Archive for the ‘Hillary Clinton’ Category

LISTEN: Speaking of Arkansas – What’s the future of the Clinton House Museum? – Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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Bill Clinton's presidency ended more than 20 years ago, but he remains the first and only Arkansan to have made it to the political Mount Everest, the White House. Well before he and Hillary Clinton were residents at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., they got married inside a small brick house at 930 California Drive in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Today, the house is the Clinton House Museum, a local effort to preserve and commemorate the place where the couple joined friends and supporters to plot out the early days of Bill Clinton's political journey. A house in Hope, Arkansas, is where William Jefferson Blythe was born, but it could be said this house in Fayetteville became the birthplace of his political success, the setting for his first successful run for public office to become Arkansas' attorney general.

The house is owned by the University of Arkansas, which also owns a number of other older houses in the area adjacent to the UA campus. The university leases the home to the board of directors of the Clinton House Museum, which is working to ensure the property's future as a stop on the so-called "Billgramage" is preserved.

In this episode of Speaking of Arkansas, that board's president, former UA professor Stephen Smith, discusses the museum's future, the house's place in political history and the efforts to build an endowment to fund operation of the small museum.

For additional information, visit clintonhousemuseum.org. The museum at 930 W. Clinton Drive is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Thursday through Saturday.

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LISTEN: Speaking of Arkansas - What's the future of the Clinton House Museum? - Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The week in whoppers: Team Biden’s gas-price cluelessness, NPR’s PC silliness and more – New York Post

Diary of disturbing disinformation and dangerous delusionsThis flashback

We forecast that retail gasoline prices will [fall to] $2.88/gal on average in 2022.

US Energy Information Administration, Dec. 7, 2021 (just seven months ago)

We say: Talk about clueless! The national average price hit $5.09 a gallon Thursday, per AAA.

Tampons, a necessity for many, are becoming harder and harder to find.

People who menstruate are saying it's hard to find tampons on store shelves across the U.S. right now, as supply chain upsets reach the feminine care aisle.https://t.co/p5mAPlSwPM

We say: People who menstruate? Gee, what kind of people might those be men? NPRs silly phrase is a natural progression from terms like birthing people, chestfeeding and gender-neutral pronouns like they and xe. But most people know that only one type of person is capable of menstruation (and giving birth): women. And the networks attempt to hide that fact in the interest of political correctness only makes it look ridiculous.

Elon Musk is not a leader. Hes just another Republican billionaire who supports white supremacy and authoritarianism because he doesn't want his workers to unionize or to pay his fair share in taxes.

The GOP just tried to end democracy and now hes supporting them. https://t.co/WArBQQsHK5

We say: Everyones entitled to his opinion, but shouldnt lawmakers like Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-NY) be expected to make sense? Mayra Flores was born in Mexico.

We say: You cant ask for better proof of Salons desperation for clicks (from the left) than this headline. Yet the story, too, absurdly links Christian belief to those who seek violence, claiming its become normal for Republicans to pray for the death of Democratic presidents. Author Thomas Lecaque actually suggests this isnt a fringe phenomenon but part of the core problem of the GOP. Alas, if anything, the evidence he cites GOP politicians like Kandiss Taylor, who used the slogan Jesus, Guns, Babies (hardly a sign she backs violence) but failed to get more than 3% of the vote in Georgias Republican gubernatorial primary last month proves just the opposite.

The [right-wing media are] too reluctant to stand up for the truth in the face of massive lying to call a lie a lie.

Hillary Clinton, quoted in The New Statesman, June 14

We say: Uh, does Clinton mean the right-wing social media that squelched The Posts Hunter Biden laptop story in 2020 and the mainstream media that pooh-poohed it to ensure Joe Bidens win only to later admit it was all 100% true? Is she talking about the medias failure to call out the Russia Collusion hoax that her own campaign launched beginning in 2016? Ha! Shes referring mostly to Trumps (false) claims that the 2020 election was stolen. But who is Clinton to gripe about that when she herself claimed 16 was stolen based on a lie her own campaign promoted?

