A recently discovered first draft of the Washington Post Editorial on the State Department report on Hillary Clinton's emails:
The department's email technology was archaic. Other staffers also used personal email, as did Secretary Colin Powell (2001-2005), without preserving the records. But there is no excuse for the way Ms. Clinton breezed through all the warnings and notifications. It was OK for others, yes, but not for her. You see, we hate her. We've hated her since she and that hillbilly husband of hers came to Washington and stunk up the place. She's not a Lady. Peggy Noonan is a Lady. Peggy would have asked what the rules were. She would never have dared run for President having been a mere First Lady--especially when she knew we didn't like her. A Lady asks permission--for everything. Nevermind that there's a job to be done and the existing system is know to be a technologically archaic POS. A Lady always asks permission. And if that permission is not forthcoming, she smiles demurely, apologizes profusely, and sits patiently while the men figure out what to do. Hillary was disturbingly unmindful of the rules--of how a Lady behaves--of how we do things in this town. Of course, were her name Dick Tubalz, we'd be lauding him for cutting through an impossible bureaucracy so he could get on with the job he was hired to do. But her name is not Dick Tubalz. It's Hillary and we hate her. (Did we say that already?) For Dick, we'd excoriate the State Department for having no policy to collect and retrieve emails when staffers leave service--just like every major business in America. None of this would have been his fault because men do these things. They cut through red tape and bureaucracy. They break the rules from time to time when there's work to be done. It's made America great. But if women did that all hell would break loose. Thus, in the middle of the presidential campaign, we urge the FBI to finish its own investigation soon, so we can once again write about the fact that we just hate her and she has no respect for how we do things in this town.
Unfortunately, that's all the text retrieved. The rest of the paper was covered in doodles.