Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => The O' Club => Topic started by: JBA on February 14, 2003, 09:56:30 AM
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Treasonous acts of Bill Clinton,
You may not know this: How did china get its nuclear information.
10 months prior to Bills re-election he signed an executive order (doesn’t go throw congress and the senate for approval) to move the over site of the sale of technology to foreign nations from the State Department to the Commerce Department.
The state dept. had for many months and years denied the sale of technology to China, stating that it would bring China 25 years of advancement in their nuclear weapon capabilities
The Head of the Commerce Dep. Jim Brown is and was friend of Bills, the company in questions was a major contributor to his re-election campaign. And let us not forget the Buddhist Monk’s contributions to the same campaign.
Immediately after the executive order was signed the sale went through.
QUID PRO QUO
Thank you, you treasonous bastard.
Classic Bill, pass the problems on to the next guy.
So not only is he the ONLY elected President to be IMPEACHED, Lie to a grand jury, smoke pot, have sex with a subordinate, steal from the white house (us ). Add North Korea in getting Nuclear Weapons ( though Jimmy Carter and Madeline Albight )
but he is also a TRATOR.
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ok..ill be the first in line.. check your history..he wasn't the only or first US President to be impeached..or your other charges.. crack a book sometime
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I think nixon resigned before impeachment
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Didn't Kennedy have an eye for the ladies? And wasn't Bush Jnr fond of the nose dust?
Politicians are politicians are politicians.
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Andrew Johnson was the first US president impeached by congress...Bill Clinton was the 2nd.
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Originally posted by Dowding
Didn't Kennedy have an eye for the ladies? And wasn't Bush Jnr fond of the nose dust?
Politicians are politicians are politicians.
No problems with that Dowding. Lying to the Supreme Court is another matter entirely.
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JBA's post is apparent to me. This will bite us in the bellybutton down the road at sometime...just like befriending Iraq in the late 70's and early 80's has bitten us today.
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more later
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more later
of that, I have no doubt
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Immediately after the executive order was signed the sale went through.
QUID PRO QUO
Sale of what exactly?
Maybe you also should look up Quid Pro Quo too.
Putting the Department of Commerce in charge of Trade? How insidious!!! The Bastard!!!! Obvious Treason!!
BURN HIM!!!
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Will Clinton Follow the Two Andrews?
16 September, 1998
By Bruce Sullivan
CNS Staff Writer
(CNS) When Vice-President Andrew Johnson got too drunk to give a speech at his inauguration with President Lincoln in 1864 he made a bad first impression with Congress. Three years later, they reminded him of the incident when he became the first and only U.S. president to be impeached by the House and brought to trial before the Senate. Johnson escaped ouster from office by one vote, 35-19, a two-thirds majority was needed in the Senate to remove him.
President Andrew Jackson never drank on duty, but he did kill a man in a duel for insulting his beloved wife Rachel, whom Jackson married while she still was legally the wife of her first husband. Some members of the Senate used that fact to attack his character when they censured Jackson in 1834.
However, President William Jefferson Clinton faces an entirely different set of circumstances. He has admitted lying under oath and to the American public and Clinton is facing a bipartisan effort that may bring about censure or impeachment.
The Senate's action against Jackson was the first and last censure of a president and of course Old Hickory protested the motion, which the House did not endorse. Later that year, after the elections, the Senate expunged Jackson's censure from the record.
Both censure and impeachment have been mentioned as possible actions for Congress to take against President Clinton, unfortunately neither President Andrew Johnson's nor President Andrew Jackson's cases can be used for much guidance, except in what not to do.
The main lesson learned from the tale of the two Andrews is that censure and impeachment must not be used for political purposes. When the Senate censured Jackson it was largely the result of partisan feuding between the Democratic President Jackson and the Whig Party led by Senators Henry Clay (KY), John Calhoun (SC), and Daniel Webster (MA).
Jackson and the Whigs disagreed strongly on matters concerning the Treasury and the Bank of the United States. The Senate's censure, while an attempt by the Whigs to weaken the presidency, did not succeed.
President Andrew Johnson also clashed with Congress, particularly over the question of Reconstruction for the newly defeated Confederacy.
Johnson, a Democrat, advanced to the presidency after the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in 1865. Johnson's views on Reconstruction were far more sympathetic to the rights of the defeated confederate states than many members of his Congress cared for and his impeachment was the result.
Most members of the majority party, the Republicans, voted to impeach Johnson and most of the Democrats voted not to impeach their fellow Democrat. However, enough Republicans recognized the political motivation for Johnson's impeachment and voted no, thus sparing him the ignominy of being removed from the presidency by one vote.
Johson was not elected, jackson was censured
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Quid Pro Quo
QUID PRO QUO - Lat. 'what for what' or 'something for something.' The concept of getting something of value in return for giving something of value. For a contract to be binding, it usually must involve the exchange of something of value.
receive money get technology