Compiled by The Post Editorial Page

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The week in whoppers: Team Biden's gas-price cluelessness, NPR's PC silliness and more - New York Post

Yes, actually, the January 6 hearings are more important than the price of gas – Nevada Current

A rogues gallery of conspiracy-pushing celebrity wannabes, grifters, and mere garden-variety windsocks hoping to locate a good-paying government job without the help of a moral compass all endorsed by or embracing Donald Trump won their primaries in Nevada this week. For reasons none of them have explained, all of them promise that if you vote for them the price of gas will go down.

Which naturally got me yet again thinking about the January 6 committee hearings.

And that in turn naturally got me thinking about Liz Cheneys dad and the invasion of Iraq.

Many of the same people who have embraced Trumps Big Lie narrative not only Republicans in Congress whose dishonor will remain, as Cheney the Younger put it in the first hearing, but also a significant portion of the Trumpist electorate were the same people who exhibited fist-pumping excitement and enthusiasm for Cheney the Elders optional war of naked military aggression.

Just as the GOP is the party of Trump now, during the Bush-Cheney years it was the party of war. The war was what defined Republicans and what they believed in, and if you didnt agree with them then as far as they were concerned you were soft on terrorism and didnt support the troops and were anti-American. Things were super ugly then, too, you see.

Going on two decades since Republicans, assisted by Harry Reid, Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, Joe Biden and way too many other Senate Democrats, gave the Bush-Cheney crowd a blank check to go a-warmongering, most of the people who were so very hot for the war in the first place have now modified their strong and heartfelt passion about the issue.

Their new position on Americas runaway war on terror: Never mind.

The day after January 6, I suggested Trump and Trumpism was destined for a similar fate; that Trumps madding crowds, including hordes of sycophantic Republican politicians, would begin to oh so conveniently forget how in thrall they were to Trumpism, and hope that everyone else would politely not remind them of their, well, dishonor.

And on the day after January 6, shocked and stunned by what wed all seen, I assumed the GOPs convenient never-mindism with respect to their full-throated embrace of Trump and Trumpism was already starting. Obviously I was wrong (not unprecedented).

Now, by letting testimony from Republicans, most of them from Trumps own orbit, tell the tale, the January 6 hearings are powerfully demonstrating the importance of unpacking the real events that prompted the insurrection, and the very real crimes committed and condoned by Trump & Co. along the way.

And once again I find myself thinking that Republicans, both elected ones and individual voting ones, will inevitably wrap themselves in comforting cloaks of denial and convince themselves that they were never that into Trump not them and distance themselves from Trump and Trumpism sooner rather than later.

Which brings us back to Nevadas ludicrous GOP primary results.

In the governors race, presumptive nominee Joe Lombardos campaign handlers have echoed Virginia GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkins campaign strategy from last year, basking in Trumps endorsement while striving to keep Trump somewhat at arms length. And while Lombardo has pandered to the stop the steal crowd with deliberately vague (and evidence-free) suggestions that some unspecified something somehow was very wrong with the 2020 election, he has, to his credit (its a low bar in the GOP these days), declined to declare that Bidens victory is illegitimate.

That makes Lombardo unique among the cast of characters launched into the 2022 general election by Nevada Republican primary voters.

Adam Laxalt, Jim Marchant, Michele Fiore, Sigal Chattah, and Sam Peters, candidates for Senate, secretary of state, treasurer, attorney general, and the fourth congressional district, respectively, are only some of the full-on Nevada Trumpists who won their primaries.

Nevada Republican voters are stuck with them, but by now they should be accustomed to such indignities. After all, long-time state GOP chairman Michael McDonald is one of Nevadas dopey fake electors who wittingly or not were at the heart of John Eastmans madcap but very real plot to overturn the election. Or as Mike Pence referred it to, as we learned in Thursdays January 6 committee hearing, rubber-room stuff. Which sounds like McDonald all over.

Nevada Democrats hold the governors office and all but one of the other statewide offices, along with five of the states six seats in the Congress, including Catherine Cortez Mastos U.S. Senate seat that Laxalt wants. Yet those offices are, if not literally, at least figuratively the GOPs to lose this year. The midterm election looked like it would be a bloodbath for Democrats even before large chunks of the electorate hardened their belief that the most existential issue of our age is not the rule of law but the price of gas. (To be fair, that belief is especially likely to take hold in a state where politicians and the powerful interests for which they stand are more inclined to stigmatize public transportation than build it.)

