There has been a lot of talk about experience in this Democratic primary process for President of the United States and Hillary Clinton professes to have the most, under fire in Bosnia, in the White House trying to avoid Monica, while all this time ignoring the experience of the Pastry Chef who also was in the White House for eight years of the Clinton administration.

To show you how much experience the Clinton campaign has, Fox News projected her the winner of the Pa., primary tonight a full 20 minutes before they discovered it because they were watching CNN.

When the telephone rings at 3 AM in the morning Hillary will say, “Bill, it’s for you.”

I just love all this talk about experience, Hillary acts as though she was attached to the hip to Bill when he was attached to something else — but not at the hip.

And when those imaginary bullets were flying in Bosnia while Chelsea was at her side and a small child was reading a poem, it demonstrated the extent of her experience putting icing on the cake with the White House pastry chef before a State dinner.

The judgment to use her husband Bill who was ‘yesterday’, but somehow is trying to be ‘tomorrow’, in her campaign is much like the space shuttle landing and deploying the chute to create a drag.

The testy finger pointing former President, who seems to have a shorter fuse today than he did yesterday, doesn’t seem to represent experience nor judgment on behalf of Hillary.

Now it’s not that Obama is doing so well when it comes to experience, for after all everyone is projecting that he has none.

For after all neither candidate follows a basic principal of “Saying what you mean and meaning what you say.”

The best of phony statements this evening came from Hillary’s campaign chairman when he lauded Fox News projecting Clinton’s win while watching CNN and calling the network fair and balanced.

Politics, a game of phonyism, cronyism and lies, is understood by most of the American voters. But again the electorate will be called on to make an important decision — that is unless politics within the Democratic party excludes the voter from its democracy.