Hillary the Other Woman: A Political Memoir
A Review
Bill Clinton might well be the love of Dolly
KyleÕs life, and, in his peculiar kind of way, she might be his. They met at that most formative time of
their lives, on the cusp of puberty, on the golf course at Hot Springs,
Arkansas, the city where they both grew up (Bill had moved away from his native
Hope at the age of seven.) She was
eleven years old and he was almost thirteen. They would become classmates at Hot
Springs High School after she, something of a prodigy, skipped two grades, and
they would date regularly, though she writes that they never Òwent
steady.Ó They were also not yet
lovers in the purest physical sense; that would come later.
Kyle would remain a virgin through high school,
she writes, and would not become the sort of person to excite BillyÕs (as she
and his childhood friends called him) deeper interests (I write), until she had
been drugged and raped by one of BillyÕs friends and turned somewhat
promiscuous, she says, as a consequence.
The original ÒthunderboltÓ did not follow a direct romantic course. ÒIt did, however,Ó she writes, Òbond us
together in a liaison that evolved from puppy love to dating to friendship to a
passionate love affair. We talked,
flirted, laughed, cried, prayed, sang, walked, danced, wrote letters, made
love, broke up, reconnected, and did it all again and again and again. Whatever that thing was between Billy
Clinton and me, it lasted for decades—transcending state lines, oceans,
marriages, societal prohibitions, and political considerations.Ó
How Hillary came to be regarded as Òthe other
woman,Ó in her view, is revealed in this passage in which Kyle uses the
nickname ÒChillyÓ that she had put on Hillary. Billy had just confided to Dolly by
phone that he had moved in with a female law school classmate at Yale and made
it sound more like an economic convenience than anything else, though Dolly
knew that it was more:
Billy said that he had told Hillary all about me. On the other hand, however, he didnÕt
say very much to me about her. He
spoke as if she were not, and never would be, an issue between us.
In a strange way, even though Billy and Chilly
eventually married, she never was an issue between us, other than an annoyance
that had to be considered in scheduling our time together. Hillary was always Òthe other womanÓ as
far as BillyÕs attention went.
As adults, Billy Clinton and I were both dysfunctionally comfortable in rationalizing that our relationship predated the ÒBilly and
Chilly Show.Ó After all, I was only
eleven years old when we met on the golf course in Hot Springs, and he was only
twelve, going on thirteen.
It had started innocently enough, and grew into
a deep friendship before becoming an affair. Thus our affair was, and always would be
to us, somehow, okay. Yes, that is
classic rationalization.
One gathers from this book and from elsewhere
that socially and sexually and in any sort of romantic sense, Hillary has never
been anything more than an annoyance to Bill, and a very big, sometimes violent
and abusive annoyance, at that. Bill
regularly referred to her as Òthe Warden,Ó after all, according to Dolly. What with BillÕs famous philandering,
the sexual and romantic shortcomings of the Clinton marriage are readily
deduced by anyone. The following
passage gives one an idea of what a liability Hillary was to Bill socially, at
least in Arkansas:
To whatever it may be worth historically, Billy
went without Hillary to our tenth Hot Springs High School reunion. He also went without Hillary to the
fifteenth reunion, and to the twentieth, and to the twenty-fifth, and to the
thirtieth. The thirtieth included
the infamous scene between the two of us that was immortalized under oath in the impeachment
investigation. Hillary also did not
attend the forty-fifth or the fiftieth reunions.
I am not a politician, and I have been to many
of my high school reunions in rural Eastern North Carolina. My wife is not from anywhere near there,
but it has never occurred to us that we would not go as a couple.
What Bill has always seen in Hillary, as Dolly
sees it, is economic security, as though that original mooching on her living
quarters at Yale sort of took on a life of its own.
Hillary took the role of financial provider from
the beginning, or so Billy told me.
