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Monday, June 30, 2008
Dr. Paul  Kengor :: Townhall.com Columnist
Ms. Hillary's Comeuppance
by Dr. Paul Kengor
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It was springtime. The year was 1969. The spirit of la revolucion was in the air.

Ms. Hillary Rodham and her Wellesley sisters sat in the crowd awaiting words of inspiration from their speaker. The commencement speaker that year was Senator Edward W. Brooke (R-MA), who in 1966 became the first African-American elected to the U.S. Senate since Reconstruction. Brooke came to extend his congratulations to the 401 women. It was a good speech, perfectly reasonable—but not to Hillary Rodham.

The young Hillary was dissatisfied. She judged that the good senator had missed the paramount issues of the time. That was an opinion she did not keep to herself, as the Wellesley brass soon learned in horror. Indeed, the powers-that-be at the college had decided that this commencement would be the first in which a graduating senior was permitted to speak. Hillary ensured that the administration would regret its decision.

Though she had spent weeks preparing an approved text, Hillary Rodham tossed aside the script as she approached the platform. She then launched into a point-by-point rebuttal of the senator’s remarks, with all the moral certainty, righteousness, and wisdom of a 21-year-old Poli Sci major from the suburb of Park Ridge, Illinois. “We feel that for too long our leaders have used politics as the art of the possible,” lectured Ms. Rodham. “And the challenge now is to practice politics as the art of making what appears to be impossible, possible.” She spoke of her and her generation’s struggles with an “inauthentic reality,” a “prevailing acquisitive and competitive corporate life,” and their yearning for “a more penetrating … existence.”

She continued her stern—it has been called “scathing”—rebuke of Senator Brooke, one that would get national press, with an excerpt published in Life magazine and a front-page article in the Boston Globe the next day, the latter of which delightfully reported that Rodham had “upstaged” Brooke. And though the liberals at the Globe would enjoy this latest moment of enlightenment from the campus community, many of the parents were appalled. Who was this petulant brat?

Agree or disagree with her message, Hillary’s treatment of Brooke was rude, not to mention surprising for a young lady who spent the decade fighting for civil rights. Here, after all, was the first black American elected to the Senate in a century. On the other hand, her behavior was all-too-symptomatic of liberal resentment toward black Republicans.

Hillary’s band of sisters, however, was thrilled. Despite her clumsy use of incoherent ten-cent words and meandering messages, they responded with a standing ovation, or, as more than one source has put it, surely exaggerating the length of the duration, “enveloping her in a thunderous, seven-minute standing ovation.”

To Hillary, the roar of the crowd signaled approval of much more than a brash response to authority; this was a send off, a commencement alright, a beginning of grander things from a honed Hillary Rodham, ready to take her slice out of history.

Brooke was humiliated, as was the Wellesley administration. Brooke would return to the U.S. Senate, where he continued to represent a moderate voice. Hillary Rodham would go to San Francisco, where she interned at a notorious law firm widely known to be run by communists. (Don’t believe me?—the firm was called Treuhaft, Walker and Burnstein. Look it up.)

That was decades ago. I hadn’t heard anything from Brooke in while. Not too long ago, President George W. Bush honored him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom—due recognition for a man of milestones in the cause of civil rights.

That changed recently when I read an article on black Republicans supporting Barack Obama’s bid for the presidency. Among the black Republicans extending a hand across the aisle is one Edward W. Brooke, former senator of Massachusetts and former commencement speaker to the Wellesley class of ’69.

With the flag of the revolution passed from Hillary to Barack Obama, the AP reporter quoted Brooke as being “extremely proud and confident and joyful” over Obama securing his party’s nomination. Brooke, who now lives in Florida, did not say if he would endorse Obama over John McCain, but he was thrilled to see the Illinois senator take the party nomination from the former Ms. Hillary Rodham—and for reasons (beyond race) not expanded upon by the AP.

Gee, what could be his reasons?

It took almost 40 years, but it seems that Senator Edward W. Brooke has alas seen Ms. Hillary Rodham receive her comeuppance.

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About The Author
Dr. Paul Kengor, author of spiritual biographies of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, has just published God and Hillary Clinton and The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan's Top Hand. He is a professor of political science and executive director of the Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.

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Senator Edward W. Brooke has alas ...
What are you, 12 years old? Do you really think that Ed Brooke has been nursing a grudge for 39 years about a speech by a 22-year-old at a commencement? That seems to be to be extremely insulting to Sen. Brooke. The man's 88 years old, and you owe him an apology. I only met him once when he was my senator, but he had more dignity in his little finger than you apparently have in your entire brain.

Munck--
You still hanging around here spewing venom? Got nothing better to do? Get lost, jerk.

The Clinton woman would have gone nowhere (and was going nowhere) until she mated up with that draft-dogding sexual pervert and rode his coattails into the White House (what does that say about our pathetic electorate, that it would vote for someone like that).

The Clintons: that scummy pair also needs to get lost, for the good of our country.

OK, Munck, drop the gun


You're awfully determined to throw cold water on Mr. Kengor and anybody who feels moved.

So? It's a great story! Even if Sen Brooke is 40 years late having his last laugh; we won't write it off as trivial. From his POV it's monumental. Not just that SHE (who must be obeyed) has this disappointment. But most of all that the fly she finds in her biscuit is a Black Senator ! After all these years!

Too bad I can't vote for the commie-lib. I derive some comfort in that nobody'll vote for the Hildebeast this time.

Brooke Gloating?
"Even if Sen Brooke is 40 years late having his last laugh; we won't write it off as trivial. From his POV it's monumental."