If Nevada Democratic voters do the same thing in the general election they did in the primary check out in resignation and dont bother to vote Nevadans will be subjected to a state chock full of elected officials wallowing in the aforementioned rubber-room stuff. With rubber-room consequences.

The January 6 committee isnt going to change the fundamentals of the campaign cycle. Or not change them much, anyway. The committees investigation isnt going to save the Democrats.

But the January 6 committees investigation isnt about saving Democratic politicians in Nevada or anywhere else. Its about far more important things, like the future of democracy and the rule of law in the U.S.

The prospects of a less frenzied, more sensible nation have seemed dire, even hopeless, as Trump, after slithering away from the White House in disgrace, has not only maintained but strengthened his control of pliant Republicans. Yet the Jan. 6 hearings provide a glimmer of hope that, unlikely as it may seem, hearts and minds can and will be changed, and that Trump and Trumpism will eventually become something Trumps legions, you know, would prefer not to talk about.

No one can be blamed for scoffing at such an optimistic view. Given this miserable timeline, pessimism is warranted.

On the bright side (where Im always looking), there was also a time when it was impossible to imagine the base of Republican voters quietly slinking away from Bush-Cheney militarism as their organizing principle. And yet, as the scale of the oops sank in, they did.

Portions of this column were originally published in the Daily Current newsletter, which is free, and which you can subscribe to here.

Correction: This column initially misidentified the winner of the CD4 Republican primary.

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Yes, actually, the January 6 hearings are more important than the price of gas - Nevada Current

50 years ago, Watergate gave rise to the culture war and corroded our institutions – New York Post

Fifty years ago Friday, five men were arrested for burglarizing the Democratic National Committee at the Watergate complex.That set off a sad chain of events that changed the course of American history and gave rise to an increasinglyleftist ruling class thats weaponized keyinstitutions, includingthe press, national-security apparatus and law enforcement, to achieve its ends.

When I served as foreign-policy assistant to President Richard Nixon during his last years, wed discuss Watergate occasionally.As the 20thanniversary of the break-in approached, he recalled the radicals hostility toward him, ascribing it to his role in exposing and prosecuting establishment darling Alger Hiss as a Soviet spy which also raised the explosive question of Communist influence in the government and his handling of the Vietnam War.

Those who were after me, he said to me, werent interested in Watergate as much as they were interested in getting me on Hiss and on Vietnam. I gave them what they needed, but believe me, Watergate was just the excuse.

Are you saying that if it werent Watergate it would have been something else? I asked.

Thats my theory, he replied. He believed that since he was immune to the intellectual viruses of the leftist elites, they had to bring him down.

This is not to excuse Nixons behavior. His central role in the coverup for which he accepted full responsibility torpedoed his presidency.

He later admitted to having been blind to the threat he posed to entrenched establishment power. There are standards for Democrats, standards for Republicans; then there were standards for me. I was in a totally different category, he told me. I should have known that I . . . couldnt even sneeze . . . without someone ordering an investigation. So to that extent, I was stupid.

After they claimed Nixons scalp, these newly emboldened forces ramped up their efforts to undermine leaders they considered obstacles to their agenda: Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush. Soon they sought to crush all opposition, particularly those they could not control, ferociously attacking Supreme Court nominees such as Robert Bork, Clarence Thomas and Brett Kavanaugh and even average Americans attending Tea Party protests, Trump rallies or school-board meetings.

This required turning critical institutions against us.The Justice Department and FBI became dangerously political, operating a two-tiered justice system in which wrongthinkers (like Gen. Michael Flynn and nonviolent Jan. 6 protesters) are disproportionately punished while leftist elites (like Hillary Clinton and Michael Sussmann) skate.As the outsider who spurned the corrupt establishment in favor of hardworking Americans, Donald Trump represented an existential threat. So these rotted organizations knowingly perpetuated the Russia hoax against a sitting president, crippling America in the process, and buried the truth about Hunter Bidens laptop.

Now theyre targeting parents for defending their kids. The radicals also weaponized education to indoctrinate children to hate America and embrace socialism, critical race theory and abusive sexualization.