HillaryÕs financial support enabled Billy to indulge in his addictions
to politics, power, and sex. In the
same way, in BillyÕs childhood home, his mother had assumed the role of
supporting the family financially while his stepfather, Roger Clinton, indulged
in his addiction to alcohol.
Explaining how Bill could have chosen a wife so
different from his extroverted party girl of a mother, she guesses that itÕs
HillaryÕs similarity to his first care giver, his maternal grandmother who had
custody of him for the first four years of his life while his mother was off at
nursing school, that at least made Hillary acceptable to him:
ÉI have heard that BillyÕs grandmother was Òthe
meanest woman in southwest Arkansas.Ó This unkind assessment came from folks
who I considered to be reliable sources.
BillyÕs grandmother may, in fact, not have been the meanest woman in
southwest Arkansas, but that sure is the impression that people had about her. And it would have been little BillyÕs
impression of his grandmother at the deepest emotional level.
When Hillary came to Arkansas, she gave people
that same mean impression. Without
quibbling over the accuracy of those assessments, one can still draw the
conclusion that both BillyÕs grandmother and Hillary Rodham said and did things
which caused people around them to describe them as mean.
So why did Hillary marry Bill? HereÕs DollyÕs take on it:
ÉHillary was a lawyer, a graduate of Yale, and
reputedly smart and highly ambitious.
She wanted a career in Washington.
How perfect. With her
personality, she needed someone charismatic like Billy, and he needed someone
willing to work, as his mother had, to provide his security.
Billy had also complained that I was a
distraction to him. Clearly,
Hillary was not.
Another reason why Hillary would have wanted to
marry Bill is hinted at in this exchange that Bill had with Dolly, starting
with DollyÕs question to him:
ÒWhy are you so dead set on having a baby
anyway? It doesnÕt appear that you
have the time to take care of one.Ó
ÒPolitically, it doesnÕt look good. We need to have a baby so we can appear
to be a normal couple. We need to
do something serious to take attention off the WardenÕs lifestyle.Ó
Billy did not
use the word lesbian.
HillaryÕs marriage to Bill—or to any
man—might have been for the same purpose.
A Night to Remember
The night of May 28, 1974, must have been truly
traumatic for Kyle. She got to see
this rival Hillary for the first time and she also had it indelibly revealed to
her what a truly low-character man she had fallen for. I could not do a better job of
describing DollyÕs shock from meeting Hillary and her reaction to BillÕs
betrayal of his political mentor and career benefactor, Senator William
Fulbright, than the Daily Mail of
London has done without reprinting her whole chapter, so at this point I invite
you to go read it and then come back: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3633977/Bill-Clinton-s-lover-Dolly-Kyle-tells-lumpy-Hillary-fat-ankles-hair-toes-schemed-LIE-60-Minutes-Bill-s-affairs.html
Quite an experience wasnÕt it. As it turned out, the Daily Mail struck again a week later,
saving me some more time at the keyboard for this review: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3635882/Hillary-Clinton-called-disabled-children-Easter-egg-hunt-f-ing-ree-tards-referred-Jews-stupid-k-s-Bill-called-Jesse-Jackson-damned-n-r-claims-Bill-s-former-lover.html
At this point you might want to do an Internet
search of ÒDolly Kyle Hillary Clinton.Ó
Notice that you have to look a long time before anything comes up on any
site that one might call U.S. mainstream press. Related to that non-coverage of the
revelations in Hillary the Other Woman,
on page 46 we have this passage: ÒHillary is fortunate to have most of the
mainstream media running interference for her, but her anger is now so close to
the surface that even the media wonÕt be able to save her from herself in every
instance.Ó
I really wouldnÕt count on that last prediction,
but one must admit that Kyle is definitely right about that Òrunning
interferenceÓ part. It is beyond the scope of her book to
address the question as to why that might be the case. Had she done so, it wouldnÕt have
surprised me if she had reached for some psychological explanation. She tells us at one point that she took
39 semester hours of psychology as an undergraduate, something that I would not wish upon anyone.
