trite
TRIAL retrospect "In the fine tradition of MSNBC's Time and Again, (and
again, and again) we took a look back on a magical time in America when
presidents ran free, members of congress lost their jobs, and a chubby
girl with a Pepsodent smile reminded us all of our own child hoods, living
in Washington on mom and dad's bill.
Remember the arguments?
· It was never about sex, it was about perjury.
· It was never about perjury, it was about sex.
· No man is above the law and no man is beneath
it.
· Sexual indiscretion is not a high crime or misdemeanor
worthy of impeachment.
· Finally we can now move on with the business
of the country.
· The American public never cared about the president's
private life.
· I never knew we had so many constitutional experts.
· A crowd of poorly conditioned, middle aged, white
guys are as menacing on Capitol Hill as they are guzzling Jack in a hunting
lodge - just without the silly hats.
· Two strawberries in my carburetor are worth six
in your gas tank
· A small bird in the hand is worth a giant lizard
skiing in Aspen.
· That snow blower snickering in the tree is wackier
than the duplicitous buzzard that made off with my Kentucky walking stick.
It was a different time in America. A time when lawyers
quit for TV, when TV would quit for nothing. No one living at the time
could forget the war of rhetorical haymakers that gave pundits jobs, left
justice ignored, and put the country to sleep.
Once a scandal revolving around questions of moral turpitude,
we quickly "moved on," shifting to a trial of cliches. And what of public
reaction? If the 90s military buzz phrase, "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," has
a Clinton-On-Trial equivalent, it became, "Don't Know, Don't Care."
But why? Weren't constitutional questions at stake? Maybe.
But there was a twist. The guys running the trial had routinely lost their
elementary school lunch money to the playground bully. When they'd tried
to kiss a girl they felt a slap, or heard a cackle. It bugged them. They
took it out on us. And we finally got wise.
Web sites soon buzzed with the collective question that
would become famous: 'Would you hire any of that Capitol Hill crew to
represent you in a rent dispute with your lord dispute?' If you did, most
agreed, this might be the final result.
Judge: "Given your counsel's repetitious, uninspired,
imperious, pretentious manner, and transparently embarrassing last minute
history cramming, I order you to pay three months future rent at double
the going rate." Slam!
The web-prognosticators needed no further convincing.
The trial ended and the nation actually did move on. But the era left
its mark. Today, it's hard to find a political web-site that doesn't hold
this truth to be self-evident - what's good for small claims court, is
good for America.
Next week on Time and Again, be sure to check Part II
of our special Federal Targets Retrospect ... Bill Clinton vs. Eric Rudolph
- Same Plight, Different Topography.
Goodnight." Copyright © 2001
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