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The Death of American Virtue: Clinton vs. Starr (2010)

par Ken Gormley

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A professor at Duquesne University Law School details the wide-ranging investigation into President Clinton "that divded the nation and nearly toppled Clinton's presidency. From special prosecutor Kenneth W. Starr's initial probe of the Whitewater land deal in Arkansas to the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit to the Monidca Lewinsky affair, culminating in a dramatic Senate impeachment trial," the author relies on exclusive interviews with President Clinton, Ken Starr, Monica Lewinsky and family, Linda Tripp, Paula Jones, Susan McDougal and many other key players as well as documents from the Justice Dpeartment's internal investigation into Starr. -- Dust jacket.… (plus d'informations)
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Like so many of my books i got this at the Library upon someone's reccomendation. it is a plod to read on but read on i am. i do know much of the story having lived through it. I konw there are many that think he shouldn't be prosecuted but he did commit and set and example to others who have committed a similar crime. So Clinton can't be treated differently than any one else.It is clear the president can be tried as a civilian, a lot of the book is the law dealing with the legal case. ( )
  SigmundFraud | Jan 4, 2013 |
In a country more prone to hit the self-destruct button than to come to terms with rabid partisan quarrels it's hard to give a balanced verdict of this book.

On the one hand Gormley lets almost everyone speak their minds, right or wrong, partisan account or balanced judgment.
On the other hand there's Gormley interpreting these accounts.

Gormley's basic assumption is that all parties were wrongly vilified, because basically they had the best of intentions save for an occasional outside juggernaut.
Is that really the case? Careful reading of all the statements from the varying participants seems to lead me to a different conclusion.

Basically Clinton remains a man with questionable sex ethics, short of hormone treatment to ease his stupid sex urges. And Starr and his ilk remain the largely partisan folks out to "get" Clinton personally and derail his administration in the process as well.

It might be the result of appeasing all parties to get them to talk to Gormley in the first place.

Linda Tripp claims she did it all for the best of everyone, but fails to explain why. All we learn is that she uses paranoia as an excuse to frame Monica Lewinsky and Bill Clinton in a partly illegal undertaking.

Most adversaries of Bill and Hillary Clinton get their actions explained in ridiculous wordings. "I thought Clinton was sick and depraved, but I swear I respected him"; "I thought Clinton was a low life liberal scum, but I swear it's wasn't politics that drove me"; "I joined forces with Starr because I was anti-Clinton all my life, but there were no politics involved in my decision." "When we found a way to use our digging into the personal sex life of Clinton to make him pay, and made high fives to celebrate the fact, it was all because we were only seeking out the truth."

When Paula Jones claims Clinton had to pay because The American Spectator smeared her name, Clinton wonders why she was out to get him and not the AS instead. Why did she go in cahoots with the very magazine that smeared her name? Why didn't Gormley ask her the obvious question?

All in all the book does little to change the image of a partisan mud fight, a continuing struggle for power with all means available. It does not explain why the Starr operation was a neutral search for truth instead of a derailed partisan quest. It doesn't even enlighten us why Clinton was such a stupid person to have a sexual relation in the White House while fighting a court case around a sexual relation in his his gubernatorial period. Weird.

Maybe Gormley chose the best solution after all. Write down what they all told him and let history judge. But maybe he did so afraid of being accused of partisanship in the current festering US political landscape.
If that's the case it's a pity. I don't buy such books to rehash the clippings from the legal proceedings, the papers and the Drudge report, but because I want a perspective as objective as possible, to come to a sensible discussion of the way democratic governments and their opponents function. And in the end, what we can learn from their mistakes. ( )
  jeroenvandorp | Jul 31, 2011 |
4733. The Death of American Virtue Clinton vs. Starr, by Ken Gormley (read 30 Jul 2010) This account of the dramatic events surrounding the investigation of Clinton by the special prosecutor's office is balanced and well-written and reads, even to one who remembers the events well, like thriller fiction. Especially of interest are the accounts of the lawyers as they did their work and of the tremendous pressure they were under. The author appears to have had the cooperation of all the people he interviewed at great length, and I think this is probably as good an account of the events involved as we are likely to see. While the events related are sordid and inexcusable so far as Clinton is concerned it seems clear that it was wise that he not be convicted and expelled from office. ( )
  Schmerguls | Jul 30, 2010 |
Cet avis a été signalé par plusieurs utilisateurs comme abusant des conditions d'utilisation et n'est plus affiché (show).
  MightyLeaf | May 25, 2010 |
4 sur 4
This hefty volume, going beyond the sordid details, provides helpful context for the larger story, the fractionalization of American politics that defined the Clinton years.
 
Mr. Gormley's "The Death of American Virtue," despite its overwrought title, is a scrupulously even-handed and exhaustively reported book. A law professor with no apparent ax to grind, Mr. Gormley set out a decade ago to write the definitive history of the Clinton independent-counsel investigation and has emerged as one of the few people who seems to admire both Bill Clinton and Ken Starr—even as he documents their failings.
 
“The Death of American Virtue” is so exhaustive that some of it raises doubts about the value of Mr. Gormley’s exertions. There are times when this book seems akin to climbing Mt. Everest in house slippers: impressive but not entirely necessary... But by and large Mr. Gormley has packed his narrative with intense, overdue and definitive testimony about the still-surprising investigation of Mr. Clinton’s activities spearheaded by Kenneth W. Starr.
 
The bland portentousness of his prose (“Behind closed doors, the White House crisis team was preparing for nuclear warfare”) may be inevitable when a writer of middling talent addresses himself to dire events. (It won’t shock anybody who’s read a Bob Woodward book.) But Gormley does such a masterly job of organizing his voluminous material that the momentum of events takes over. The book seldom feels padded or tedious -- in fact, it’s addictive.
ajouté par Shortride | modifierBloomberg, Craig Seligman (Feb 12, 2010)
 
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A professor at Duquesne University Law School details the wide-ranging investigation into President Clinton "that divded the nation and nearly toppled Clinton's presidency. From special prosecutor Kenneth W. Starr's initial probe of the Whitewater land deal in Arkansas to the Paula Jones sexual harassment suit to the Monidca Lewinsky affair, culminating in a dramatic Senate impeachment trial," the author relies on exclusive interviews with President Clinton, Ken Starr, Monica Lewinsky and family, Linda Tripp, Paula Jones, Susan McDougal and many other key players as well as documents from the Justice Dpeartment's internal investigation into Starr. -- Dust jacket.

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