With the one tool of a hammer in her head, every
question she tends to see as a nail.
I think it might have led her to make the following observation about
the experience of growing up in the biggest illegal gambling center in the
country: ÒBilly had an incredible,
lifelong sense of immunity. It
seems that he never had to experience the negative consequences of his actions. I think that he picked up much of that
attitude from the pervasive societal ÔnormÕ of illegality in Hot Springs as we
were growing up there.Ó
The ClintonsÕ ÒImmunityÓ Explained
That might explain why Bill might not expect to experience the negative
consequences of his actions, but it would not explain why his expectations have
turned out to be correct in instance after instance after he left the small
stage of Hot Springs. For that one
must turn to the penultimate paragraph in my review of The
Money and the Power: The Making of Las Vegas and its Hold on America by
Sally Denton and Roger Morris. As
an organized crime center Hot Springs, Arkansas, was a little Las Vegas, even
before there was a Las Vegas. See
also my reviews of L.D. BrownÕs Crossfire, R.
Emmett TyrrellÕs Boy Clinton, and Roger Stone and Robert MorrowÕs The
ClintonsÕ War on Women for an explanation not only of why BillÕs expectations of
immunity turn into reality but also why the press runs interference for him and
his wife. Bill gives every
indication that he has been on the CIA payroll for a very long time, and that
organization is involved in a lot more than foreign intrigue, whatever the
legal restraints against its domestic activities might be. Through his likely connections to
organized crime and, especially, to the CIA Bill has two bases covered in the
Deep State that controls our media and our political system.
Using this approach we might not need any of
KyleÕs psychological, or even economic, explanations for the Clinton-Rodham
union. They did meet at Yale, after all. We learn from Joyce MiltonÕs The First Partner, Hillary Rodham Clinton that the man who got
Hillary her first job out of law school, working on the staff of the House
Select Committee on Watergate, was her Yale law professor, Burke Marshall. We learn from Wikipedia that the illustrious
professor Marshall was, himself, a Yale Law product and, like both Bush
presidents, a graduate of Yale and of Phillips Exeter Academy. Most telling, perhaps, is that between
undergraduate and law school, Marshall worked for Army intelligence in World
War II. To complete the picture, see
my article ÒSpooks on the HillÓ to learn about the
illegal but widespread infiltration of the Congressional staff by the CIA.
For the record, James Hamilton, as the man purported
to be the Vincent Foster family attorney but seemed to be working for the
Clintons instead, played a prominent role in the cover-up of FosterÕs likely
murder. Hamilton was assistant
chief counsel of the Senate Watergate Committee and is also a product of Yale
Law School.
That brings us to our next topic.
Vince Foster
There is one important question on which Kyle
and I are very close to the same wavelength, and that is the death of deputy
White House counsel Vincent Foster. ItÕs touched on in that second Daily Mail article, but to find any further
mention online of what she has to say about FosterÕs death one has to dig a
little more deeply than that popular British tabloid. I found it at bizpacreview.com, and it doesnÕt say much,
and what it says is a bit misleading: ÒIn the
end, Kyle has very little nice to say about Hillary including her doubts of
HillaryÕs innocence over the death of Vince Foster.Ó Kyle believes that Foster was murdered,
but she doesnÕt suggest that Hillary was directly involved in the murder.
Her 42nd chapter is entitled ÒJust
Another Suicide,Ó and itÕs about the Foster case. She begins by saying that
Foster, a partner of HillaryÕs at Little RockÕs Rose Law Firm, Òknew the facts
about HillaryÕs double-billing practices that had enabled her to receive
questionable foreign money with strings attached.Ó She then runs through a lot
of other sensitive and legally dubious things that Foster was associated with
or privy to, any one of which might have been responsible for his murder, and
concludes the chapter this way:
Vince Foster spent the weekend before his death
at the home of big-time Democratic operative Nathan Landow.
