Ted Cruz has a strong and proven history of being a drunken asshole, but Wisconsin doesn't care, It’s also been
reported that while a student at Princeton University, former classmates have
described him as “creepy,”
and have said he had a
habit of putting on a paisley bathrobe and stalking the end of his dormitory where female students lived.
He is the child of drunks and his sexual habits reflect his fathers, the stuff people don't talk about.
In a hot room, in back of the house Ted played with the shutters, trying his best to block the view from the outside. He felt some better as the shutters started to block the morning sunshine, just a thin corridor of sunlight shown through now, helping him keep his secrets. It's just a story Ted kept repeating, none of it true, Heidi would understand, she always did. Bill Clinton got away with affairs for years and he's still on top of his game, money talks, girls walk.
and have said he had a
habit of putting on a paisley bathrobe and stalking the end of his dormitory where female students lived.
He is the child of drunks and his sexual habits reflect his fathers, the stuff people don't talk about.
In a hot room, in back of the house Ted played with the shutters, trying his best to block the view from the outside. He felt some better as the shutters started to block the morning sunshine, just a thin corridor of sunlight shown through now, helping him keep his secrets. It's just a story Ted kept repeating, none of it true, Heidi would understand, she always did. Bill Clinton got away with affairs for years and he's still on top of his game, money talks, girls walk.
He had been so delighted just yesterday and then the headlines rocked his perfect little arrangements. He knew that Heidi knew about his girlfriends as their marriage was uncertain and incomplete. It's not that he didn't love Heidi and the children but his happiness was from other women where Heidi's unwillingness for adventures in the bedroom continued.
Their marriage was partially formed by love but filled with many disappointments that assailed the couple after she had caught Ted cheating. With fear and exhaustion they had both given up and Ted continued his affairs with other women driving Heidi further and further into depression and prescription drugs.
Trump confidant Roger Stone spoke with Frank Morano
on AM970 The Answer in New Jersey/New York on Sunday morning about allegations
that he planted the story in this week's National Enquirer accusing Ted Cruz of
multiple extra-marital affairs.
"He’s a lawyer himself," he said,
"so why won’t he sue? It won’t cost him anything. To be absolutely clear —
Cruz won’t sue because the allegations are largely true."
Basics:
-- "The Rubio campaign elected not to use this
information, but they kept it as a hedge about some of the allegations about
Rubio's personal life."
-- "Cruz holds himself out as a moral
exemplar, and I think it is the hypocrisy that once again is problematic here.
Where's his lawsuit? Where's his $100 million lawsuit against the National
Enquirer..."
-- "This is very much like the John Edwards
case, when the Washington Post, who is chasing this story, or the AP, who is
chasing the story. The dirty little secret here is this isn't just the National
Enquirer, this is major media organizations. Every major media organization in
the country is pursuing this story. And they are well familiar with the
names."
-- "And you have to wonder whether these
women, one of whom worked for the Carly Fiorina campaign and then shortly
thereafter Ted Cruz pays Carly half a million dollars. Ted despises Carly, and
Carly despises Ted. What is the $500,000 for? Can you say hush money?"
-- "Maybe Donald Trump is talking about
Heidi's mental breakdown, and the fact that she was found by the local police
wandering and disoriented, and she was deemed to be a threat to herself."
-- "Heidi with her husband posing as a
conservative Republican was a top aide to Condoleezza Rice at the National
Security Council prior to going to the U.S. Trade Rep's office where she was a
top aide for Robert Zelick, who took her to Goldman Sachs -- You remember who
they are? The bank you and I bailed out.-- Goldman then subsequently gave a
million dollar illegal sweetheart deal to the Cruz campaign, which he lied
about."
Related Video: Glenn Beck on Ted Cruz Sex Scandal:
I will drop him like a hot potato if these accusations were true...
FRANK MORANO: We have Roger Stone, noted New York
Times bestselling author, longtime Republican political consultant and former
advisor to Donald Trump, and the only person, who you heard Ted Cruz in the
clip I just played you, the only person quoted on the record in this incredible
National Enquirer article...