The media openly work hand-in-glove with the left and Big Tech to silence speech, cancel dissenters and memory-hole truth.And the culture is directed by a nearly monolithic leftism; witness Disneys disastrous foray into woke virtue-signaling.

This modern cycle of national destruction began when the radicals saw an opportunity to take Nixon out. Though he was often derided as paranoid, Nixon had real enemies committed to his destruction, and he was equally committed to counterattacking, resulting in a harrowing dance of mutual annihilation.

Sound familiar? Those same dark forces will continue to wage ruthless war on anyone else who challenges their unaccountable power and corrupt status quo.

Watergate cast a large shadow over American politics and deepened an existing culture of political mistrust, to be sure.But it also normalized the criminalization of policy differences that has corroded our institutions and accelerated a dangerous tribalism that threatens our national cohesion.As a result, the left and its ruling-class handmaidens have felt increasingly empowered and justified in using all necessary means to achieve their ends.

The break-ins 50thanniversary will give the press a fresh opportunity to resurrect the long-ago scandal while minimizing current outrages, from skyrocketing inflation and gas prices to the open southern border to Biden family corruption.The lefts long march, turning our institutions into weapons of ideological war and torching any opposition along the way, rolls on.In retrospect, its clear theirsuccess in removing Nixon supercharged their mission.

Monica Crowley is the host of the Monica CrowleyPodcast.

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50 years ago, Watergate gave rise to the culture war and corroded our institutions - New York Post

Bill Clinton Did More to Sell Neoliberalism than Milton Friedman – In These Times

In recent years, the term neoliberalism has reverberated across academia, Twitter, and major media outlets. It has increasingly become shorthand for describing and dismissing the centrist and corporatist bent of the Democratic Party, symbolized by Bill and Hillary Clinton. This popularization has also stretched it thin. Broadly, neoliberalism describes the theory of political economy that free markets and government austerity are the best way to create individual freedom and choice. The term also has become away to define the historical period since the 1970s when these ideas of market fundamentalism, disseminated by Milton Friedman and the Chicago school of economics, came to structure seemingly all aspects of governance and spheres of human activity in the United States and much of theworld.

The seeming pervasiveness of these ideas has produced atendency to treat neoliberalism as monolithic and totalizing, which obscures the spectrum of market-oriented thinking and policy. The New Democrats, who helped found the market-focused Democratic Leadership Council (DLC), held adistinctive view of the market and the role of government, which has been consistently overlooked. The roots of this Democratic version of neoliberalism were rooted less in the free-market conservatism of Ronald Reagan and Milton Friedman and more in the liberalism of the New Deal and the Great Society, with its commitment to public-private partnerships and its faith in technocratic expertise to solve social problemsand capitalism to create economic stability, security, and growth. In fact, afaith in markets as avehicle for social change was not new to the New Democrats, but afundamental feature of liberalism through much of the twentiethcentury.

More than the increasingly fraught term neoliberalism, the phrase doing well by doing good better crystallizes the approach of the New Democrats. The phrase has become so frequently invoked in the speeches of Silicon Valley executives and the mission statements of their companies that it seems like atimeless adage. Yet, it came into popular usage in the 1990s largely through the help of Bill Clinton, who readily adopted it. Clinton used it to describe both his administrations approach of enlisting the private sector to address poverty domestically and using free trade and globalization to promote freedom, democracy and human rights around the world. The phrase encapsulates the aspirational belief that it is possible for the market to do good and to achieve traditional liberal goals of equality and providing for those inneed.

Since the New Deal, liberals had advocated for doing well and doing good. However, the form of political economy enacted during the New Deal and, later, the New Frontier and Great Society, understood these as distinct goals. The architects of mid-twentieth century liberalism believed that stimulating capital markets was the best path to creating economic growth and security (doing well). The job of the federal government, as they saw it, was to fill in the holes left by capitalism with compensatory programs to help the poor, like cash assistance and Head Start, and to enact laws that ended racial and gender discrimination (doing good). In contrast, the New Democrats sought to merge those functions and thus do well by doing good. This vision contended that the forces of banking, entrepreneurialism, trade, and technology, which had created the economic growth and prosperity of the 1990s, could substitute for traditional forms of welfare and aid, and better address structural problems of racial and economic segregation. In this vision, government did not recede but served as abridge connecting the public and privatesectors.