Kathleen Willey would be taken to that same home
of Nathan Landow over a weekend to be pressured into
silence after she reported that Billy Clinton had sexually assaulted her in the
Oval Office. Kathleen had enough to
deal with in her life after the death of her husband; she was not going to
continue talking about ClintonÕs assault on her.
Vince, on the other hand, more than likely
responded to the weekend pressure by giving voice to his concerns about ethics
and morality and the right thing to do.
That would not have been comforting to the co-presidents when they heard
LandowÕs report about the weekend meeting with Vince,
who died two days later.
Hillary ClintonÕs White House assistants removed
boxes of files from Vince FosterÕs office before the possible
crime scene could be examined by those investigating his death.
Vince FosterÕs office safe was opened and
emptied by HillaryÕs people.
Vince FosterÕs death was ruled to be a suicide.
No, I do not believe that Vince Foster committed
suicide.
You donÕt have to believe what I believe, but
know this. The news of Vince
FosterÕs death was being talked about in beauty shops here in Little Rock
before his dead body was found in Fort Marcy Park.
What she probably did not know is that the major
contributor to Democratic politicians and primary backer of Al Gore, Nathan Landow, had been nominated to be ambassador to The
Netherlands by President Jimmy Carter, but the nomination had been derailed
when his joint casino investments in the Bahamas with members of the Meyer
Lansky organization and the Gambino family came to light. It is also of some interest that The Washington Post reported that Foster
had been at the estate of LandowÕs son-in-law,
Michael Cardozo, never mentioning Landow and
CardozoÕs relation to him. Factoring
all that information in, we are back into the territory of the criminal Deep
State, of which The Post is
demonstrably a part.
KyleÕs revelation about the early scuttlebutt in
Little Rock about FosterÕs death also fits with the observations of the
witness, Patrick Knowlton, in the case.
At a time that Foster was already lying dead in the back of the park, Knowlton
saw a Honda in the parking lot of Fort Marcy Park with Arkansas license plates
that was markedly older and of a different color from FosterÕs Honda. That suggests that Foster
was lured to a clandestine meeting in the park by someone from the
Clinton inner circle, someone he trusted.
That person would have notified others in the inner circle as soon as the deed was accomplished, likely by an experienced assassin. It would have taken only one member of
the inner circle to share the news of FosterÕs death with someone in Arkansas,
and it would have been all over the Little Rock grapevine with lightning speed.
This scenario for how Foster met his end
explains why none of the investigations and no one in the press has addressed
the question of when Foster left the White House compound, with whom, and by
what means of transportation. They
have told us when he left his office and when he left the White House proper,
but theyÕve said nothing about what the perimeter guards saw and what the White
House outer surveillance cameras captured.
Furthermore, neither the investigators for Robert Fiske or for Kenneth
Starr looked into any long distance telephone records to see who might have
been calling numbers in Arkansas, not even to confirm the belated claim that
Foster had been prescribed an anti-depressant by his Arkansas physician based
upon FosterÕs phone call, a prescription that they say was filled by a pharmacy
in Georgetown, based upon another long distance telephone call. One must suspect an ulterior reason for these
omissions.
Dolly Kyle has written an extraordinarily
revealing book that, in the end, probably reveals even more than she realized.
Full Disclosure: In the 50th and final
chapter, Kyle shows how my Seventeen Techniques of Truth Suppression have been used to permit
the Clintons to get by with their appalling, even criminal, behavior. She gives me full credit both in her
book and in an excellent presentation that she gave last
month to a group in White Plains, New York, which is well worth an hour of your
time to watch. She also paid me the
courtesy of requesting my permission before reprinting her paraphrase of my
work in her book.
David Martin
September 28, 2016
See also ÒDolly Kyle, Vince Foster, and the Ku Klux Klan.Ó
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