Hillary Clinton is Dying
Too
Hillary Rodham Clinton
has been severely criticized for her handling of classified government
information. But that might turn out to be not her greatest problem! Her email
scandal simply averts public eye from the real problem affecting the future of
Mrs. Clinton’s career. That is the problem of her deteriorating health.
Aside from superficial
theorizing about her health problems, a deeper expert enquiry into Mrs.
Clinton’s health poses a rather legitimate question: Is Hillary Clinton
physically and mentally capable of serving as President of the United States
and Commander-in-Chief? At closer inspection, it appears that the Democratic
presidential nominee’s health concerns are far more serious than any superficial
rumors might suggest.
However, even a rapid
glimpse at her calendar should indicate something that the progressive liberal
media people are seemingly suppressing: Clinton’s campaign schedule has never
included more than one campaign event each day. And it is at the heat of the
campaign season when both candidates are running virtually neck-in-neck. In the
first two weeks of August, Hillary Clinton was only campaigning half of those
days. Meanwhile, Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has held more
than twice as many events and has only taken two days off the campaign trail.
Another strange
propensity of the Democratic candidate is her notorious aversion to public
speeches and press conferences. Throughout her campaign Mrs. Clinton has held only
a handful of public debates, made one or two public speeches, and did not hold a
single press conference in half a year. This bizarre conduct on her part did
not escape the notice of professional reporters, who actively talk about
Clinton’s unwillingness to participate in a freewheeling but formal forum with
reporters. This has certainly risen to a central issue of the campaign, with
everybody from the Washington Post to ABC News to New York magazine hectoring
her about her press conference avoidance. The secretary’s “press conference
phobia” has not been explained, except by reference to her closed door
interviews, which are said to be enough to sway the opinion of the public in
her favor.
Yes, reporters can be
malicious, presumptuous beasts beneath her contempt, forever judging her and
setting traps to destroy her. But do not forget that Hillary Clinton is a
lawyer and a career politician and rejoining to acidic questions is clearly her
purview. At least that is what she has done for the better part of her life.
And yet, when Clinton's schedule was announced, several news outlets noted that
Clinton hasn't scheduled a single weekend campaign event in the month of
August. Hillary Clinton is hiding from the public eye!
Meanwhile, Hillary
Clinton is said to be in her final stages of Vascular Dementia. Vascular Dementia
is the second most common type of dementia after Alzheimer's disease. The word
dementia describes a set of symptoms that can include memory loss and
difficulties with thinking, problem-solving or language. In vascular dementia,
these symptoms occur when the brain is damaged because of problems with the
supply of blood to the brain.
According to the
Alzheimer society, the most common cognitive symptoms in the early stages of
vascular dementia are:
* problems with planning
or organizing, making decisions or solving problems
* difficulties following
a series of steps
* slower speed of
thought
* problems concentrating,
including short periods of sudden confusion.
A person in the early
stages of vascular dementia may also have difficulties with:
* memory - problems
recalling recent events
* language - speech may
become less fluent
* visuospatial skills -
problems perceiving objects in three dimensions.
Vascular dementia causes
behavioral changes that often make people seem unusual or out of character. The
most common include irritability, agitation, aggressive behavior and a
disturbed sleep pattern. Someone may also act in socially inappropriate ways.
Occasionally a person with vascular dementia might strongly believe things that
are not true and suffer various delusions or see things that are not really
there and have all kinds of hallucinations.
Vascular dementia is
usually caused by reduced blood supply to the brain due to diseased blood
vessels. To be healthy and function properly, brain cells need a constant
supply of blood to bring oxygen and nutrients. Blood is delivered to the brain
through a network of vessels called the vascular system. If the vascular system
within the brain becomes damaged - so that the blood vessels leak or become
blocked - then blood cannot reach the brain cells and they will eventually die.
Hillary Clinton is known
to be power hungry even to the point of putting her family and her own health
second to her attempts to exercise authority and control. It would not come as
a surprise to many people who know her if she was willing to jeopardizes her
own health and the happiness of her daughter and even grandchildren by running
her presidential campaign while she was mortally sick. Quite on the contrary.
Hillary Clinton is desperate to be the first female president. For people who
have known her for a long time, it is the strongest motivator that will drive
Mrs. Clinton on in the hope that she, by hook or by crook, will become First
Female President, even if it means that she will survive for a few weeks or
months afterwards.
Like her husband Bill,
Hillary Clinton is obsessed with idea of leaving a legacy. Perhaps, it was her
good idea all along. But their vain attempts at leaving a legacy have proved to
be disastrous. Bill Clinton is said to have been obsessed with his legacy, and
for good reason. A president's legacy has a way of defining his presidency:
Harry Truman’s drew a road map for fighting the Cold War; Lyndon Johnson’s
sentenced Richard Nixon to Vietnam; Ronald Reagan’s finished off the Soviet
empire.
