in 1995, she attended the speech given by the president in Derry, Northern Ireland. Her role: to shake hands after the speech. Later that day, the first couple traveled to Belfast, where they lit the Christmas tree outside of City Hall. After the Lord Mayor announced the winners of the annual "letter writing and poster contest," Hillary read excerpts from the children’s letters.

When the Clintons flew to Dublin the next day, Mrs. Clinton toured the National Gallery, where she signed the guest book. In the afternoon, she did give a 25 minute speech to about 350 women from all over Ireland. This meeting seems to be at the heart of her exaggerated contentions that she helped the peace process by bringing both sides together. But published reports indicate that the women advocating peace in Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic were well known to each other long before the meeting. And a 25 minute speech outside of government channels was hardly the cause of the end of a bitterness that began almost a hundred years ago. Immediately afterwards, she introduced the president to a crowd of 30,000 people at Trinity College, where he spoke to the Irish people .

In 1997, she participated in a roundtable discussion with students in Northern Ireland and met with representatives of various Youth Councils.

In September 1998, she accompanied the president when he made a speech to the people of Northern Ireland. Noble Peace Price Laureate David Trimbell was present. He recently had this to say about Hillary’s role in the peace process:

“Hillary Clinton had no direct role in bringing peace to Northern Ireland and is a "wee bit silly" for exaggerating the part she played.”

He continued:

"I don’t know there was much she did apart from accompanying Bill [Clinton] going around," Her recent statements about being deeply involved were merely "the sort of thing people put in their canvassing leaflets" during elections. "She visited when things were happening, saw what was going on, she can certainly say it was part of her experience. I don’t want to rain on the thing for her but being a cheerleader for something is slightly different from being a principal player.” Continued...

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About The Author
Dick Morris, a former political adviser to Sen. Trent Lott (R-Miss.) and President Bill Clinton, is the author of Condi vs. Hillary: The Next Great Presidential Race. To get all of Dick Morris’s and Eileen McGann’s columns for free by email, go to www.dickmorris.com
 
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We don't have a choice in our Relatives
We don't have a choice in a lot of things Hillary. We do have the choice to honor those we have been connected to or are brought up with. We all know what you and Bill did with your relatives, and what President Carter did with his. And I don't think that was the correct honoring way of handling relatives you don't like or don’t agree with either, or are ashamed of. I think Obama has done the honorable thing in regards to his former pastor.

Hillary and Bill in their behavior towards people are not honoring. It is part of that polarizing atmosphere that they carry with them; it’s some kind of elitist, snobbish, attitude of entitlement. Where we the majority of the American people, in her perception, seems to be the common untutored masses without good understanding, who have to be tricked and cajoled to do what is best for us like some retarded uncooperative child. Even if her best is wrong.

I think we need to respect people even when we don't agree with them, not cast them away, not kill them, not punish them or have them fired. But acknowledge that we don't agree, share our thoughts with them, and then honor each others right to choose their own way and their own president.

I shudder to think what this country will be like if Hillary gets into office with this dishonoring and categorizing which discards the validity of other peoples opinions. It is dictatorial, and if she acts dictatorial now, God help us when she gets into office with unlimited power and with a Congress and House majority of her same party.

Women yes, Hillary no.
I think our country is ready for a women in the highest office in America, but I don't think, that first women should be Hillary. We need a younger women than Hillary to carry that particular torch. Hillary with her past and her old political mentality, is not the one to be the front runner for a woman the White House. She has too much negative history, she doesn't not have respect of the other nations she would have to deal with, and she is too vindictive and devisive. I feel her and Bill have really brought in the polarization that we are now observing here in the the United States and Hillary is perfecting it to a fine art.
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