WWW — Men in the pornography industry made her do it says Paula Jones who’s trying to get a book deal. Who those men in the pornography industry are, we’re not sure. But Jones, according to the N.Y. Post, is hawking her autobiography, “I Said ‘No!’: A Case File of Sexual Harassment,” in which Jones will warn fellow victims “what to expect if their harasser is a powerful man. The legal journey may be long and difficult, and their lives will change forever, but in the end they will have their self-esteem and honesty.”
Jones – whose harassment case against her former boss, Bill Clinton, led to revelations about Monica Lewinsky and then his impeachment trial – explains how she has supposedly maintained her self-esteem even after launching the Paula Jones Celebrity Psychic Network, posing naked for Playboy, and boxing with Tonya Harding for a “Celebrity Boxing” special on Fox.
Jones’ book proposal, now making the round of publishing houses, promises that in Chapter 27, she will describe “how, beginning with an innocent photo-shoot, men in the pornography industry manipulated her into posing nude, something she had said she would never do. Paula gives the money to the IRS to satisfy her debt, and immediately regrets the episode and is embarrassed by it.”
But, manipulated by men, she is victimized again. The meat of her proposed book is chapter three, a blow-by-blow account of what happened in the Excelsior Hotel May 8, 1991, “when Clinton propositioned Paula, exposed himself to her, and intimidated her.”
In the next chapter, “Paula tells why she didn’t go public.” What supposedly made Jones finally come forward was a 1994 story in American Spectator magazine “in which state trooper and Clinton bodyguard Danny Ferguson claimed Paula had consensual sex with Clinton.”
Four years later, when Clinton looked into the camera and said, “I did not have sex with that woman, Miss Lewinsky,” those were “the precise words Paula had wanted him to tell the world about her,” the proposal says.
So, is the book really a saga about a right- eous woman’s struggle to clear her name? In a chapter on “The top 10 myths about Paula Jones,” she denies that she was one of Clinton’s bimbos. “I said ‘no.’ I never had sex with that man, Bill Clinton.”
She also disputes she’s trailer trash: “I ain’t never lived in a trailer in my life.” How’s that for self-esteem? Publisher Judith Regan told us there won’t be much interest in Jones’ story at this late date: “I think now, it’s worthless. There are no secrets left.”