Like his predecessors,
Bill Clinton left behind a legacy that has covered in ignominy the Clintons for
a time and left America and the world swaying in horror and pain from the wars
that were unleashed in Somalia (Mr. Clinton's nation-building experiment would
claim 30 American lives and 175 U.S. casualties), Europe (after Belgrade
flouted NATO's threats and intensified its dubious policies toward Bosnia), the
Middle East and Asia (international terrorists were no longer frightened by the
US military might). After watching Mr. Clinton thrash Iraq, Serbia, Afghanistan
and Sudan for nearly half a decade, America's enemies have decided that nothing
short of an ICBM will give Washington pause. The Clinton legacy served as an epilogue
to the first Bush administration and a prologue to the second. Just as the
younger Bush could not foresee exactly where the story would take him, so Mr.
Clinton did not know what would have happened the following years.
Urged by his wife,
Hillary, to strive forward to leave a “legacy”, Bill Clinton made a mess of
global proportions and never fully recovered from the mistakes he made during
his presidency. Today, Hillary Clinton seems to be suffering from the same fit
of vanity that had led her husband to ignominy and is now driving her to be elected
the first female President of the United States. All that regardless of her
health problems that have been kept as the greatest secret of the Democratic
nominee! The question if a deadly sickness would prevent her from running for
president does not seem to have posed any problems to Mrs. Clinton. Her answer
is certainly ‘no’. She is willing and eager to leave a legacy becoming the
first lady president. The interests of the people and national security
disregarding. The Democrats would certainly have no compunction nominating a
dying candidate, as long as it means that they will hold onto power.
Historical precedents also
must be encouraging them. A dying FDR was propped up just long enough to win
the election of 1944 and died just three months into his term. That health
problems are Hillary Clinton’s greatest secret ensues from a detailed survey
conducted by a number of specialists close to the Democratic nominee. According
to the New York Post and a number of other sources, Hillary Clinton faces
“mounting health issues” leaving her secretly worried that she’s too sick to
run for president.
The 68-year-old
Democratic front-runner has been “frequently plagued” by “blinding headaches”
and a series of strokes over the course of the campaign which have left her second-guessing
her chances of winning in 2016, says the upcoming book “Unlikeable — The
Problem with Hillary.” Radar reports that some insiders have said that Clinton
has had several strokes and may have multiple sclerosis. Rumors circulate that
Clinton has been repeatedly hinted at the possibility that, perhaps for her
daughter Chelsea and her grandchild, she should step aside and let another
replace her as the Democratic nominee.
Overwork — frequent
overseas trips, perpetual jet lag, high-pressure meetings — had surely made her
ill. She has kept up a punishing schedule since Hillary Clinton became Bill’s
wife, especially after Mrs. Clinton declared her candidacy for president in
2007. Having logged more than 950,000 miles and visited 112 countries, she is known
to be one of the most-traveled secretaries of state in history. She has
gradually put on weight and in recent times appeared fatigued. However, that
was not what has become her real problem. Mrs. Clinton is suffering clots in
her head.
Hillary Clinton has
suffered a variety of health issues. Unsurprisingly, she has declined to make
her medical records public. In July of 2015 her personal physician released a
letter asserting her “excellent physical condition.” Unfortunately, even casual
observation, including multiple later episodes recorded on video, strongly
suggest that the content of the letter is insincere. There is a certain need to
sort through the known facts and demand a fair, thorough medical explanation
for Mrs. Clinton’s physical condition to make it public.
Hillary Clinton
physically and even mentally is not capable of serving as President of the
United States. This conclusion would certainly be made if serious and
independent medical examination was made prior to the debates. Hillary Clinton
is mortally ill. She, in fact, will probably die within the next year or two.
Even casual observers have noted multiple times that Hillary Clinton is looking
older by the month. And perhaps any doctor would agree that her increasingly
worsening physical condition is the most expected development of Mrs. Clinton’s
Vascular Dementia.
Since June 2009, Hillary
Rodham Clinton, the then Secretary of State, have undergone a massive number of
surgeries and medical treatments to repair and recuperate from a fractured
right elbow, which had been caused when she slipped and fell on her way to a
White House meeting. Presumably, the unfortunate incident had repercussions.
That and the fact that she had a blood clot in the past – in her leg, in 1998 –
contributed to Mrs. Clinton’s propensity to dehydration, loss of consciousness,
and increased risk of forming clots higher in her blood system. On December 13,
2012, a concussion through the fall in her home, when she fainted and fell
striking her head, was diagnosed and Mrs. Clinton was admitted to New
York-Presbyterian/Columbia hospital. A scan discovered a number of additional
blood clots and more. Hillary Clinton had spent several days of treatment for
the blood clots in a vein in her head.
The clots in her head
turned out to be potentially more serious than the other ones, blocking a vein
that drains blood from the brain. Untreated, such blockages inevitably lead to
brain hemorrhages and/or strokes. Treatment consists mainly of blood thinners
to keep the clot from enlarging and to prevent more clots from forming, and
plenty of fluids to prevent dehydration, which is a major risk factor for blood
clots.
Specialty fluids have
become a daily necessity for Mrs. Clinton to prevent more blood clots from
appearing in the brain. Dr. David J. Langer, a brain surgeon and associate
professor at Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, said that Mrs. Clinton
needs continual monitoring in the following months and probably years to make
sure her doses of blood thinners are correct and that the clots are not
growing.
