To hear the right wing tell it, Bill Clinton has been downstairs in his laboratory, piecing together his Frankenstein candidate, Wesley Clark. The erstwhile general has now arisen from the lab table, ready to obey Dr. Clinton's every command and utterly unaware of the mad doctor's ultimate scheme to use him as a stalking horse to somehow cripple the Democratic field and get wife Hillary into the race.
This is the line being trotted out -- by William Safire in a recent New York Times column, on all the right-wing Web sites, on the chat shows and thence out to an unsuspecting America. And there's a reason it's become the accepted line. Republicans and conservatives are terrified of Clark's potential -- he already beats George W. Bush in one poll, albeit by a statistically meaningless margin. Most frightening to Republicans in that poll, though, was the result that Clark led Bush among men (if a Republican candidate doesn't carry that demographic, he's vapor). They have to smear Clark, roughly and quickly. And so the collective knee jerks, and Republicans reach for what has been for a decade now their first line of offense. Link him to Clinton. Dirty him up. And the mainstream media, which loves this story line, will lap it up.
But there's one problem with the strategy, and it's the same old problem that you'd think they would have figured out by now: America doesn't hate Bill Clinton. The right wing and the major media just can't bring themselves to believe this. And so here they go, making the same old Clinton mistake.
http://www.prospect.org/webfeatures/2003/09/tomasky-m-09-24.html