Clinton was impeached and acquitted, not just "allowed to stay in office." After his acquittal, there was no legal basis whatsoever to remove him from office.
And Clinton has never had any problem using weasel words when he felt it was necessary; he didn't need any help. If you're interested, here's the transcript with the full context of the "meaning of 'is' is" remark: http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/transcr.htm http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/transcr.htm That part is about a third of the way down the page. The context is more complicated than you might think; it wasn't just some throwaway statement. John wrote: Bhairitu, There was one guy in another forum who was terribly afraid of this so- called judge since he is a self-proclaimed Masonic member. The forum member said that he was tortured for divulging the organization's secret--vagal stimulation, which is supposedly practiced by high ranking members. He believed that this judge is a threat to the world as we know it. As you can glean from this video, the Masons have connections world-wide through various organizations, including the Post Master Generals. This judge also said that he coached President Clinton how to handle the sex investigations and how to deal with Congress during the Lewinski scandal. That's why Bill Clinton was using weasel words like, "It depends on WHAT IS is". It sounded like this type of wording came out of Miller's teachings. The judge further stated that Clinton threatened to expose the worthlessness of the American currency if he was drummed out of office. Specifically, the box outline on the currency note means--in some legal language, or maybe Masonic symbolism--that the note is worthless. As it turned out, Clinton was officially impeached but was allowed to stay in office. Was the judge telling the truth? Lastly, in the video, the judge stated that the American currency note is all based on Masonic symbols, including the circles in the dollar amount, the pyramid, and the "eye" on top of the pyramid. And guess what? The presidents on the currency notes were all Masons as well, such as George Washington, Grant and Benjamin Franklin.