Back in 2012, she theoretically
still was able to testify before the Senate and House about the attack on the
American mission in Benghazi, Libya, which had killed four Americans, including
Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens on September 11, 2012. However, Mrs.
Clinton’s physical condition was too bad and she could not appear at a hearing
in December.
Mrs. Clinton’s blood
clots formed in a large vein along the side of her head, behind her right ear,
between the brain and the skull. The vein, called the right transverse sinus,
has a matching vessel on the left side. These veins drain blood from the brain.
Simultaneous blockages in both those veins can cause strokes or brain
hemorrhages. But if only one transverse sinus is blocked, the vein on other
side can usually handle the extra flow.
Mrs. Clinton was lucky
to have only one vein blocked. If additional clot, higher in this drainage
system, appeared in a vessel with no partner to take the overflow, it would
have been far more dangerous, according to Dr. Geoffrey T. Manley, the vice
chairman of neurological surgery at the University of California, San
Francisco. The fact that Hillary Clinton had blood clots in the past suggested
that she has a tendency to form clots, and will need blood-thinners for the
rest of her life, Dr. Manley said.
One major risk to people
who take blood thinners is that the drugs increase bleeding, so blows to the
head from falls or other accidents – like the fall that caused Mrs. Clinton’s
concussion – become more dangerous, and more likely to cause a brain
hemorrhage.
According to Dr. Langer,
the vein blocked by the clot might not reopen. As the time goes, the clot
persists and the body covers it with tissue that closes or narrows the blood
vessel. However, as long as the vein on the other side of the head remains
open, there is no immediate problem for the patient.
It remains unclear what
caused Mrs. Clinton’s blood clots to begin with. What is clear is that her blood
clots have caused her, throughout her entire life, occasionally lose
consciousness, pass out, and fall unexpectedly, sometimes hurting her head,
elbows, and knees. One of the reasons could be her overworking and stressing
during her frequent overseas trips, perpetual jet lags, high-pressure meetings,
and so on. One of the warning signals of her worsening situation has been her
putting on weight and in more recent times appearing more frequently fatigued.
Those are strong signs of severely disrupted blood circulation and vascular
problems.
Another direct
repercussion of vascular dementia is developing behaviors that seem unusual or
out of character. The most common include irritability, agitation, aggressive
behavior and a disturbed sleep pattern, delusions, and hallucinations. Someone
may also have memory loss and/or act in socially inappropriate ways.
Average life expectancy
for people suffering vascular dementia, from the time of diagnosis, is five
years. According to public records, Mrs. Clinton’s vascular dementia was
diagnosed in 2013. If she became president, Mrs. Clinton would be unlikely to
complete the term and there's a good chance that the VP would have to take over
months after the election.
Hillary Clinton faces
mounting health issues, which is a fact! Her neurological condition includes
Complex Partial Seizures and Subcortical Vascular Dementia! To address the
condition, Clinton's doctor is said to have also raised the dosage on her
“antidepressants and anxiety medication”!
Dementia can
significantly shorten a person's life. If Mrs. Clinton were a sitting
president, this diagnosis alone would be enough grounds for her resignation.
However, Clinton’s campaign is in full swing. Meanwhile, throughout the
campaign, cameras have caught glimpses of Hillary Clinton coughing, wheezing,
stumbling, and stuttering. One of her staff has been photographed carrying a
pen for emergency injections…
Hillary Clinton is
almost 69 years old. It is reasonable to expect a person of her age to have
some medical issues. However, Clinton is not retiring from work. Instead, she
is running for president, possibly the most stressful job in the world. And she
seems to be little concerned with the fact that the health of
Commander-in-Chief is national security issue.
Hillary Clinton is a renowned
megalomaniac, who still believes, like her husband, that she ought to leave a
“legacy”. Preposterous as she appears to be, Hillary Clinton is determined to
win. Meanwhile, increasingly smaller number of her dwindling supporters find
Mrs. Clinton trustworthy. Given her deteriorating health condition, Hillary
Clinton continues to push forward, deceiving the public about her health,
avoiding press conferences and most public events.
She knows that pretty
soon she will be evidently not fit to stay in her job any longer. Any deception
would be impossible. She knows she would not be able to last longer than one
term, if elected president. Her illness progresses too quickly. Yet, she keeps
her maniacal struggle. Hillary Clinton is asking for the toughest job on the
planet just to stake her ground in history. She does not seem to care that,
should she become president, Mrs. Clinton would not be able to execute her
duties properly. Pretty much like when she was Secretary of State back in 2012,
when she had her first stroke.
She is known to have had
little integrity long before Benghazi. But even then, she had no stamina or
medical condition to do her job the way she would have liked to. So what? Now,
her physical and mental capacity are diminishing by the day. If she becomes
president, her short and probably painful tenure certainly will not last long.
Maybe two months, maybe two years. Perhaps it even becomes a series of events
similar to Benghazi or some other terrible things follow. Hillary Clinton seems
to be obsessed with her endeavor to win the race. If she wins, the fact is
Hillary Rodham Clinton is the First Female President of the United States of
America forever! There will be no other in the future! As to the details, what
difference – at this point – does it make?
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