I don't know where to begin, clearly the Cruz
campaign has blamed you for everything except for kidnapping the Lindbergh
baby, why are? Everybody is acknowledging, even the NYT today, that this
attempt to dig up these Cruz extramarital affairs was originally carried out by
the Rubio campaign, why are they making you the guy everyone is deciding to
blame?
ROGER STONE: I guess it is an attempt at
deflection.
You've been in politics a long time, the only thing
worse that being talked about is not being talked about. So I guess, I have a
brand, perhaps a brand for rough and tumble politics, a brand for the dramatic,
but in this particular case, the private detectives who are specifically cited
in the article... were actually working for and paid by Marco Rubio.
I believe the Rubio campaign elected not to use
this information, but they kept it as a hedge about some of the allegations
about Rubio's personal life, and in the end they elected not to use it.
And before you knew it he was out of the race.
I think these private detectives got paid twice.
They got paid once when they did the original work for Marco Rubio, and they
got paid again when they on their own went ahead and sold it to the National
Enquirer. They will admit that they pay for information they can confirm.
But in this case, I can tell you categorically, I
did not plant the story in the National Enquirer, and then blaming Donald Trump
or his campaign is somewhat outrageous. I never discussed this with Donald or
anyone in his campaign.
All I did do, when a longtime reporter from the
National Enquirer, who I used to know when she was at the New York Post, and
before that at the UK Daily Mail, called and asked for a comment, and I was
happy to give a comment on the record: "If this is proven, it would be
highly problematic for Ted's image, since it is built around his moral
superiority, and his appeal to evangelical Christians...
MORANO: Why should we care about who Ted Cruz
sleeps with?
STONE: Neither you or I are running for
president... And he is, and he holds himself out as a moral exemplar, and I
think it is the hypocrisy that once again is problematic here.
Where's his lawsuit? Where's his $100 million
lawsuit against the National Enquirer...
This is very much like the John Edwards case, when
the Washington Post, who is chasing this story, or the AP, who is chasing the
story. The dirty little secret here is this isn't just the National Enquirer,
this is major media organizations. Every major media organization in the
country is pursuing this story. And they are well familiar with the names.
And you have to wonder whether these women, one of
whom worked for the Carly Fiorina campaign and then shortly thereafter Ted Cruz
pays Carly half a million dollars. Ted despises Carly, and Carly despises Ted.
What is the $500,000 for?
Can you say hush money?
He [Ted Cruz] specifically called me a henchman,
henchmen get paid. I'm not paid anything by the Trump campaign, so therefore by
definition I can't be a henchmen...
I think he's the one who has been copulating with
rodents...
MORANO: Donald Trump did tweet "I'll spill the
beans on your wife," do you understand where those people are coming from?
Look, Roger Stone has a long history of this stuff, and this story comes out
just a few days after Donald Trump tweets that pseudo threat against Heidi? I
mean, some people might say that is too much of a coincidence?
STONE: The scandal doesn't have to do with Heidi.
Maybe Donald Trump is talking about Heidi's mental
breakdown, and the fact that she was found by the local police wandering and
disoriented, and she was deemed to be a threat to herself, maybe they're
talking about they fact that Heidi with her husband posing as a conservative
Republican was a top aide to Condoleezza Rice at the National Security Council
prior to going to the U.S. Trade Rep's office where she was a top aide for
Robert Zelick, who took her to Goldman Sachs -- You remember who they are? The
bank you and I bailed out.-- Goldman then subsequently gave a million dollar
illegal sweetheart deal to the Cruz campaign, which he lied about.
He said the infusion of cash to his campaign came
from his wife cashing in his reitrement. That's a lie. All of that pretains to
Heidi, none of this does, this pretains to Ted Cruz and his zipper.
Like a creature crawling from the sea to shore Ted couldn't help himself as he slithered from one breathing woman to another. Yes, he would simply lie to Heidi and say he was staying out of town on business but his wide-eyed and unmoving lies had finally caught up with him.
