welp...I dunno kids...I think it's happening like we said it would:
‘Mayor for Hillary’ Arrested for Allegedly Trading Meth for Gay Sex Orgy
‘Mayor for Hillary’ Arrested for Allegedly Trading Meth for Gay Sex Orgy – Blazing Cat Fur
	 Boca Vista     @bocavista2016
     Boca Vista     @bocavista2016                                               
         
                    The Union boss who helped Hillary win PA is raided by the FBI. Hillary's media is SILENT.   
#HillaryCoverageIsCrap
https://twitter.com/bocavista2016/status/762409538611978240
let's revisit the olden days kids:
Clinton Admits To 'Wrong' Relationship With Lewinsky
  President reverses earlier denial; asks the matter be ended
  
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
   WASHINGTON (AllPolitics, Aug. 17) -- Breaking seven months of near  silence, President Bill Clinton admitted Monday night that he did, in  fact, have an  inappropriate and "wrong" relationship with ex-White  House intern Monica Lewinsky, but insisted he did nothing illegal. 
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   "I know that my public comments and my silence about this matter 
gave a  false impression. I misled people, including even my wife," Clinton  said, his voice breaking slightly. "I deeply regret that." 
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   Clinton's four-minute address to the nation followed an afternoon of  closed-door testimony for a federal grand jury looking into how Clinton  answered questions about his relationship with Lewinsky in a deposition  in the Paula Jones sexual-harassment case last January. 
   "While legally accurate, I did not volunteer information," Clinton said. 
     
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
 Watch Clinton's speech in its entirety in: Real: Windows Media  
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56K or read a complete 
transcript  
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
 Clinton Deposition In Jones Case: 'I've Never Had An Affair With Her' 
"Indeed I did have a relationship with Ms. Lewinsky that was not  appropriate. In fact, it was wrong. It constituted a critical lapse in  judgment and a personal failure on my part for which I am solely and  completely responsible," he said. 
    The president gave his  televised address from the Map Room in the  private residence of the White House, where he had faced prosecutors  from Independent Counsel Ken Starr's office  for more than four hours  earlier in the day. 
During his testimony, sources tell CNN the president  did admit to having sex with Lewinsky.   
   "But I told the grand jury today, and I say to you now, that at no time  did I ask anyone to lie, to hide or destroy evidence or to take any  other unlawful action," Clinton said. 
   
In Clinton's public comments, the word "sex" was never spoken and the  word "regret" was only used in reference to his admission that he misled  the public and his family over the last seven months about his  relationship with the former White House intern. 
   Clinton explains honesty gap
   The president's admission was a stunning reversal from his forceful, and  now infamous, public statement last January when he said, "I want to  say one thing to the American people. I want you to listen to me ... I  did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss Lewinsky." 
   Explaining his misleading public positions, the president said they were  motivated by a desire to protect his family and "myself from the  embarrassment of my own conduct." 
   Word that Clinton was changing his story began leaking out Sunday night,  a development that was characterized by one family friend as  "wrenching" for his wife Hillary and daughter Chelsea. 
   The first lady did not appear with her husband during his speech, but  did have a hand in crafting the speech, sources tell CNN. The  president's personal attorney David Kendall was strongly involved. 
   The president began writing his speech Sunday night, and sources say  that the original version was much more apologetic than the one  delivered by the president. 
  
'Even presidents have private lives'
   As it is all but certain Starr will send a report to Capitol Hill, the  president's fate will most probably land in the lap of Congress. 
   With that in mind, some of the president's comments seemed targeted at  lawmakers, reminding them and the public that the Lewinsky investigation  was prompted by what he described as the "politically inspired," and  now dismissed, Jones case. 
   The president also had pointed words about Starr's four-year Whitewater  investigation. "I had real and serious concerns about an independent  counsel investigation that began with private business dealings 20 years  ago, dealings I might add about which an independent federal agency  found no evidence of any wrongdoing by me or my wife over two years  ago," Clinton said.
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   Instead, the president urged the public -- and  Congress -- to put the  matter to rest and allow him to deal with his family and the work of the  nation. 
   "Now, 
this matter is between me, the two people I love most --
 my wife  and our daughter -- 
and our God.  I must put it right, and I am prepared  to do whatever it takes to do so. Nothing is more important to me  personally.
 
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   "
But it is private, and
 I intend to reclaim my family life for my  family. It's 
nobody's business but ours," Clinton said in the most  direct and forceful declaration of the speech. "Even presidents have  private lives.  
   "This has gone on too long, cost too much and hurt too many innocent people," Clinton said. 
  
President has way to go to heal the breach
   Come Tuesday morning, the president will have  more explaining to do to his closest friends and advisers. 
   Aides and supporters who have been standing by Clinton during the worst  crisis of his presidency were said to be saddened, disappointed and in  some cases feeling betrayed by the president's about-face. 
   But Vice President Al Gore was one of the first to make a public  statement of support for his boss. While vacationing in Hawaii, Gore  released a statement saying he was proud of the chief executive. 
   "Along with the rest of the country, I watched the president's televised  address in which he took full responsibility for his actions and  apologized to the nation," Gore said. "I'm proud of him -- not only  because he is a friend -- but because he is a person who had the courage  to acknowledge his mistakes. 
   "I am honored to work with this great president on his agenda to the  nation, and I believe that it's time to put this matter behind us --  once and for all -- and move forward with the business of the United  States of America," Gore said. 
   Meanwhile, the Clintons have decided to delay the family's departure for  a 12-day vacation in Martha's Vineyard until Tuesday afternoon to give  the president time to call friends and supporters to explain his  actions, aides said. 
           
Clinton Admits To 'Wrong' Relationship With Lewinsky - Aug. 17, 1998
you lyin' sack of sh!t.