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Re: Re[2]: "The Seduction of a President" by Kenneth Starr



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Rfbruns:

I'm not talking about our friends and relatives.

You sound a bit naive.  When a person in a position of trust says something,
he doesn't have to say it under oath for it to be believed. In our normal
everyday dealings we dont expect people to take legal oaths every time they
say something to us.

Here's a common type of example.  A friend of mine got a good job offer.
His then current employer tried to get him to stay, promising future and
present benefits. While he was mulling over this counteroffer, he accidently
found out that he was going to be laid off at the end of the current
quarter.  Did it make any difference that the employer didnt take an oath
before lying?

Starr found nothing criminal about WhiteWater and Clinton.

Starr, the Republican party and the Republican Supreme court have seriously
damaged the office of the president and the ability of future presidents to
carry out their constitutional responsibilities.

Lionel Issen

-----Original Message-----
From: RfBruns@xxxxxxx <RfBruns@xxxxxxx>
To: metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wednesday, September 16, 1998 2:06 PM
Subject: Re: Re[2]: "The Seduction of a President" by Kenneth Starr


>In a message dated 9/16/98 7:49:58 AM !!!First Boot!!!,
>lissen@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:
>
>> There isnt a single president who hasnt lied or cheated. There isnt a
single
>>  CEO who hasnt lied or cheated.
>Lionel,
>I'm surprised at your awareness of the whole human race. Either way, can
you
>make that statement and add "under oath"?
>Rf
>