The New Democrats treated poverty and other forms of discrimination largely as amarket failure. In response, its adherents looked for ways to both bring the market to poor people of color and to integrate them into the capitalist system. This thinking led to the promotion of programs like microenterprise, which aimed to transform marginalized people into entrepreneurs and savers, and inspired initiatives such as Empowerment Zones and New Markets, which sought to make distressed urban and rural places profitable. The New Democrats also applied market-based tools to areas like public housing, education, and regulation of business, where capitalism had been seen as the problem, not thesolution.

Clinton and his allies extended the values of what historians call racial liberalism: the argument that for marginalized groups, especially African Americans, inclusion in American society and the legal system provided the best means for creating racial equality. At the same time, proponents contended that giving poor people of color the tools to start businesses, open bank accounts, get mortgages, and increase their purchasing power would generate profits and allow them to become engines of economic growth. This approach built on along-standing liberal tradition of drawing on ideas from international development to address poverty in the United States and vice versa. Policies trying to tap emerging markets and stimulate entrepreneurship show how ideas that see poor countries, places, and people as sites of profit came to ricochetglobally.

The New Democrats were genuinely convinced that the market could improve the lives of poor people, alleviate the problems of racial segregation, improve the functioning of government, and maintain traditional liberal ideals of egalitarianism and individual choice and freedom. In fact, the New Democrats often argued that they were simply using new means to achieve the same liberal aims. Unlike free-market fundamentalists like Milton Friedman, the New Democrats believed that both government and corporations had afundamental obligation to do good. They aimed to enlist the private sector to not just line the pockets of large corporations but to also use the resources and techniques of the market to make government more efficient and better able to serve thepeople.

Clinton and his allies routinely referred to microenterprise, community development banking, Empowerment Zones, mixed-income housing, and charter schools as revolutionary ideas that had the power to create large-scale change. These programs, nevertheless, uniformly provided small or micro solutions to large structural or macro problems. Time and again, the New Democrats overpromised just how much good these programs could do. Suggesting market-based programs were a win-win obscured the fact that market capitalism generally reproduces and enhances inequality. Ultimately, the relentless selling of such market-based programs prevented Democrats from developing policies that addressed the structural forces that produced segregation and inequality and fulfilled the governments obligations to provide for its people, especially its mostvulnerable.

Although Clinton started the New Markets tour visiting Ray Pennington, awhite Appalachian coal miner, the New Democrats agenda overwhelmingly focused on Black and brown women who had become the face of the poor in the 1980s and 1990s. In speeches and photo-ops, Bill and Hillary Clinton and their allies routinely celebrated people like aBlack welfare recipient in rural Arkansas who started her own catering business, apoor seamstress in Chile who used aloan from amicroenterprise organization to buy asewing machine and provide for her family, and aLatinx charter school student in Los Angeles receiving atop score on astate achievement test. These images and descriptions of poor people aligned with the meritocratic ethos of the Ivy League graduates of Wall Street, Silicon Valley and the White House. However, these celebrations falsely suggested that market forces could give the vast majority of poor people the power to move out of poverty, overcome racial segregation and control their ownlives.

Although the valorization of poor women of color as hardworking entrepreneurs and savers seemed more compassionate than the infamous Reagan-era image of the welfare queen, it proved no less detrimental. The focus on transforming poor people of color into financial actors contributed to making what was left of the social safety net in the 1990s and beyond only available to those people willing or able to operate within the imperatives and strictures of market capitalism. The celebration of afew individuals who managed to achieve success through market-based programs obscured the fundamental barriers and forms of structural discrimination and uneven development of global capitalism that made it impossible for most people of color in the United States and around the world tosucceed.

Clintons efforts to reward those who played by the rules also continued to stigmatize those poor people who, allegedly, did not. The doing well by doing good ethos, therefore, further legitimizedand operated hand in handwith punitive policies like those contained in the 1996 welfare reform law. It also fit with the tough-on-crime politics of the DLC and the Clinton administration, including the passage of the 1994 crime bill, which led to the vastly disproportionate surveillance and incarceration of millions of African-American men, whom the New Democrats deemed unable to become entrepreneurs, savers, or valuable contributors to the NewEconomy.