The air was stifling in the hot room tonight in back of the house as he waited on her to return to their obscure sexual affair. They would play all night and try to sleep during the daylight hours as the town center outside was teaming with activity and working people.
What Ted didn't know is that he had been followed for several months, and reels of film and still pictures had been taken, leaving restaurants, entering Hotels late at night with familiar women.
He heard the siren outside and he jumped as if he were waiting for heavy boots to climb the stairs and discover this place and this other women. His chances in the race were being slapped all over the media as the tabloid even printed obscured pictures of his lady friends. Like playing cards he always knew when to fold but the hawkers had discovered all his sexual affairs and the tabloid was using their theory as a cutting saw taking his life apart.
His Ace in the whole was Donald himself and his close ties and friendship with the tabloid publisher. The New York City and Washington D.C. media empires wanted to destroy Donald so Ted went offense.
He would claim the whole thing was a thicket of lies that extended from Donald the billionaire to the tabloid publisher. As he had guessed the vine of guessing did not bloom inside the main stream media as ABC, CBS, NBC, MSNBC, CNN and even FOX News paid little attention. It was working as he had dampened the story with more lies of his own.
Only Ted and his many girlfriends knew the truth as even Heidi had to guess so like a pianist he would place his foot of lies on the dampener pedal and watch as his own lies buried the truth from the American people.
Ted knew in his cold heart that Donald didn't have anything to do with the story because the tabloid would make millions of dollars selling millions of copies at the grocery store and airport news stands. He would survive and prosper but the race for the White House was getting dirty and Donald would never run out of time and money. In time Ted's extraordinary sex life would complicate everything and the turmoil in his marriage and inner life would be all over the news media.
She had gently opened the bedroom door and entered the room while Ted was staring out a tiny opening in the shutters, his thoughts scattered as she returned to him as his dream life returned to him, leaving his reality beneath the waves of lies.
His complicated sexual activity always started with a glass of milk and she had returned with a chilled glass suggesting that they could start. Her movement stirred him as he was absorbing her sounds and movements as her nude body moved closer as her smell overcame him and his sick words of sweetness started to flow.
This is a woman that he had hired, he called it the talent of money, you could accomplish anything and many important men wanted the tattoo and the sticky sex without any rules.
He had found her scrubbing floors at the fancy Hotel and he had stripped down from his expensive clothes and wore a robe not tied in the front after she accepted his hundred dollar bills. He would remember her pouring warm water over him into the tub as she was ordered to wash him vigorously and join him in this small back room tin tub. She would towel him dry and cloud him with talcum powder and he would wash her body paying special attention to her toes.
She was not a fat women and he would dress her in colorful cloth and rub her flesh with milk and take her in his own way.
He didn't care if the world found out, until the world found out.
When he finished with her he lit the cigar and told her that he was from a very poor family in Canada and found his own way in America.
He wanted to eat something now as he rested and ate his mind went back to Heidi as he became hungry for the other woman again.
He fed the girl a piece of white bread and wondered why she was a whore. He guessed she was from a poor family, working her way through America.
She had cried and pleaded so finally he agreed and opened up one of the shutters so she could look outside. She saw the black S.U.V. again, the men had paid her for the story about Ted as something had changed insider her.
She needed the money and the animated sex simply was part of the game but those men down there had wired the hot room in back of the house. They were playing their own game and the license tag on the S.U.V. was from Florida and they guy named Marco payed her five thousand dollars per trick with Ted as the silhouette shadow of Ted was dancing on the wall next to her, the games would start again as the room door started drifting open, very slowly without any noise.
Three men in dark black military uniforms entered the room without a sound and flowed like water across the room. The only sound was the lamp falling from the table as Ted crashed to the floor under the bigger mans weight, it was over in five seconds at most.
The police would report that the attackers were Islamic maybe from Nigeria and the story grew in some impressive way, even the tabloids took the bait.
The Cleveland Republican Convention was full of anxiety and joy at the same time, the one man race was on T.V. and Donald was out of hibernation and helplessly Hillary watched the wake of the people drown her campaign out.
