speaking of hildebeast and Benghazi, she got shredded In absentia at the Republican debate tonight. Rubio bitch slapped her on it. in fact, most of the candidates bitch slapped her. 
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/o...027-story.html
                                                                         Whoa, before the campaign caravan moves on: Did you see what happened?
We've  spent the week digesting news media autopsies of Hillary Rodham  Clinton's 11 hours before a U.S. House committee investigating the raid  on American compounds in the Libyan port city of Benghazi. By most  accounts Thursday's hearing was a bastardized baseball game — the mound  crowded with hurlers pitching wildly, and a lone batter adroitly  swatting everything they threw at her.
   To a point, that's spot-on: Chairman Trey Gowdy of South Carolina  focused on the murders of Ambassador Chris Stevens, foreign service  officer Sean Smith and CIA contractors Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods.  But too often his Republican colleagues, Peter Roskam of Illinois  included, descended into frantic sneering. On demeanor, style and  effectiveness, Clinton won the ballgame.
But that's just part of  the story. Only one person in that hearing room wants to be president of  the United States. And as the day lengthened, Americans watching for  more than impressive theatrics peered through a new window into her  trustworthiness. As a result, events arguably shaped by the presidential  campaign of 2012 are shaping the presidential campaign of 2016.
                   
The Benghazi probe is unveiling records that don't flatter Clinton or her State Department. Recall the context:
On  Sept. 6, 2012, President Barack Obama told the Democratic National  Convention: "A new tower rises above the New York skyline, al-Qaida is  on the path to defeat, and Osama bin Laden is dead." Five nights later,  attackers hit the outposts in Benghazi. Had an administration that  boasted of quelling terrorism left the four Americans vulnerable to  terrorists on the anniversary of 9/11?
About 10 p.m. that night,  Clinton issued a statement that said in part, "Some have sought to  justify this vicious behavior, along with the protest that took place at  our Embassy in Cairo yesterday, as a response to inflammatory material  posted on the Internet."
But on Thursday we learned that, at 11:12  p.m., Clinton emailed her daughter, Chelsea: "Two of our officers were  killed in Benghazi by an Al Qaeda-like group." No hateful video, no  protest. On Sept. 12 Clinton revealed more. According to State  Department notes, she told Egyptian Prime Minister Hesham Kandil, "We  know that the attack in Libya had nothing to do with the film. It was a  planned attack — not a protest. ... Based on the information we saw  today we believe the group that claimed responsibility for this was  affiliated with Al Qaeda."
Yet on Sept. 14, when the four  flag-draped coffins returned to Joint Base Andrews, Clinton said at the  Transfer of Remains Ceremony: "We've seen rage and violence directed at  American embassies over an awful Internet video that we had nothing to  do with. It is hard for the American people to make sense of that  because it is senseless, and it is totally unacceptable." Tyrone Woods'  father, Charles, who took notes, says Clinton said to him, "We are going  to have the filmmaker arrested who was responsible for the death of  your son."
Did Clinton convey her knowledge of "a  planned attack — not a protest" to her confidante Susan Rice, then the  U.S. ambassador to the U.N.? Hard to know. In several TV appearances on  Sept. 16, Rice blamed the Benghazi assault on the video. Obama, too,  went uncorrected publicly by Clinton after he told a Sept. 20 forum  hosted by Univision: "What we do know is that the natural protests that  arose because of the outrage over the video were used as an excuse by  extremists. ..." In a Sept. 25 speech at the U.N., Obama cited the video  six times.
For a solid two weeks, then, the administration  emphasized a narrative that, apart from questions of accuracy, offered  shelter from pre-election criticism.
Pressed Thursday on her  conflicting public and private statements, Clinton blamed early  confusion. Maybe so, although for three years she hadn't volunteered  that she was saying different things to different people about such a  deadly, embarrassing event, let alone why.
The hearing should  silence complaints that because other committees explored Benghazi, this  investigation can reveal nothing new. The committee has interviewed  some 55 witnesses and will question 20 others by year's end. The  committee and its staff have been relatively quiet about their findings,  which will come in a written report.
All of us can see in this  probe that patience yields fresh findings. So does a long campaign.  Americans complain about these multiyear marathons. But the longer the  cycle, the more we learn.
Yes, this is a new window into a  candidate's honesty but perhaps not the last, most revealing window.  Maybe Clinton now will explain to voters why, with her Benghazi outpost  in cinders and her ambassador dead, she didn't publicly acknowledge a  terror attack — and why she let Rice and Obama speak mistakenly.
With  more witnesses to testify and many more emails from Clinton's private  server to become public, no one knows whether more revelations —  exculpatory or damning — await discovery.
We do, though, know why  those witnesses will speak and why we even know about Clinton's emails  such as the startling one to her daughter: because this House committee  has been digging where earlier investigators didn't bother to look.
                       
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