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From the AP on Hillary Clinton's CLOSED door deposition:
"After a pause, the House Oversight Committee's deposition of the former secretary of state has restarted. It was put on hold after Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert shared a photo of Clinton at the closed-door proceeding with a conservative influence who posted it on social media. The photo violated committee rules for depositions, but Boebert posted on social media that the influencer "did nothing wrong." Imagine the GOP uproar if a Democrat had done the same of a Republican testifying at a closed door hearing, regardless of the reason. But then, the WH guy has pretty much trained all his staff and followers that "we're above the law". My opinion and mine alone and not my employer's.
AverageSue reacted "After a pause, the House Oversight Committee's deposition of the former secretary of state has restarted.
"Democratic Wins Media;
'House Republicans dragged Hillary Clinton back into the spotlight today under the pretense of "oversight" related to the Epstein files. What they got instead was a blistering, disciplined opening statement that did two things at once:
1) It centered victims and survivors.
2) It exposed the investigation for what it looks like on its face: political theater designed to protect powerful people and distract from real accountability.
And Clinton didn't mince words about the stakes.
She opened by affirming something most Americans agree with: Congressional oversight matters. It should be fearless, principled, and rooted in truth and accountability. But, she said, too often investigations in Washington devolve into "partisan political theater" - an abdication of duty that insults the public.
Then she cut to the core of why she was there.
The Committee justified subpoenaing her on the assumption that she had information about Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Clinton made her position explicit: she does not. She reiterated what she stated in a sworn declaration earlier this year: she had no knowledge of their criminal activity, does not recall ever encountering Epstein, never flew on his plane, and never visited his island, homes, or offices.
That's the part Republicans wanted to be the story.
Clinton refused to let it be.
The real story: who gets protected, and who gets ignored
Clinton made the most important moral point of the day: the Epstein case is not a gossip magnet or a tabloid parlor game. It is a mass abuse scandal that reveals how systems of power failed - and how institutions too often bend for the rich, well-connected, and politically useful.
She spoke plainly about being horrified by what the public has learned about Epstein's crimes, and she highlighted the grotesque reality that Epstein effectively got a slap on the wrist in 2008 - a deal that allowed predation to continue for years.
Then she aimed her remarks where a serious oversight committee would aim theirs: at government conduct, prosecutorial decisions, investigative failures, and transparency.
And this is where her statement landed like a hammer.
Clinton challenged the Committee's priorities, pointing out that if the goal is truly to assess how the federal government handled investigations and prosecutions, the Committee's actions don't line up with that mission. She noted they subpoenaed multiple law enforcement officials tied to DOJ or the FBI's handling of the case - yet only one appeared in front of the Committee. She also criticized the lack of public hearings and a refusal to allow media access, even as the Committee publicly postures about transparency.
In other words: if you're serious, you act serious. If you're hiding the ball, you keep things closed-door and loudmouth your talking points on cable.
Clinton did what Republicans won't: center the survivors
This is the part that separates Clinton's testimony from the average Washington food fight: she anchored her remarks in the lives of survivors.
She spoke about spending her career advocating for women and girls, and she described meeting victims of trafficking and sexual violence around the world - girls forced into prostitution, survivors trying to rebuild their lives while people in power looked away, mothers searching for daughters lost to trafficking networks.
It wasn't performative. It was a reminder that behind every headline and every salacious mention of "the files" are human beings who were abused, exploited, and discarded.
And she made a point that should be tattooed on the forehead of every member of Congress: survivors are real, and they are entitled to better than politics-as-sport.
A real committee would do real work - here's what that looks like
Clinton didn't just complain. She laid out what a serious investigation would actually do.
A serious committee would push for full release of files with lawful redactions that protect victims and survivors - not powerful men and political allies. It would dig into reports about interviews being withheld. It would subpoena key players who can speak to decisions that protected Epstein and potentially others.
It would demand testimony from prosecutors in Florida and New York about how Epstein received such a sweetheart deal and why other potentially implicated individuals weren't pursued.
It would seek input from frontline officers and experts about what resources they need to combat trafficking.
And it would put forward legislation to strengthen enforcement and force executive branch action.
That's what oversight looks like when it's not a show.
The question Clinton asked that Republicans don't want asked
Clinton ended with the kind of direct challenge that makes unserious politicians sweat:
What is being held back? Who is being protected? And why the cover-up?
