Several members of the Maine Corps who had ridiculed Clinton die in a helicopter crash after three had flown with Clinton to the Roosevelt in the Potomac: "Definitely a far cry from conclusive evidence, but certainly a very intriguing coincidence" (117). That type of hint with no evidence is how conspiracy theorists build a vision of what they believe but cannot prove, and the fact that there is no proof becomes proof that someone is keeping anyone from finding the truth.
One of the other hot buttons for right-wing conspiracy theorists is the town of Mena, Arkansas, a town with an airport once used by the CIA to send material to the Contras and later used for smuggling cocaine into the country. Gottlieb cite another conspiracy theorist author, George Carpozi Jr., who finds the death of pilot Barry Seal to be a murder to cover up other activities. The provable crimes taking place in Mena were being committed by Republicans supporting the contras and smuggling drugs as well, and Gottlieb links this to Clinton largely because when a state representative wanted to investigate, "Mr. Clinton did not seize on the issue and offer support" (133). This fact is taken as a demonstration that Clinton was involved in drug smuggling, which is not even a sensible way to reach a conclusion.
Gottlieb has a way of implying guilt without actually saying so, as when he wites about a series of deaths he says are suspicious, though the suspicion comes largely fro the way he links widely disparate events as if they are connected because he can find a tenuous connection. He then writes,
None of the deaths or acts of violence mentioned here can be directly pinpointed to either of the Clintons. They all seem unrelated, but when taken together, it seems impossible that they could be mere coincidence (107).
That is...
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