Page 217 - Lunacy and the Age of Deception
P. 217
The key words to note in the FBI and Justice Department ruling are “found no evidence.” The
evidence lay primarily in thousands of e-mails from within the IRS. The e-mails were never made
available for Congress to review as Ms. Lerner claimed that the computer hard drive on which they
resided had crashed and was subsequently thrown away. I don’t believe she was disappointed at this
extremely coincidental event which prevented Congress from examining the evidence.
As hard as it is to conceive of such events occurring even once, they tend to occur quite commonly.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton experienced a similar issue when she became embroiled in the
Benghazi scandal. It was discovered that Hillary had opted to keep her official government e-mails
on a private server, even e-mails rated top-security, a clear violation of government policy. When
Congress wanted to review her e-mails to discover her level of involvement with the events of
Benghazi, her departure from government policy was discovered. Rather than turning the server over
to Congress and letting them sift through its contents, Hillary Clinton cherry-picked certain
documents to share with Congress, while withholding others. Clinton turned over 30,490 messages
that she and her team deemed to be work-related. Clinton and her staff said they destroyed 31,830
messages which they determined to be personal. The private server was then subsequently wiped
clean. Whoops! There goes the evidence.
“You mean wiped, like with a cloth?”
Yes, Hillary actually asked that question, feigning ignorance of what it means to “wipe” a computer
hard drive. There is a term used for such deceptive actions. It is “cover-up.” Cover-ups occur all the
time. Evidence disappears. Whistle-blowers are silenced. Lies and obfuscation are the order of the
day. We live in a very dark world. If lying and bearing false witness were not such a common
transgression of fallen man, Yahweh would not have prohibited them in the Ten Commandments.