She argued she was compelled to testify despite having no helpful knowledge because the spectacle serves a different purpose: distracting attention from President Trump's actions and shielding him from legitimate scrutiny.
And then she delivered the line that cuts through everything: if this Committee is serious about Epstein's trafficking crimes, it should not rely on press gaggles to get answers from the President. It should ask him directly, under oath, about his involvement and appearances in the Epstein files.
That's the standard. That's the bar. And it's exactly why they'd rather haul Clinton in than do the job in front of them.
Hillary Clinton did the assignment. Republicans didn't.
You don't have to agree with Hillary Clinton on every issue to recognize what happened here.
She walked into a trap set for ratings and revenge - and turned it into a statement about accountability, survivors, and institutional failure. She forced the conversation back to what matters: transparency, prosecution decisions, the protection of victims, and the pursuit of truth without fear or favor.
That's not "spinning." That's governing.
And if House Republicans actually cared about justice for Epstein's victims, they'd stop chasing headlines and start doing the work Clinton laid out - in public, with receipts, and with zero sacred cows.
Because this isn't a political scandal.
It's a human one.
And the American people can tell the difference."
DennisinPeoria and AverageSue reacted 1) It centered victims and survivors.
2) It exposed the investigation for what it looks like on its face: political theater designed to protect powerful people and distract from real accountability.
And Clinton didn't mince words about the stakes.
She opened by affirming something most Americans agree with: Congressional oversight matters. It should be fearless, principled, and rooted in truth and accountability. But, she said, too often investigations in Washington devolve into "partisan political theater" - an abdication of duty that insults the public.
Then she cut to the core of why she was there.
The Committee justified subpoenaing her on the assumption that she had information about Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Clinton made her position explicit: she does not. She reiterated what she stated in a sworn declaration earlier this year: she had no knowledge of their criminal activity, does not recall ever encountering Epstein, never flew on his plane, and never visited his island, homes, or offices.
That's the part Republicans wanted to be the story.
Clinton refused to let it be.
The real story: who gets protected, and who gets ignored
Clinton made the most important moral point of the day: the Epstein case is not a gossip magnet or a tabloid parlor game. It is a mass abuse scandal that reveals how systems of power failed - and how institutions too often bend for the rich, well-connected, and politically useful.
She spoke plainly about being horrified by what the public has learned about Epstein's crimes, and she highlighted the grotesque reality that Epstein effectively got a slap on the wrist in 2008 - a deal that allowed predation to continue for years.
Then she aimed her remarks where a serious oversight committee would aim theirs: at government conduct, prosecutorial decisions, investigative failures, and transparency.
And this is where her statement landed like a hammer.
Clinton challenged the Committee's priorities, pointing out that if the goal is truly to assess how the federal government handled investigations and prosecutions, the Committee's actions don't line up with that mission. She noted they subpoenaed multiple law enforcement officials tied to DOJ or the FBI's handling of the case - yet only one appeared in front of the Committee. She also criticized the lack of public hearings and a refusal to allow media access, even as the Committee publicly postures about transparency.
In other words: if you're serious, you act serious. If you're hiding the ball, you keep things closed-door and loudmouth your talking points on cable.
Clinton did what Republicans won't: center the survivors
This is the part that separates Clinton's testimony from the average Washington food fight: she anchored her remarks in the lives of survivors.
She spoke about spending her career advocating for women and girls, and she described meeting victims of trafficking and sexual violence around the world - girls forced into prostitution, survivors trying to rebuild their lives while people in power looked away, mothers searching for daughters lost to trafficking networks.
It wasn't performative. It was a reminder that behind every headline and every salacious mention of "the files" are human beings who were abused, exploited, and discarded.
And she made a point that should be tattooed on the forehead of every member of Congress: survivors are real, and they are entitled to better than politics-as-sport.
A real committee would do real work - here's what that looks like
Clinton didn't just complain. She laid out what a serious investigation would actually do.
A serious committee would push for full release of files with lawful redactions that protect victims and survivors - not powerful men and political allies. It would dig into reports about interviews being withheld. It would subpoena key players who can speak to decisions that protected Epstein and potentially others.
It would demand testimony from prosecutors in Florida and New York about how Epstein received such a sweetheart deal and why other potentially implicated individuals weren't pursued.
It would seek input from frontline officers and experts about what resources they need to combat trafficking.
And it would put forward legislation to strengthen enforcement and force executive branch action.
