I can not get a copy of the video showing Hilary getting into her vehicle, but what it shows is important. She had come to a halt while waiting for the door to be opened. Then she paused far too long until her handlers tried to actually move her. It appeared that she had frozen up. Then her first movements were not coordinated. All this conforms to Parkinson's.
Her pneumonia is surely induced by the drugs she is aggressively using now to control her symptoms. It is not infectious or she would be running a high fever a long time ago. Her coughing confirms excess fluids dumping into her lungs. Single coughs would normally control a minor problem such as allergies.
I sincerely hope she does not have Parkinson's. It happens to be a terrible way to die. If she does, she has now entered the last terminal decline that can drag out for another five years while making it impossible to have a life. It is your unwelcome friend that insistently stays with you constantly distracting you.
If she does have Parkinson's, we are watching the death throes of her run for the White-house. It was also very bad judgement to make this run as well as she would have been diagnosed ten years ago and the disease progression is well known and inevitable.
She needs to make full disclosure of her medical records now and if it is Parkinson's, she needs to step aside. There is really no happy ending for this disease..
Why did Hillary Clinton lie about her health?
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign just made a massive
error. We'll know within the next few weeks if the error will prove to
be catastrophic.
On Sunday, Clinton abruptly left a Manhattan ceremony marking the
15th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. A video shows her
shakily stumbling while trying to get into a van to leave. The candidate's physician
later offered this explanation: Clinton has had an allergy-related
cough for some time, and during an examination on Friday, the Democratic
nominee was diagnosed with pneumonia, put on antibiotics, and told to
take time out to rest. She became overheated and dehydrated during
Sunday morning's event, which led her to collapse. She's now home in
Chappaqua and on the road to recovery.
Compare this timeline to details from Hillary Clinton's public schedule and behavior over these same two days.
After Clinton was diagnosed with pneumonia and put on antibiotics,
she did not, as her physician recommended, take time out to rest.
Instead, she attended a fundraiser featuring Barbra Streisand. Then on
Sunday morning, she attended the 9/11 commemoration, became
"overheated," and woozily wobbled rather dramatically. Ninety minutes
later she exited her daughter Chelsea's apartment building to tell the
press she was "feeling great." The Secret Service permitted a young girl to come over to give the candidate a hug.
It was only a few hours later when her campaign finally announced that she has pneumonia and is recovering.
The most charitable reading of this timeline is that her campaign —
presumably with the blessing and perhaps insistence of the candidate —
fully intended to keep her illness a secret from the public. Let's be
clear about what this means: Her campaign intended to lie. Even though
doing so would require her to keep up a public schedule that might well
make her condition worse and require ever-more elaborate forms of
concealment. Because, of course, to curtail her schedule would raise
questions that might reveal the truth.
So even after she collapsed, the campaign decided the ruse would
continue. It arranged for the candidate to make her curbside declaration
of wellness, even bringing on the girl to give her a "spontaneous" hug.
(Clinton's protection detail would never have permitted a genuinely
spontaneous embrace on the street, even by a child.)
It's easy to understand why the Clinton campaign would want to keep
this kind of news a secret. The candidate doesn't trust the media. The
right has been hitting her over supposed health issues for months (and even years),
and the assault has picked up in intensity over the past week or so —
since Clinton found herself in the midst of an extended coughing fit at a
campaign event in Cleveland.
Then there's the gender dynamic. Donald
Trump presents himself as a hyper-masculine tough guy, while Clinton is
the first female presidential nominee. The Clinton camp is probably
twice as terrified of their candidate looking frail as a less
path-breaking campaign would be.
So the campaign chose to lie. The potential reward was considerable:
namely, an absence of politically damaging news stories about Clinton's
medical condition. But the risk was enormous — and it's blown up in
their faces. Because now the story isn't just that Clinton is ill. It's
that, once again, she's untrustworthy — and this time about her own
health.
That's why the announcement that she has pneumonia will only fuel
more speculation about Clinton's physical condition, with potentially no
end in sight. The world saw her collapse, and 90 minutes later, the
candidate looked America in the eye and proclaimed that she was feeling
great. Except now we know that she wasn't.
Not long after this charade, someone on the campaign staff made the call to come clean. But it may well have been too late.
The best the campaign can hope for now is that Clinton recovers
quickly and soon looks healthy in her public appearances. Then maybe the
topic will recede into the background of the campaign. The candidate
got sick, but then she got better. End of story.
But if she doesn't recover quickly? If she appears weak and frail for
more than a few days? Then, yes, she'll face perfectly reasonable
questions about whether she's physically up to serving as president. But
worse, she'll confront lingering doubts about what, precisely, is
ailing her. "It's pneumonia," the campaign will proclaim over and over
again. To which a skeptical America will justifiably reply, "Yes, we can
tell that you'd like us to think so. But we have no reason to trust
that's true."
Political trust is a fragile thing. Once it's gone, it's exceedingly
difficult to get back — and without it, there's no basis on which to
dismiss conspiracy theories that even normally level-headed observers will begin, for perfectly understandable reasons, to entertain.
Like so many of the scandals and pseudo-scandals that have dogged
Hillary Clinton and her husband through the years, this one needs to be
recognized as entirely self-inflicted. The campaign now has to live with
the consequences of having chosen to lie to get out of a problem.
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