maxparrish, are you upset that the market has voluntarily paid the Clintons for their product?
Depends. What's "their product"?
maxparrish, are you upset that the market has voluntarily paid the Clintons for their product?
Free speech.maxparrish, are you upset that the market has voluntarily paid the Clintons for their product?
Depends. What's "their product"?
Fixed for you.Depends. What's "their product"?Free speechinfluence.
I was hoping it was self-evident.Fixed for you.Free speechinfluence.
Fixed for you.Free speechinfluence.
Corporations aren't spending 100's of millions for nothing. No ex-president has anything valuable to say to help a business' bottom line. Remember Bush Sr not knowing what a supermarket check-out scanner was? You think he has the expertise to help a company into the 21st century. How about Bush Jr and his record of business failures as well as political failures. Yet both of them are on the corporate speech gravy train. They pay so current politicians know what to look forward to if they play ball while in power.How do ex-presidents being paid for speeches equal buying influence? Ex-presidents are no longer in positions of power to do anything.
You forgot - money = speech in the USA.Fixed for you.Free speechinfluence.
Fixed for you.
Jesus Christ. This has been going on for 200 years. Because a woman is using the system, everyone is up in arms. Where was all this fake outrage when Bill Clinton, GW, Reagan and every other politician was paid for their speeches.
maxparrish, are you upset that the market has voluntarily paid the Clintons for their product?
Depends. What's "their product"?
Depends. What's "their product"?
The speeches that they deliver. That's what companies are paying for.
Precisely why they're paying for them is anyone's guess. Perhaps the senior executives need a speaker to turn their shareholder-funded holiday into a 'corporate retreat'. Perhaps being seen to pay outrageous fees to have empty platitudes directed at you is a conspicuous consumption of the corporate elite: we're doing so well, we're paying a Bush for advice! Or perhaps the companies really do think that there are good business or motivational dividends that can be yielded from the speeches.
The point is, the Clintons have a product and the market is paying for it voluntarily.
Depends. What's "their product"?
The speeches that they deliver. That's what companies are paying for.
The speeches that they deliver. That's what companies are paying for.
Heh. I seems obvious to most everyone who has ever heard her that Hillary is not that gifted a speaker.
If we accept that Hillary's large speaking fees are a product of her wonderful speeches we are left to puzzle over other observable facts.
Why doesn't she use her speaking talents to sell out large auditoriums?
Why don't people flock to her campaign events where her wonderful speeches are being offered gratis?
What is this magical something in her speeches that makes them so uniquely appealing, but only to wealthy corporations with business before the government?
Heh. I seems obvious to most everyone who has ever heard her that Hillary is not that gifted a speaker.
If we accept that Hillary's large speaking fees are a product of her wonderful speeches we are left to puzzle over other observable facts.
Why doesn't she use her speaking talents to sell out large auditoriums?
Why don't people flock to her campaign events where her wonderful speeches are being offered gratis?
What is this magical something in her speeches that makes them so uniquely appealing, but only to wealthy corporations with business before the government?
It seems obvious to most everyone who has ever heard him that Justin Bieber is not that gifted a singer.
It seems obvious to most everyone who has ever heard him that Justin Bieber is not that gifted a singer.
Unlike Hillary, he does (or did) seem to be able to sell tickets to actual people acting in their capacities as individuals.
Call me when the only gig Justin Bieber can get is playing for huge dollars for Goldman Sachs and we'll discuss why only Goldman Sachs thinks he is such a great singer.
Heh. I seems obvious to most everyone who has ever heard her that Hillary is not that gifted a speaker.
If we accept that Hillary's large speaking fees are a product of her wonderful speeches we are left to puzzle over other observable facts.
Why doesn't she use her speaking talents to sell out large auditoriums?
Why don't people flock to her campaign events where her wonderful speeches are being offered gratis?
What is this magical something in her speeches that makes them so uniquely appealing, but only to wealthy corporations with business before the government?
WARREN: President Clinton had been showing that this is another way that he could be helpful to business. It wasn't a very high visibility bill. And when Mrs. Clinton came back with a little better understanding of how it all worked, they reversed course, and they reversed course fast. And indeed, the proof is in the pudding. The last bill that came before President Clinton was that bankruptcy bill that was passed by the House and the Senate in 2000 and he vetoed it. And in her autobiography, Mrs. Clinton took credit for that veto and she rightly should. She turned around a whole administration on the subject of bankruptcy. She got it.
MOYERS: And then?
WARREN: One of the first bills that came up after she was Senator Clinton was the bankruptcy bill. This is a bill that's like a vampire. It will not die. Right? There's a lot of money behind it, and it…
MOYERS: Bill, her husband, who vetoed…
WARREN: Her husband had vetoed it very much at her urging.
MOYERS: And?
WARREN: She voted in favor of it.
MOYERS: Why?
WARREN: As Senator Clinton, the pressures are very different. It's a well-financed industry. You know a lot of people don't realize that the industry that gave the most money to Washington over the past few years was not the oil industry, was not pharmaceuticals. It was consumer credit products. Those are the people. The credit card companies have been giving money, and they have influence.