Dear Hillary,
There is an easy way to turn the private email servor problem from a negative to a positive. Here's how.
Let it be known that the private email servor was a State Department cyber security project and that it was used as an intelligence honeytrap. That is to say, it was set up in order to identify those who might attempt to compromise your email by hacking into the servor.
Further, let it be known that as part of the project, the information on the servor was false or misleading information of no real national security value.
Once the servor was set up with watchguards developed by our own cyber intelligence operatives, it would be a simple matter to identify those who had actually made the attempts to hack into the servor. It would also yield information about sources and methods being used by others for such activities against our information networks, both governmental and military.
How to release this information? Assuming that the State Department cyber security project was successful, and assuming that all useful information has thus been gained from the project, the best way to share the information with the public would be during one of the nationally televised Democrat debates when the inevitable question about the private email servor is asked.
Another way is to have some somewhere gradually drop hints and suggestions that the private email servor was a sting operation to catch cyber hackers attempting to learn our government's secrets.
The issue goes away and your credibility soars and you become the next President of the United States.
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