The veneration of entrepreneurship to solve social problems also revealed the type of work and worker that the New Democrats valued, and the types of constituencies to which they aimed to appeal. Beginning in the 1970s, this brand of Democrats consistently advocated that the future of both the economy and the Democratic Party lay in shoring up the entrepreneurial postindustrial economy and its college-educated nonunionized workforce. Starting in the New Deal, organized labor and working-class constituents played apivotal role in shaping the base and values of the party. The New Democrats deliberately aimed to constrain the power and influence of the labor movement, and stressed that white middle-class professionals were key to the partys viability going forward. Bill Clintons capturing of the presidency and the soaring of the New Economy in the 1990s seemed to offer affirmation of this theory and strategy. However, it came with major long-term costs and repressions, not least of which are the current fractures within the DemocraticParty.

The labor movement and other social justice groups pushed back on the electoral strategy and policy agenda of the New Democrats. These groups came out in full force to support Jesse Jacksons two presidential bids, in 1984 and 1988, and the different future for the Democratic Party that his candidacy embodied. During the Clinton years, groups mounted protests to specific issues, such as welfare reform, charter schools, free trade and sweatshop abuses. By the 1990s, however, the increased dominance of the New Democrats approach prevented aunified coalition of social movements representing the interests of the poor and working class from coalescing to pressure the Clinton administration into either meaningfully shifting its policy agenda on the economy and poverty or changing its political strategy. Likewise, consistent claims by the Clinton administration and the New Democrats that they were doing good, coupled with concerns about the alternatives offered by the Republicans, blunted the power of these groups and progressive politicians of the Democratic Party to bring more redistributive solutions to thetable.

More than trying to build common ground with social movements on the left, the New Democrats commitment to doing well by doing good ushered in new partnerships among government, corporations, nonprofits, and philanthropic organizations like the Ford and Gates Foundations. The growing popularity of the notion that corporations could both fulfill social goals and make aprofit meant that policymakers could rely on, and often encourage, business and philanthropy to perform functions that were once the domain of the publicsector.

This trend opened new funding streams for solving problems of social inequality. Marshaling companies like America Online, Nike, and Citicorp to improve public education, combat sweatshops, and revitalize distressed urban neighborhoods reinforced the idea that the private sector was better at solving these problems than government. In doing so, it legitimated these private actors to become central players in the development of public policy, especially concerning poverty and inequality. This leaning on large corporations, wealthy tech entrepreneurs, and large private foundations, therefore, removed important mechanisms of democratic accountability and transparency from the policy process. Upon leaving the White House, Clinton, through his own foundation, substantially refined and expanded this model. The Clinton Foundation made it its mission to woo the worlds most powerful interests to help the powerless through partnerships among private companies, wealthy donors, NGOs and underservedcommunities.

The efforts of the New Democrats became critical to solidifying the idea that markets could do good in the popular consciousness. By the end of the 1990s, this consistent celebration of the power of markets would contribute to fortifying the belief among ageneration of idealistic college graduates that the most effective path for enacting social change was to attend business school and work for asocially responsible company, rather than work in the public sector or become aunion or community organizer. This trend is but one example of how Clinton and his allies ultimately did more to sell free-market thinking than even Friedman and hisacolytes.

On the surface, doing well by doing good and win-win are phrases that call on corporations to assume more responsibility for social problems in ways that benefit all parties. But all the policies that flowed from that vision created clear winners and losers. The commitment to doing well by doing good did little to address the unequal distribution of wealth in the United States and around the world. Indeed, this inequity has only intensified since the 1980s, in part due to the economic agenda and unyielding commitment to globalization by the Clintonadministration.

At the heart of the call for doing well by doing good is the idea of erasing the barriers between the public and private sectors. But rather than affirming this idea, the past 30years have instead shown the power in resurrecting those barriers and the need for creating new ones that limit the reach of the private sector, restore faith in governmentand truly create amore equalsociety.

This piece is aslightly edited excerpt from Lily Geismers book Left Behind: The Democrats Failed Attempt to Solve Inequality, available to order from PublicAffairs here.

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Bill Clinton Did More to Sell Neoliberalism than Milton Friedman - In These Times