Clinton And Trump  Represent The Same Entity: Conspiracy Theories And Beyond
By Taj Hashmi
11 June, 2016
Countercurrents.org
Countercurrents.org
The Democratic and 
Republican parties have made presumptive nominations of their 
Presidential candidates, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Both are 
among the least popular candidates in the history of US Presidential 
elections. While many Americans think Clinton is least trustworthy, and a
 hawkish representative of Washington and the Wall Street, they think 
Trump is a bully, racist, inexperienced, unpredictable, and least 
Presidential. Then again, thanks to multiple conspiracy theories about 
the two candidates, their mutual relationship, and about the nomination 
and election process, Americans and people across the world are 
sceptical, puzzled, worried, and uncertain about the next Presidential 
election and its short- and long-term effects on global peace and order.
Conspiracy theories proliferate and 
become viral in no time. And sections of the population – even in the 
most developed countries like the US – believe in such theories, which 
sometimes sound much more rational and convincing than the truth. We 
have come across several wild conspiracy theories, including one on the 
“hidden understanding” between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. 
According to this theory, Clinton and Trump are fused in a single entity
 that represents the Wall Street and the Military Industrial Complex in 
America. Hence their joint-venture to defeat the maverick “socialist” 
Bernie Sanders, who’s against Big Money and the Military Industrial 
Complex.
The way the Democratic Party had 
declared Clinton to be the presumptive nominee of the Party, day before 
the last Primaries in six states were held on Tuesday June 7, many 
Sanders supporters believe their candidate was ignored, marginalized, 
and humiliated. Sanders simply didn’t get what he asked for from his 
Party, i.e. for the sake of a fair and winnable election; let the 
superdelegates’ votes be counted only after the Primaries are over, at 
the Democratic Party Convention in July. The least expected declaration 
of Clinton as the presumptive nominee before the last Primaries gives 
the impression that the whole thing was premeditated and rigged, a 
by-product of a secret plan to nominate Clinton at the eleventh hour, 
without yielding to Sanders’s demand to process the nomination at the 
Democratic Convention. One may, however, call it a conspiracy against 
Bernie Sanders, too.
The Democratic Party bosses’ 
insensitive decision to declare Hillary Clinton as the presumptive 
nominee – because of her scoring higher number of votes, delegates, and 
super delegates than those by Bernie Sanders – before the Democratic 
Primaries in California, New Mexico, Montana, North Dakota, South 
Dakota, and New Jersey ruined whatever prospects Sanders had to gain 
more votes and delegates to influence the superdelegates to get 
nominated as the prospective Democratic nominee for the Election. Many 
prospective Sanders voters are likely to abstain from going to the 
polls. As one New York Times columnist has observed, passionate Bernie 
Sanders supporters “awoke enraged on Tuesday [June 7] after learning 
that his slim hopes for winning the Democratic presidential nomination 
had been effectively dashed as a batch of superdelegates revealed their 
support for Hillary Clinton”. An editorial of the same daily has also 
pointed out; Clinton “needs to convince Sanders followers that she won 
fairly”.
The Republican camp also witnessed 
some dramatic moments since Trump’s becoming the presumptive nominee. On
 Friday June 3, three days before the Primaries on the 7th, Donald Trump
 in an interview with CNN repeated his racially charged accusations 
(which he first brought up at a Republican rally in late May) against 
US-born Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who is overseeing lawsuits against Trump 
University in San Diego. Trump repeatedly said the judge being a 
“Mexican”, couldn’t render unbiased decisions in the lawsuits, as he 
(Trump) wanted to build a wall across the US-Mexico border to stop the 
influx of illegal Mexicans into America. Almost the entire Republican 
Party leadership, including Speaker Paul Ryan and the Senate Leader 
Lindsay Graham, condemned Trump’s judge-comment racist and 
“un-American”.
Despite Trump’s public denial that 
his comment wasn’t racist at all, he knows it was blatantly racist, and 
he used racist slur on purpose. According to another streak of 
conspiracy theory, Trump played the race card to jeopardize his own 
election prospects. This theory implies he’s actually not interested in 
winning the election; he is after ruining the Republican Party; and his 
“hidden agenda” is all about electing Hillary Clinton as the President. 
After all, she and her husband are old family friends, and he has better
 prospects of making more money having another Clinton in the White 
House!
Now, can anyone do anything about any
 conspiracy theory that is in circulation for decades? There are people 
who believe in multiple conspiracy theories about President Kennedy’s 
assassination. There are people in America – even in Neil Armstrong’s 
neighbourhood – who don’t believe the astronaut and his colleagues ever 
stepped on the moon. And we know about quite a few conspiracy theories 
about 9/11 and the killing of Osama bin Laden. I don’t have any solution
 – or intention – of debunking any of these conspiracy theories. 
However, what lies beyond the conspiracy theories is very discomforting 
for peace loving people, within and beyond America.
                    
Now, the American voters seem to have a difficult choice, between the Devil and the Deep Sea! While Trump would be most unpredictable like a bull in a china shop, but is least likely to get elected. As one recalls her whole-hearted support for Iraq Invasion in 2003, Clinton, the likely winner could blindly follow George W. Bush’s disastrous foreign policy. As Obama’s Secretary of State, she was instrumental in the overthrow of multiple Arab regimes, including the brutal killing of President Qaddafi, and the destruction of Syria by engineering a civil war in the country with the help of Islamist terror groups. Last but not least, one has reasons to worry about what she publicly stated she would do if elected to the presidency: “If I’m President, we will attack Iran…we would be able to totally obliterate them” – with nuclear weapons, one wonders!
Now, the American voters seem to have a difficult choice, between the Devil and the Deep Sea! While Trump would be most unpredictable like a bull in a china shop, but is least likely to get elected. As one recalls her whole-hearted support for Iraq Invasion in 2003, Clinton, the likely winner could blindly follow George W. Bush’s disastrous foreign policy. As Obama’s Secretary of State, she was instrumental in the overthrow of multiple Arab regimes, including the brutal killing of President Qaddafi, and the destruction of Syria by engineering a civil war in the country with the help of Islamist terror groups. Last but not least, one has reasons to worry about what she publicly stated she would do if elected to the presidency: “If I’m President, we will attack Iran…we would be able to totally obliterate them” – with nuclear weapons, one wonders!
Contrary to what Sanders untiringly 
campaigned for during the last one year, Clinton is likely to lend 
unconditional support to the Wall Street, Israeli, and the Military 
Industrial lobbies; and she’s likely to drag America and her allies into
 protracted wars in distant lands, for the benefit of the Military 
Industrial Lobby and others who benefit from long-drawn-out wars. One is
 not sure how effective would be the opposition of Bernie Sanders’s 
supporters, who are opposed to the manipulative Wall Street, and other 
beneficiaries of wars and invasions of countries who pose no threat to 
America.
The writer teaches security 
studies at Austin Peay State University in the US. He is the author of 
several books, including his latest, Global Jihad and America: The 
Hundred-Year War Beyond Iraq and Afghanistan (Sage, 2014). Email: 
tajhashmi@gmail.com
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