Dolly Kyle, Vince Foster, and the
Ku Klux Klan
Chapter 20 of Hillary the Other Woman, the
fascinating, and very important memoir of Bill ClintonÕs paramour of longest
standing, Dolly Kyle, is entitled, ÒWitness Protection Program and the
KKK.Ó It begins this way:
If there were a witness protection
program for people who are afraid to tell what they know about the Clintons,
there would be a groundswell of new information. As it stands now, however, the KKK (the Klinton Krime Kartel)
is still able to operate at will because most people are afraid to speak
against the mob in public.
Her use of the KKK term led her
quickly to this interesting digression:
When
I was a student at Hot Springs High School, I wrote a paper about the other
infamous KKK, the Ku Klux Klan. I
talked to men who were members of the KKK, who didnÕt seem to mind telling a
harmless teenage girl about the notorious exploits of the Klan in Arkansas.
I
researched obscure newspaper references and all sorts of odd bits and pieces of
credible reports that I could find about the Klan in Arkansas in the
1960s. I had a shoebox full of
index cards with a different quote or incident on each one. It was certainly a lot harder to do this
kind of research before the Internet!
Ultimately,
I sorted, organized, and outlined my 3 x 5 cards, and then wrote what I (an ÒAÓ
student since the first grade) thought would surely be an ÒAÓ paper. My teacher, however gave me a great big
ÒC-Ò at the top of the page, and added this comment:
ÒThe
Ku Klux Klan does not exist in Arkansas.Ó
That
was my first big slap in the face for telling the truth that someone didnÕt
want to hear. In retrospect, IÕm
guessing that the teacher may have been a member of the Klan!
Reading about that episode put me
in mind of a similar student slap down that I write about in Part 4 of ÒAmericaÕs Dreyfus Affair: The
Case of the Death of Vincent Foster.Ó
This one has a much more direct connection to KyleÕs main subject than
does her own story (with links added):
Another argument that might be made
[for their failure to address the issue] is that, dependent as they are upon
the printed word, academicians have had difficulty learning anything about the
Foster case. Following on the heels of the writers of the first draft of our
history, as journalists are often called, the compilers and interpreters in
academia have been very poorly served by the draft writers. There is certainly
no doubt about that, as we have made clear in this essay. Until the recent
publication of the books by [Christopher] Ruddy and
British journalist Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, there was
simply no information available in the usual opinion-molding sources, either
books, journals, magazines, or newspapers. The highbrow magazines usually read
by college professors and equivalent professionals have been the absolute
worst, as we pointed out earlier, in
playing down the Clinton scandals.
Still, this is a poor excuse for
the degree of ignorance that exists. College professors are supposed to go
beyond such secondary sources. I have interviewed a community college criminal
justice major in the Washington, DC area who did just that, writing a
first-rate research paper disputing the governmentÕs conclusions on the Foster
death using government documents available in the George Mason University
library. He did it, furthermore, without any assistance from the Foster
researchers in the area, being unaware at the time of our existence. In the
process he also demolished the argument that academicians might use for
avoiding the subject, that is, that this is a topic of little general interest.
In the last presentation in his public speaking class the assignment was to
give a speech to persuade. With the topic already in hand from the paper he had
written for another class and with what he figured was already an assured ÒAÓ
in the course from his accumulated record, he decided to risk trying to
persuade the class that Vince Foster was murdered. Actually, as he told me, the
risk was not with the fellow students, whose vote would determine half his
grade, but with the teacher, whom he had pegged as a ÒliberalÓ who wouldnÕt
like the topic. He didnÕt know how right he was on both counts. The students
not only gave him an ÒAÓ for his presentation, but also chose his as the best
speech given, while, as he put it, the teacher distracted him with her look of
absolute disgust throughout his speech. ÒYou could almost see the smoke coming
out of her ears,Ó he said, and as he took his seat she said, ÒYou know I donÕt
agree with any of that.Ó She then put her grade where her mouth was, giving him
a ÒCÓ on the presentation. That combined with the student assessment,
fortunately, still gave him a ÒBÓ on the speech and an ÒAÓ for the course.
We have heard so many stories in
recent years of the sort of ideological purity being enforced on campuses these
days, one could imagine this little scene being played out almost anywhere in
the country. In fact, one might more readily expect it at one of the elite
universities instead of at a suburban community college. By happenstance there
was more than ideological blindness at work in this instance, and I tell it
because it is one of those cases where truth is sometimes stranger than
fiction, not because of any larger point that it supports. In the small world
that is metropolitan Washington, the speech teacher happened to be the wife of
Robert Bryant, currently second in command (at the time of the writing ed.) in
the FBI and their spokesman at the joint Park Police, Justice Department, FBI
press conference in which the initial Foster ÒsuicideÓ conclusion was announced
on August 10, 1993. The student had not been aware of the fact, and I took some
pleasure in breaking the news to him.
I had been
put in touch with the student by Beth George, the
mother of college student, Tommy Burkett, whose obvious murder had been covered
up by the police with the help of Dr. James BeyerÕs autopsy, the corrupt
autopsy doctor in the Foster case.
George was a colleague of Ms. Bryant at Northern Virginia Community
College in Fairfax County. ThatÕs
how I knew who Ms. Bryant was and her student still didnÕt until I told
him. The late Dr. Beyer, I think,
would have been right at home in the virtually lawless illegal gambling center
of Hot Springs where Bill and Dolly grew up, and you readers can well see why
the Clintons are so much at home in Washington, DC.
David Martin
July 15, 2016
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