Monday, May 29, 2017

Hillary Clinton Can't Be the Resistance When She Fought So Dirty Against It

The Rockhouse writes in defense of the Pussy Hat which had nothing to do with Hillary Clinton who appropriated it as if it represented her rather than women in general.  In the same way, Clinton tried to appropriate The Resistance even after she and Debby Wasserman Schultz had done every evil thing possible to undermine The Resistance.  Only when she decided it could be politically-expedient and financially-rewarding did she suddenly decide she was a revolutionary.

After all, she also said she was a Washington outsider, didn't she.


As we saw at Wellesley, that snake is still slithering around out there and doing the dirty underground, as always, where no-one can easily see it.  At least she copped forty grand for the pretense at Wellesley.

As a hiring manager, if I saw anyone now with a degree granted by Wellesley, I would be deeply suspicious if I had heard that uninformed and deliberately duplicitous speech previously.  It doesn't surprise us that Clinton presents such rubbish but the appalling acceptance of it by the novitiates would make it likely I would pass over anyone from that school in preference for someone from a more-balanced institution.

Ed:  like the racists in Harvard?

Harvard has a long and distinguished reputation but that kind of rubbish will sink the school faster than Clinton's hypocrisy sank Wellesley.


I positively ga-ron-tee, any man who saw that speech and its result at Wellesley will probably be reluctant to interview anyone who was schooled there.  Clinton may have inhibited the future for the graduates more than brain cancer.

We welcome women to the IT workplace but the fact was they wouldn't come and specifically as they said at the time because the work was too hard with long hours, etc.  They were generally fine with programming since it doesn't matter who sits on the other side of a computer screen so long as the person is competent.  A programmer's hours are usually relatively light relative to those worked by people in systems so they didn't want it.  The decision is logical since systems was one of the most-abused specialty areas in DP and, as we saw, they were chucked by the road in favor of outsourcing as soon as the Bank decided they were no longer cost-effective.

Well, men, that was a smart move, wasn't it.  Work hard and still get screwed.  Whoop de do.

Note:  I had been stabbed in the back a few years before that but it gave me no satisfaction in hearing my staff was stabbed as well.


There may be a reason to trust corporate thinking but, despite my experience there, I have never seen one.

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