He was impeached for lying to a grand jury. Derp.
He was impeached for lying to a grand jury. Derp.
What stupidity gave you the idea that a rapist must be convicted to be a rapist....?
Thats as stupid as claiming that a driver doing 120 mph on a road posted at 45 isn't a speeder unless he gets a ticket.
Clinton will now have the honor of having the most faithless electors since the foundation of the republic.
Clinton, the first woman candidate, also has the most electors ever who declared her unfit for the presidency #feminism
First Woman Candidate
Holds the Record for Most Money Spent in any campaign
Holds the Record for Most electors declaring her unfit
One of three people to lose to a candidate who did not win his home state.
#imawomanhearmeroar
#breakingtheglasscieling
The question was "tell me when he was convicted of rape."
Aside from being impeached for lying to a grand jury, I believe Bill Clinton also was forced to give up his law license for a time and pay a fine.
I know that. There was still no rape conviction.
You've become confused again, dear. Unless you can quote me saying anything about Clinton and rape, I believe you're talking to someone else.
Follow the thread, dear. The Bill Clinton rape comments started in #9. You just tried to obfuscate because of course there was never a rape conviction.
Follow the thread, dear. The Bill Clinton rape comments started in #9. You just tried to obfuscate because of course there was never a rape conviction.
There was an impeachment, and I believe he lost his law license for a time and had to pay a fine.
Sessions evil attack on black voting remembered
http://www.hickoryrecord.com/news/us...a9fb3f18e.html
WASHINGTON (AP) — A failed voting-fraud prosecution from more than 30 years ago is likely to re-emerge as a contentious issue during Sen. Jeff Sessions' confirmation hearing for attorney general.
Sessions was dogged by his handling of the case as U.S. attorney during his 1986 confirmation hearing for a federal judgeship, when he tried to fend off complaints of a wrongful prosecution. He devoted more space to that case than any other in a questionnaire he submitted this month to the Senate Judiciary Committee for the attorney general post, suggesting the matter is likely to come up again during his Jan. 10-11 confirmation hearing before the panel.
The 1985 prosecution involved three black civil rights activists, including a former adviser to Martin Luther King Jr., who were accused of illegally tampering with large numbers of absentee ballots in rural Perry County, Alabama. The defendants argued that they were assisting voters who were poor, uneducated and in many cases illiterate, and marked the ballots with the voters' permission
It's not illegal.
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its knot?.....
What stupidity gave you the idea that a rapist must be convicted to be a rapist....?
Thats as stupid as claiming that a driver doing 120 mph on a road posted at 45 isn't a speeder unless he gets a ticket.
What gave me the idea that a rapist must be convicted to be a rapist?
Oh, just a little thing called our Judicial System.
I know you's like to be able to just brand those you hate with derogatory labels, but that's not how we do things in the USA.
The question was "tell me when he was convicted of rape."
There was an impeachment, and I believe he lost his law license for a time and had to pay a fine.
He can't.
That's why they play these diversionary games, so they can continue to spread lies about Bill Clinton.
They point to the payout and wail: that prove he's guilty!
But when you ask them if Trump settling with his accusers over Trump University is proof he's guilty, and they sing a different tune!