The beating of the rain made her smile as she waited for the blue eyed man with her own personalized stimulus check as her asking price had swelled and the pulped up tabloids offered her hundreds of thousands of dollars for Ted's story.
She had been confined to the Hotel in New York City for several months now but she was paid five thousand dollars a week to call room service and sleep late. The entire story was a lie but the voiceless Ted and his animal life was out of politics and Donald was the cloudburst of liberty and freedom.
Untroubled by all her lies, none of it true, not even the sex she looked out her hotel window and wondered about the stupidity of the main stream media and the political parties. She guessed the entire process was a put on, actors and writers, camera and action.
She never had it so good and the sun had emerged with the trees still damp from a morning shower and she found herself impossibly happy. She thought about those three thugs climbing out the window that day with Ted and running down to the lake shore as the city buses ran people to work.
Everything would have to be scrubbed as the chimes of the Hotel doorbell rang as room service was always on time. No one would know the exact manner of her disappearance as there would be no witnesses.
He leaned forward as she opened the door, her hair pulled back and painted lips stirred him as he pushed her back and crossed the room.
For no other reason, he just wanted to have sex with her.
Ted was thunderous and he had changed all the rules as the spell came over him he turned from the bed and noticed the alarm clock sounding will all the bells and horns that he hated most when he traveled.
Ted couldn't remember the entire dream, but the smell of sunshine made him ready for the world and he would be wise and regal today, maybe a blue tie today, skipping the red.
The drumming had started as Heidi turned over and kissed her husband good morning and she laughed at Ted's messed up hair.
Mr. President, you want some advice?
Pillowing in the crook of his arm, she smiled, she was never frightened with Ted as he took her hand and kissed it, he wondered if it were real.
The terrible injustice of a dream, clutched in some false story, he turned and got out of bed with a smile because he had survived his midnight crazy beating in silence, the silence of a dream.
Fiction
.
Ted Cruz on Tuesday night accused Donald Trump's
allies of conspiring to publish a National Enquirer story alleging the Texas
senator had multiple affairs with unnamed women.
Cruz suggested that Roger Stone, a former aide to
Trump, and David Pecker, CEO of the National Enquirer's parent company, had
been in cahoots, pushing an item he has repeatedly denied and denounced as
"garbage."
"The story, on its face, quoted one person on
the record: Roger Stone," Cruz said during a CNN town hall event in
Wisconsin. "Roger Stone has been Donald Trump's chief political adviser.
He planned and ran his presidential campaign and he's been his hatchet man --
he's spent 40 years as a hatchet man. But not only that, the head of the
National Enquirer, a guy named David Pecker, is good friends with Donald
Trump."
Representatives for National Enquirer's parent
company, American Media Inc., did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. But on Friday, the company said in a statement that "no one
influences" the tabloid magazine's reporting "other than our own
reporters and editors."
"We stand by the integrity of our coverage and
remain committed to our aggressive reporting on such an important topic,"
the spokesperson said in an email.
Trump campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks told CNN in a
statement Tuesday that the campaign is "emphatically denying any truth to
this claim."
She said another campaign could have been responsible
and added, "Mr. Trump had no knowledge of this story."
Earlier in the day, a former communications
director for Cruz denounced "sexist smears" pushed online by Trump's
social media director suggesting she had an affair with Cruz.
Amanda Carpenter, who is now a CNN political
commentator, told CNN's Jake Tapper on "The Lead" there is no truth
to the allegations.
"I have a purely professional relationship
with Sen. Cruz. And I want to go further than that: I am 100% faithful to my
husband. There is nothing more important to me than being a good wife and a
good mother, and it's been very hard the last few days to have my character
called into question and watch this blow back on them," Carpenter said.
Cruz has vehemently denied the accusations in the
National Enquirer, which did not name any women but did include five pixelated
photographs of women.
Subsequent to the National Enquirer story, the
Trump campaign's social media director retweeted a 30-second video that
suggested a relationship between Carpenter and Cruz.
It's all false, she said on CNN.
"I don't want to run away from this. I want to
address it. But at the same time, the hardest thing about doing this is
defending myself but not making it worse," she said. "And so that's
the weird conundrum that I've found myself in and so many of these other women
who have to confront these sort of sexist smears."
