Parody As a Weapon Part XXVIII

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Last week, in Part XXVII, we remained in the realm of song parody, and took a peek at Joe Biden’s economy at a no longer a dollar store through the lens of 1970s super group Chicago. This week, we will reach back to an earlier decade to examine the recent revelations of the Durham special counsel investigation.

The year 1960 was marked by a close presidential election that remains controversial amidst claims of electoral fraud in Illinois and Texas. Beyond the realm of politics, though, there were changes waiting in the wings as 1961 began. A native Michigander named Charles Westover, performing as Del Shannon had his pop chart hit with “Runaway”. The song featured Max Crook on a keyboard instrument he created and named the Musitron, which was a precursor to the synthesizers that would gain popularity in the years ahead.

Del Shannon followed up his hit song with another track entitled “Hats Off to Larry”. The song’s lyrics were an exercise in Schadenfreude for the protagonist disguised as a tribute to the man who broke the heart of the woman who broke his heart. Del Shannon would go on to have later US hits, though he had much more success in the United Kingdom, where he basically was the counterattack to the British Invasion that dominated the US pop charts in the mid-1960s.

Del Shannon’s music career continued in the 1970s and 1980s, though with much less commercial success, at least until “Runaway” was borrowed as the theme song for the TV series “Crime Story” in 1987. It had been reported that he would be joining the pop ensemble “The Traveling Wilburys” as the replacement for the recently deceased Roy Orbison when Shannon was found dead from a gunshot wound at his home in California in 1990. Though his death was ruled a suicide, his wife did not believe so, and other family and friends were baffled by this mysterious death.

Another controversial death by a gunshot wound in the 1990s that was ruled a suicide was that of Vince Foster. As a close associate of the Clinton Family in both Arkansas and the White House, the discovery of his body in Fort Marcy Pak in the District of Columbia raised suspicions as the Whitewater investigation into Bill and Hillary was just getting started.

Of course, this would not be the last investigation of Clinton corruption, or the last associate whose death during an investigation turned out to be greatly convenient for the couple (though the heirs of Jeffrey Epstein could not be reached for comment). Certainly, the violation of statutes regarding the protection of classified material documented in Operation Midterm Exam in 2016, where a private unsecured server housed in a private bathroom closet were involved along with the laptop of a now-convicted sex offender would have merited prison time for most other government employees so involved. Despite this, corrupt former FBI director James Comey excused her criminal negligence.

Nonetheless, as revelations in recent court filings from the investigation by Special Counsel John Durham indicate, there appears to be an expanding body of evidence that not only did Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign invent the Trump-Russia collusion narrative and used their connections to government intelligence agencies to investigate and disseminate these falsehoods, but that representatives employed by or associated with her presidential campaign exploited their access to other restricted government data to falsify evidence to support their disingenuous narrative.

Though the statute of limitations for most federal felonies that occurred during the Obama administration expired, the use of the word “spying” to describe the activities by the Clinton campaign and its operatives does suggest that potential violations of federal espionage laws may be under consideration, which is significant, since some of these at least have a ten-year statute of limitations from the date one left government service.

In addition, those who returned to government service for the Biden administration and submitted new SF86 forms and failed to properly report prior mishandling of classified information may have new 18 USC 1001 violations to investigate and prosecute if they were less than candid about their roles in the dissemination of this manufactured slanderous narrative.

Beyond this, though, ever mindful of Lucy Van Pelt’s performance with the football for Charlie Brown, it might be time to reach into Del Shannon’s bag of Schadenfreude and engage in some wistful and wishful thinking on what might be coming in the Durham investigation for Hillary and her minions (and hopefully all of those targeted by and participating in the investigation avoid Fort Marcy Park while in Washington, D.C.). With such in mind, with the stylized chords of Max Crook’s musitron in the background, I offer this version of Mr. Westover’s opus to memorialize a woman far worse than any who ever broke his heart:

Once there was a little girl
Who had an e-mail “matter”
It now turns out she liked to spy
On the office her husband once spattered

Lock up Hillary

she broke the law
Just like the server in her

staff bathroom hall

Her campaign told big lies

now it’s their turn to cry cry cry
Now that Durham may finally get the truth

I know this may sound hardened
She’ll soon call Joe to get her pardon
For the many things she’s gotta pay

Lock up Hillary

She’s a disgrace
She spied on Trump when she

Took second place
Her campaign told big lies

now it’s their turn to cry cry cry
Now that Durham may finally get the truth

Lock up Hillary

But don’t be through
Brennan, Clapper, McCabe

And Comey too
Her campaign told big lies

now it’s their turn to cry cry cry
Now that Durham may finally get the truth

Now that Durham may finally get the truth

Now that Durham may finally get the truth

 

#Parody #Ridicule #Alinsky #Biden

 

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