I realize that Kengor's hatred for the Clintons burns with a white-hot flame (as does yours), but it's insulting to claim with absolutely no basis in fact that Brook is in any way gloating or feeling vindicated; I believe he's above any such crassness. All we know is that Brooke after the race was over expressed pride in the fact that a colleague of his is the candidate of a major party for president; both of them have made major breakthroughs for blacks in national politics. Kengor, hack that he is, dances around the fact that it's entirely his own speculation, based probably on his own limited emotional range.

Rodham & Brooke
Democrats showed no love for a black Republican forty years ago and even less now. If you are black,you must be a Democrat to get any respect from the liberal Democrats.

Hillary has always had an affinity for socialists. So has Obama. They were their mentors and that philosophy has carried them through to today.




Munck
And you, sir, have no dignity at all.

But that is not the problem. You also have no intelligence. You have missed the point. Karma does happen, and it happened this year to a couple of truly awful people, Bill and Hillary.

Rowly 11:15 PM EST
"Democrats showed no love for a black Republican forty years ago and even less now. If you are black,you must be a Democrat to get any respect from the liberal Democrats."

In the late 70's I spent a long period working at NRL and living in Boston, so I was commuting on a weekly basis. I was almost always on the same AA flight back to Logan as most of the New England congressional delegation. From my personal observation, Tip O'Neill, Ed Brooke, Ted Kennedy, Clayborn Pell, Bob Drinan (my congressman), and the others all got along just fine.

DocJ 11:59 PM EST
"Karma does happen, and it happened this year to a couple of truly awful people, Bill and Hillary."

I disagree. I think that Hillary is going to come out of this in fine shape, and be a major power in the Senate and the nation's politics for many years to come.

Bill, on the other hand, has done himself a fair amount of harm. It's my hope and belief that he'll be able to recover from it, but his days in the spotlight may be over.

1969
In that year, many 21-year-old thought (?) that they knew more than older people, especially anyone over 30.

So it is not surprising than HRC delivered such insulting remarks, and continued to lecture the USA on her views of what the USA should be.

If her married name was not Clinton, she would never have reached as far as she did, only to fall to the affliction shown by by ancient Greek dramatists, Hubris.

Her whole life has been a gigantic lie; consider the various scandals she has been involved in. A person without honor!

Finally the citizens recognized her for what she is: a power-mad harridan.

Lady Macbeth she ain't; just another of the 3 witches.

Instead of slipping gracefully into oblivion she will continue to bedevil the country with her delusions of grandeur.

Consider her statement about Bobby Kennedy.

It ain't over until the fat lady sings. She will be the Phantom of the Senate.

Watch the next 20 years of her (and Willie boy's) life. She ain't going away while there is mischief to be done and damage to the USA.

Character
"You can fool some of the people all of the time
and all of the people some of the time but you can't fool all of the people all of the time."
Abraham Lincoln

Enough people saw the real HRC to vote for the other candidate and stop her triumphant return to the White House, to which she evidently felt entitled.

So she immediately started trying too wangle the VP slot.

The woman has no honor; consider all the scandals she has been involved in. Some people might forget but enough remember.

Character is still a necessary requirement for our national leader. And that she ain't got.

'Nuff said. Move On."

Bob Munck
If the author had indicated that all Senator Brooke had thought about since 1969 was retribution against HRC then I would agree that this would be improbable and inappropriately paint Senator Brooke as petty. I don't believe the author intended this nor did I read any insult to Senator Brooke in what was written.

When Brooke learned that HRC was the same woman who had been so rude at that commencement he had to follow her life in the White House and her life in the Senate with a little more than average curiosity. The knowledge that Obama will carry more delegates than her into the DNC has to please him. This isn't necessarily as a result of any grudge. It is merely the result of a man who understood first hand how intolerable it would be to have such a rude and dishonorable woman in our White House as president.

A few corrections
Burke was not only the first Black elected since Reconstruction--but the first Black EVER elected to the Senate.

Rowly (#5) is almost on the nail with "If you are black,you must be a Democrat to get any respect from the liberal Democrats". I'll amend it to "If you are black, you must be a Dhimmicrud to avoid stabbed in front by liberal Dhimmicruds--who will still stab you in back".

Senator Brooke
I imagine Babwa Wawa made him forget all about Hillary.

Bob Munck ...
True to form, you are still slinging crap. Hillary is a self-serving low-life. And Bill is a pervert. So, where does that leave us?

Not with either of them heading back into the White House as President and First Mutt. I am overjoyed that that is a circumstance the ain't happening.

I reckon Brooke (if he has some lucidity and memory left for an 88 y/o) has to think just a little bit about the little twit that attacked him all those years ago. I am a nearly 60 y/o, and I still remember a few of the ignorant folks I met 39 years ago, some of them I hope someday to see get a taste of comeuppance. It could happen. It did for Brooke.

I agree, 'nuff said. Munck, if you don't like these TH article writers, go somewhere else! Or at least ... go away.

Huzzah
"but he was thrilled to see the Illinois senator take the party nomination from the former Ms. Hillary Rodham"

Me too, baby, me too.

No more Clinton scum in the White House, ever again.

We dodged a bullet
"Enough people saw the real HRC to vote for the other candidate and stop her triumphant return to the White House, to which she evidently felt entitled."

Exactly. The "Hillary" presented last fall as the answer to all our prayers couldn't survive the light of day.

One could point to many moments, but the sniper fire whopper proved her to be so self-deluded as to be a potential catastrophe if she ever managed to ooze into the White House.

SHe'll be the next VP
Obama needs her to guarantee himself the White House. He told Hillary that there was only ONE way she could get the nod at VP: If it was absolutely clear to everyone that it was HIS decision.

"So, Hillary," Obama said, "shut the hell up and you'll get it." She immediately quit her campaign for the VP slot and has been uncharacteristically quiet.
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