She said she, her husband and her children have
suffered attacks, especially online, since the allegations surfaced last week.
"I just want to encourage everyone to look at
the broader culture of this campaign: There is a toxic culture being produced
this season. And I think we all need to recognize what's happening, look at the
facts, and go into this with our eyes wide open and be unafraid to confront
it," Carpenter said.
Dan Scavino, the Trump campaign's social media
director, shared a video on Twitter that pushed the unfounded rumors.
Carpenter criticized Trump's refusal to dismiss the
story as "disheartening."
"This is just a really ugly smear that seems
all too common this campaign season," she said.
In an interview with Tapper, Trump adviser Sarah
Huckabee Sanders deflected questions about Scavino's move to push the rumors by
saying she hadn't seen the video.
But she said Carpenter and Cruz should sue the
tabloid.
"For the sake of both Amanda and Sen. Cruz's
family, I think they should fight back and sue the National Enquirer on this
false story," she said.
Carpenter was asked about whether she has plans to
sue and she said right now she's just trying to get through the ordeal.
..
This story has been corrected since it was
originally published.
When is an affair just an affair? And when is
someone’s private sex public business? Those are the questions of the moment
following two sets of high-profile allegations involving Republican politicians
engaging in extramarital relations. Last week, the National Enquirer alleged
that GOP presidential candidate Ted Cruz had been “caught cheating” with five
mistresses, choosing not to identify the women by name. Earlier in the week, a
story broke that Robert Bentley, Alabama’s virulently anti-gay governor, was
having an affair with Rebekah Caldwell Mason, his married chief of staff. As
Neal Broverman reports for the Advocate, rumors of their affair had been
circulating in Washington for years. Both deny the allegations.
Many believe that what takes happens in the
bedrooms between consensual adults should stay there, even when it’s
politicians whose policies we disagree with. My colleague, Mary Elizabeth
Williams, argued that this is hardly the worst misdeed Cruz has ever committed;
however, in our extremely sex negative culture, it may be the one that ends his
White House run. “[O]f all the reasons that Cruz shouldn’t be president, is an
accusation that he slept with other women really the one he ought to go down
for?” Williams asks. She astutely notes that—given the possibility that the
report was leaked by a Trump staffer—the story is “intriguingly timed, to say
the least.”
Should it prove legitimate, inquiry about Ted
Cruz’s sex life is more than just “gossip”—as Politico’s Jack Shafer likewise
suggested. Cruz’s alleged affairs are worthy of inquiry for the same reason
that it’s news when closeted Republicans like Larry Craig foot-tap for sex in
an airport bathroom or Randy Boehning is caught on a gay hookup app: Their lies
hurt people. Their duplicity, often cloaked in “family values” political
rhetoric, profoundly affects the LGBT populations against whose interests they consistently
voted, even while engaging in the exact behavior they deemed despicable. In
2006, Craig—the now-disgraced Idaho Senator—supported adding an amendment to
the Constitution that would ban same sex-marriage.
There’s a great rule of thumb on the subject, known
as the Barney Frank Rule. “I think there’s a right to privacy,” the retired
Congressman once explained to Bill Maher. “But the right to privacy should not
be a right to hypocrisy. People who want to demonize other people shouldn’t
then be able to go home and close the door, and do it themselves.” In 2014,
journalist Itay Hod posted about former Illinois Representative Aaron
Schock—who was long rumored to be gay—on Facebook. Many, like Huffington Post’s
Michelangelo Signorile, argued that questions about Schock’s sexuality were
worth asking because of the flamboyantly attired Republican’s terrible history
on LGBT equality. He earned a zero rating from the HRC.
Exposing the hypocrisy of Republican legislators
not only makes our political system more honest—it can actually change
behavior. After Boehning was outed by Dustin Smith last year, following a chat
between the two men online, the North Dakota politician actually told reporters
that the leak was a relief: “The 1,000-pound gorilla has been lifted.” Boehning
further explained that his prior anti-gay legislative decisions (including
voting against a 2015 gay rights bill) were in service of a coverup. “This has
been a challenge for me,” he told The Forum. “You don’t tell everyone you’re
going to vote one way and then switch your vote another way—you don’t have any
credibility that way.”
