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    © Jack Cashill  
        November 30, 2017 - WND.com 
      The surprise firing of NBC’s Matt Lauer for  sexual harassment shines a new light on Lauer’s role in helping then president  Bill Clinton save himself from getting kicked out of office.  
         
        By the time Clinton was elected president in  1992, liberals had reached critical mass in America’s newsrooms. Although not  the most obvious, Lauer was one of them. He and his colleagues  
        filtered  the information flow to suit their needs.  
         
        In  the years that followed, two phenomena would test the effectiveness of these  filters. One was the democratic power of the internet. The other was the outrageous  behavior of Clintons.  
      On  January 26, 1992, America writ large first met Hillary Clinton.  
      Earlier that  month, Arkansas state employee Gennifer—with a “G”--Flowers confessed to a tabloid  that Bill Clinton had been dallying with her for some twelve years. 
         
         In a desperate attempt to save Bill’s  candidacy for president, the Clintons agreed to be interviewed by Steve Kroft  on CBS’s 60 Minutes. 
         
        To  his credit, Kroft forcefully stuck it to the Clintons. In the not so distant  past news people expected the truth from public officials, even Democratic  front-runners for the presidency. Starting with this interview, the Clintons would  dramatically lower that expectation.  
         
        When  Kroft asked Bill if he had an affair with Flowers, he answered, “That  allegation is false.” Hillary, her hands lovingly intertwined with Bill’s,  nodded in affirmation.  
         
        Of  course, they were both lying, Bill with much greater skill. Democratic Senator  Bob Kerrey would soon immortalize Bill as “an unusually good liar.”  
         
        Later  in the 60 Minutes interview, Bill  swore, “I have absolutely leveled with the American people.” He had done no  such thing, and Kroft knew it.  
         
        Skeptically,  Kroft asked Bill if he thought the interview would help quiet the furor.  Clinton answered, “That's up to the American people and to some extent up to  the press. This will test the character of the press. It is not only my  character that has been tested.”  
         
        By  Clinton standards, the media would pass the test, ace it even, and at their  prompting, so would the public. Clinton gave the media just enough cover to  “move on.”  
         
        The  Clinton years were a turning point in the history of journalism. Although  liberals had been on a long march through America’s newsrooms for years, it was  not until after the Republican sweep in 1994 that they largely abandoned their  role as watchdogs.  
         
        America  has always had scoundrels, but never before had the media collectively  championed one, let alone two. Throughout Clinton’s presidency, Bill and  Hillary lied as necessary to protect the Clinton brand.  
         
        In  1998, Hillary had plenty of opportunity to hone her craft. That year the story  of Bill’s sordid sexual history with intern Monica Lewinsky broke into public  view.  
         
        Unable  to contain the story, the media largely endorsed the Clinton plot twist in  which the truth tellers—the whistleblowers, the prosecutors, the “bimbos” that  erupted—were the villains and the Clintons the besieged protectors of the  progressive legacy.  
         
        It was during this period that Matt Lauer got to  play his small role in American history. Six years and a day after she lied on 60 Minutes to protect Bill’s candidacy,  Hillary lied on the Today Show to  protect his presidency.  
         
        “There  isn’t any fire,” she told Lauer about the “smoke” surrounding her husband and  Lewinsky. Unlike Steve Kroft in 1992, Lauer did not challenge her, not  at all. 
         
        In fact, he shifted his inquiry from the perjury and  obstruction of justice charges facing the president to the fairness of independent  counsel Ken Starr’s “thirty million dollar” investigation.  
         
        This was all the license Hillary needed to introduce  a new and memorable sub-plot. ''The great story here,” she said ominously, “is  this vast right-wing conspiracy that has been conspiring against my husband  since the day he announced for president.” 
         
        If  Lauer failed to see through the subterfuge, the late Christopher Hitchens did.  Said he of the Clintons in his indispensable book, No One Left to Lie To, “Like him, she is not just a liar but a lie;  a phoney (sic) construct of shreds and patches and hysterical, self-pitying  demagogic improvisations.”  
         
        The  proudly left-of-center Hitchens took his title from a quote by Democrat David  Schippers, the chief investigative counsel for the House Judiciary Committee.  
         
        Said  Schippers for the ages: “The President, then, has lied under oath in a civil  deposition, lied under oath in a criminal grand jury. He lied to the people, he  lied on his cabinet, he lied on his top aides, and now he’s lied under oath to  the Congress of the United States. There’s  no one left to lie to.” 
         
        Today, not even to Matt Lauer.  
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