That's what oversight looks like when it's not a show.
The question Clinton asked that Republicans don't want asked
Clinton ended with the kind of direct challenge that makes unserious politicians sweat:
What is being held back? Who is being protected? And why the cover-up?
She argued she was compelled to testify despite having no helpful knowledge because the spectacle serves a different purpose: distracting attention from President Trump's actions and shielding him from legitimate scrutiny.
And then she delivered the line that cuts through everything: if this Committee is serious about Epstein's trafficking crimes, it should not rely on press gaggles to get answers from the President. It should ask him directly, under oath, about his involvement and appearances in the Epstein files.
That's the standard. That's the bar. And it's exactly why they'd rather haul Clinton in than do the job in front of them.
Hillary Clinton did the assignment. Republicans didn't.
You don't have to agree with Hillary Clinton on every issue to recognize what happened here.
She walked into a trap set for ratings and revenge - and turned it into a statement about accountability, survivors, and institutional failure. She forced the conversation back to what matters: transparency, prosecution decisions, the protection of victims, and the pursuit of truth without fear or favor.
That's not "spinning." That's governing.
And if House Republicans actually cared about justice for Epstein's victims, they'd stop chasing headlines and start doing the work Clinton laid out - in public, with receipts, and with zero sacred cows.
Because this isn't a political scandal.
It's a human one.
And the American people can tell the difference."
We the people charge all with tampering with evidence and withholding. Only to get the 5th.
I'm actually surprised the House Oversight Committee didn't bring up the issues of Hillary Clinton's deleted emails or server when she was SOS, or the continued conspiracy of that pizza place being a sex trafficking ring. Especially after they couldn't get the any details of her knowledge of Epstein's activities. Which was none.
I wonder which Republicans named in the files will be threatened with contempt of Congress if they refuse to appear before this committee after being subpoened?
My opinion and mine alone and I don't care what others think.
AverageSue reacted I wonder which Republicans named in the files will be threatened with contempt of Congress if they refuse to appear before this committee after being subpoened?
My opinion and mine alone and I don't care what others think.
NBC News had comments from Clinton afterwards where she said she WAS asked about "Pizzagate"...and about UFOs. Seriously? That tells me the GOP committee head James Comer was not satisfied with her answers about connections with Epstein, and had to deflect off on something else.
My opinion and mine alone and no one else
skutfarcus and AverageSue reacted My opinion and mine alone and no one else
Follow the money. I Audited $2.1 Billion in Epstein Financial Records. Here's Every Name the Money Touched.
randallscott25-star. github.io/epstein-fo rensic-finance/narra tives/19_grand_
The Season 1 finale. 10,964 transactions across 14 banks, 8 shell entities, and 123 connected nodes.
AverageSue and DennisinPeoria reacted randallscott25-star. github.io/epstein-fo rensic-finance/narra tives/19_grand_
The Season 1 finale. 10,964 transactions across 14 banks, 8 shell entities, and 123 connected nodes.
RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
AverageSue and RambleOn reacted RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
RELEASE THE EPSTEIN FILES! (real)
If Trump's name was mentioned 38,000 times in the Epstein Files, why did they talk to Hillary Clinton who was not mentioned one time?
mypeez, AverageSue and skutfarcus + 1 more reacted
@CCubs :
And Hillary didn't plead the fifth a single time.
And Hillary didn't plead the fifth a single time.
CCubs : And Hillary didn't plead the fifth a single time.
Current Presidents are either immune from having to appear, or it's a made up rule by his ring kissing advisors.
Even if he did, he would either invoke the 5th Amendment constantly like Maxwell did, or deflect and bully the Democrats on the committee of arranging this "hoax" of an investigation. Even though it was his own GOP party that initiated the investigation.
My opinion and I'm sticking to it.
Even if he did, he would either invoke the 5th Amendment constantly like Maxwell did, or deflect and bully the Democrats on the committee of arranging this "hoax" of an investigation. Even though it was his own GOP party that initiated the investigation.
My opinion and I'm sticking to it.
@mypeez :
I'll believe it when we see it. Those in his circle will claim Deepfake, AI created, just like the ones the WH bully puts on his social media.
My opinion and mine alone and not my employer's.
AverageSue reacted I'll believe it when we see it. Those in his circle will claim Deepfake, AI created, just like the ones the WH bully puts on his social media.
My opinion and mine alone and not my employer's.
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