In contrast, it’s considered gauche to expose the
private life of a well-known figure when that information isn’t in the public
interest. This practice is often called “outing,” correctly derided as a
reactionary tactic that shoves LGBT celebrities out of the closet before they
are ready (see: Lance Bass, Neil Patrick Harris, George Michael) for little
reason other than our own smug satisfaction. Say, if Brad Pitt were secretly
gay, would there be much utility in exposing him? Not really. Pitt’s
hypothetical decision to live in the closet would have little effect on anyone
else, aside from his own family. He isn’t in a position to legislate against
the rights of LGBT folks or do others harm because of his lie.
Mike Rogers, the journalist at the center of the
2009 documentary Outrage, once explained it as the difference between outing
and reporting: “Outing is the indiscriminate disclosure of someone’s sexual
orientation without his or her consent,” he wrote in Politico. “Reporting is
not at all indiscriminate—and it has a higher purpose.” To ask serious
questions about Ted Cruz’s private life isn’t just a smear tactic by his
opponent in a contentious Republican race, even if Cruz would like you to
believe this is the case. It’s what journalism is supposed to do. It speaks
truth to power, especially when that power is used inappropriately.
To hold Republican politicians accountable for
their infidelities is to hold them to the same standard that they do millions
of Americans across the country. Cruz has been a virulent opponent of
reproductive rights for women: He opposes all forms of abortion, even in cases
of rape, incest, or where the procedure would save the mother’s life. Cruz has
particularly been an outspoken critic of Planned Parenthood, calling it a
“criminal enterprise.” He has even opposed contraceptives like Plan B,
repeatedly referring to the morning-after pill as an “abortion-inducing
[drug].”
That’s, of course, just the tip of the iceberg. Ted
Cruz has been a fervent opponent of marriage equality, supporting an amendment
that would overturn the Supreme Court’s 2015 decision to allow same-sex couples
to wed. The Texas Senator has consistently fought these rights based on a
so-called “family values” stance. “We will see the destruction of traditional
marriage, and the family is the foundation of society,” Cruz told Breitbart
earlier this year. “If the family is destroyed, society will be destroyed.” He
has also argued that gay marriage hurts children, even though every ethical
study on the subject has shown that kids raised by same-sex parents do just
fine. (They actually outperform their classmates.) You know what does hurt
kids? Infidelity.
There are a number of reasons Ted Cruz’s sex life
matters. Aside from his platform, reports indicate that a Super PAC associated
with the candidate’s campaign donated $500,000 to former Hewlett-Packard CEO
Carly Fiorina last July. Why would a pro-Cruz PAC give money to the
competition? Media sources have suggested that the reason for the contribution
may have been that Cruz was allegedly having an affair with a staffer on
Fiorina’s failed presidential campaign. If Cruz coordinated with his PAC to
bribe Fiorina’s camp with what amounts to “hush money,” that’s not only sleazy.
That could amount to a federal crime. A GOP operative was sentenced to two
years in prison last year for breaking campaign finance laws, which stipulate
that candidates and their political action committees cannot communicate.
But more than anything, Cruz’ alleged infidelity—if
the National Enquirer story turns out to be accurate—would further reveal what
a charade the political party of “family values” really is. When it comes to
sexual impropriety, the Daily Beast points out that the GOP solidly “trumps”
their Democratic rivals: Between the years of 1990 and 2010, the outlet found
that Republicans were responsible for the majority of sex scandals. When it
came to the particular fact of sexual hypocrisy, the conservatives
overwhelmingly snowed their liberal competition—by a 2:1 margin. No matter who
today’s no-good, cheating politician happens to be, numbers like those will
always, absolutely be worth a conversation or two.
.
Roger Stone: Categorically Deny I Planted Cruz Sex
Story – “Know for a Fact That He Cheated on His Wife”
Republican political consultant, correspondent, and
editor of the StoneZone.com joined Steve Malzberg on Newsmax TV on Monday to
discuss the Ted Cruz sex scandal.
stone malzberg
Stone, who Cruz blamed for the National Enquirer
report, categorically denied he was behind the Cruz sex story.
Stone also said he “knows for a fact” that Ted Cruz
cheated on his wife Heidi.
Steve Malzberg: Did you give this information and
story to the Enquirer?
Roger Stone: Absolutely, positively, categorically
not… This story originated by Marco Rubio operatives… I was aware of three
allegations of Ted Cruz and women, not his wife. I learned about two additional
allegations. So, I can also tell you Steve, categorically, I never spoke to
Donald Trump about this. I never spoke to anybody in the Trump campaign about
this… Trust me if I would have planted the story you would never know about it…
Malzberg: Do you believe he should end all doubt,
categorically say he never cheated on his wife and sue the paper?
Stone: I’m not going to give Ted Cruz campaign
advice. I do think it is odd he hasn’t sued… Perhaps he’s worried about his
ability to survive discovery…
Malzberg: Do you know anything about a video, a sex
video with Cruz, a compilation video?
Stone: First of all what is amazing is that Ted
Cruz could find people, five women, who are willing to have sex with him. He’s
a very creepy guy… I only know what I have read online…
Malzberg: Do you know for a fact that he had sex
with any of these women?
Stone: Yes.
Malzberg: How many?
Stone: More than one. I really am not going to go
down this story any further.
.
It looks like the Ted Cruz campaign may be
finished. It’s now more or less confirmed he cheated on his bankster wife and
had sex with at least five different women.
The New York Times, The Washington Post, Bloomberg
News, Politico, and ABC News all knew about the allegations but refused to
publish them. Breitbart also declined to run the story back in February.
On Friday, The Daily Beast reported Cruz rival
Marco Rubio may be responsible. Rubio has his own problems. GOP insiders
reportedly confirmed he was a “very extroverted homosexual” in the 1990s.
Then there is Hillary Clinton. So far she has
escaped having to answer for the email scandal. The Justice Department has
refused to act. Obama spokesman Josh Earnest said it’s no big deal. The FBI has
enough evidence to move on a prosecution, but nothing is happening. “It will
never get to an indictment,” former Inspector General Howard J. Krongard told
the New York Post in February.
For a national media interested in tawdry celebrity
gossip and sex scandals the mishandling of classified information is pretty
mundane stuff. It’s true an extramarital affair destroyed the political career
of Democrat John Edwards, but that only happened after Edwards admitted the
affair and said he fathered Rielle Hunter’s child. Cruz has so far denied the
accusations. He blames Donald Trump for the rumor.
Our rulers long ago decided Teflon Hillary will be
the one to sit in the White House and continue the Obama agenda, which is a
continuation of the Bush agenda that he inherited from Bill Clinton, a sexual
predator who has yet to answer for his behavior. Clinton was impeached for
lying under oath, not molesting and raping women.
Not only did Hillary cover for him, but the
corporate media did as well, most recently in January when NBC refused to do a
story on Juanita Broaddrick, the Arkansas woman who says Bill Clinton raped her
in 1978. The wife of a former Federal Reserve boss, Andrea Mitchell, dismissed
the possibility of a story. She said there wasn’t “anything new” to report.
It remains to be seen if Ted Cruz will get a free
pass. He is not the preferred choice of the financial elite and their
handpicked political class. GOP apparatchiks wanted Jeb Bush to take the
nomination, but push come to shove they will go with Cruz despite his phony tea
party rhetoric. His wife is, after all, a Goldman Sachs insider and a CFR
member. The political class will do just about anything to make sure Donald
Trump does not get the nomination.
It doesn’t seem likely the Cruz sex scandal will
blow over anytime soon. #CruzSexScandal is now trending on Twitter. Before the
internet, the corporate media squashed stories with ease. The rules changed
when Matt Drudge reported the Monica Lewinsky scandal and Republicans decided
to use it to take down Democrat Bill Clinton.
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