Bill and Hillary Clinton profess to have always been supporters of racial equality, but anecdotes published in a new book by his ex-lover claim otherwise.

Hillary was heard calling mentally challenged children 'f*****g ree-tards' and caught on record blurting out the terms 'stupid k**e and 'f***ing Jew b*****d', while Bill called the Reverend Jesse Jackson a 'G**damned n****r'.

Bill was also sued several times by blacks and Hispanics for violations of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

Dolly Kyle - who was just 11 when she first crossed paths with Bill, dated him through high school and began sleeping with him once they graduated - published the claims about the Clinton couple's racial epithets and politics in her new book, Hillary: The Other Woman, published by WND Books.

Bill Clinton's former lover Dolly Kyle has published claims about the Clinton couple's racial politics in her new book, Hillary: The Other Woman

Dolly says Hillary (pictured with Bill on Tuesday) was caught on record blurting out the terms 'stupid k**e' and 'f***ing Jew bastard', while Bill called the Reverend Jesse Jackson a 'G**damned n****r'

She writes of one occasion, when developmentally challenged children were having difficulty picking up the eggs at a traditional Easter egg hunt on the grounds of the governor's mansion during Bill's tenure in the Arkansas state house.

Reluctant hostess Hillary had enough.

'The frustrated Me-First Lady demanded, "When are they going to get those f*****g ree-tards out of here?"' Dolly writes.

Dolly dated Bill through high school and began sleeping with him once they graduated

Behind the Reverend Jesse Jackson's back, the Clinton duo called him, 'That G**damned n****r'.

Dolly claims the couple used the same insult toward Robert 'Say' McIntosh, one of the leading African-American activists in Little Rock, Arkansas when Bill was governor. McIntosh was dogging Clinton about ongoing relationships with black prostitutes, q charge, she says, Bill never denied.

Clinton never denied stories that he was having an ongoing relationship with one black prostitute as well as her friends. He did deny a rumor that he had fathered a child with a black prostitute while governor and took a DNA test that was reported as negative.

Rumors of the trysts throughout Little Rock and were aided by 'one prominent black female newscaster who used to brag openly around the television station about her relationship with the governor, although they were 'only' indulging in oral sex'.

Bill Clinton and Dolly grew up with Jim Crow laws in place in the plantation mentality of the South and they were in full force during the 1950s and '60s.

It was a segregated society in Hot Springs at that time. Black and white students went to different schools. In the movie theaters, black people had to watch the movie from a balcony, use separate bathrooms and water fountains.

'Signs that separated 'WHITES' and 'COLORED' were deadly serious and always enforced', Dolly writes.

In Arkansas, everyone had to pay a $2 poll tax to vote, and the cost was a huge sum for many black people.

The black vote was further diluted by 'gerrymandering, a wide-spread practice of dividing electoral districts along racial lines to dilute the black vote'.

Dolly writes that behind the Reverend Jesse Jackson's back, the Clinton duo also called him, 'That G**damned n****r'

Not one black was voted into the Arkansas legislation in hundreds of elections.

In the 1980s, Clinton was sued several times by blacks and Hispanics for violations of the 1965 Voting Rights Act and he lost every case.

The district lines were redrawn under court order.

Ben McGee was a black Democrat was elected to the state legislature in 1988. Clinton tried to replace McGee with a white Democrat of his choice, claims Dolly.

The case went all the way to the Supreme Court was ruled 8-0 against Clinton and the Arkansas officials who challenged McGee's election.

In the 1980s, Hispanics were moving into Arkansas in greater numbers and Clinton began racial profiling against Hispanics, she claims.

He instituted the racial profiling program three years after his brother, Roger Clinton went to prison in 1985 for dealing cocaine.

The program was initially part of his anti-drug program, although Roger's drug suppliers and buyers were white.

'For no good reason, Bill and Hillary decided to profile Hispanics as drug dealers,' Dolly writes.

State troopers now had the authority to stop and search any vehicle remotely suspect of carrying drugs.

'Specifically, the troopers were to stop and search cars driven by Hispanics, especially those cars with Texas license plates.'

Clinton was sued in federal court for his Criminal Apprehension Program that was ruled unconstitutional.

'Billy threw one of his infamous temper tantrums about the ban on his racial profiling of Hispanics and he threatened to renew the racial profiling program in spite of the court's ruling', Dolly reports.

Bill Clinton's 'three strikes' rule incarcerated 2.5million people, including poor people of color who couldn't afford lawyers during their trials

Racial profiling remained in Clinton's head and several years later, he gave state troopers the right to stop and search any car.

Bill and Hillary have been very verbal in criticizing racial profiling as a 'morally indefensible, deeply corrosive practice'.

Clinton's crime bill, the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, was dubbed the 'three strikes' law and is one which has incarcerated over 2.5 million people, predominately poor people of color who could not afford lawyers during their trials.

The 'three strikes' rule sent people to jail for a petty crime or a major felony. It meant prison for life on the third offense, whatever that happened to be.

Clinton's solution was to 'lock 'em up and throw away the key', Dolly writes. Now he could claim credit for less unemployment.

'The unemployment numbers actually did go down, but that was partly because the young black males in prison were no longer counted as unemployed,' she adds.

And when Hillary arrived in Arkansas, Dolly writes, she looked down her nose at what she viewed as 'ignorant hillbillies'.

She was raised in a middle-class suburb in Illinois and considered herself above the southerners – unless she was campaigning in New York state where she declared herself to be a lifelong Yankees fan.

She has repeatedly told the story that she was named after Sir Edmund Hillary who became the first climber to reach the summit of Mt. Everest in 1953.

Hillary was born in October 1947, six years prior to the New Zealand explorer's climb.

She was forced to amend her statement when asked about it, Dolly writes.

'Hillary didn't belong in Arkansas but here she was'.

In the governor's mansion for eight years, Bill and Hillary were both getting tired of the routine and frustrations of the small Southern state and Bill opted out of running for reelection in 1990.

He was marking his time until he could make a move for the White House.

Dolly claims that when Hillary moved to Arkansas, she looked down her nose at what she viewed as 'ignorant hillbillies'

'Hillary decided that, if Billy didn't run for reelection in 1990, she would run for governor in his place,' Dolly writes.

A statewide political poll in 1989 revealed that 'she didn't have a snowball's chance in hell of being elected governor of Arkansas'.

Back in the early 1980s, Hillary, working as a lawyer for the Rose Law Firm, was making more money than Bill was as governor.

The couple always made it known they had 'good investments', although they had no money to invest.

Dolly makes several claims about the Clintons in her new book, Hillary: The Other Woman

They were always 'on the lookout for additional income', Dolly writes.

She adds: 'I first heard about this particular deal when a couple of guys from Canada contacted me in Dallas to ask for my help.'

Dolly agreed to meet the men who were 'terrified of the Clintons'. One man stated he was going to die soon so he wasn't afraid.

'Steve was one of over two thousand Canadians infected with HIV, the AIDS virus,' Dolly claims. The source was traced to bad blood collected from inmates in Arkansas' prisons.

Inmates were paid $7 a pint for their blood and 'Billy's cronies then sold the prisoners' blood to some blood brokers for $50 per pint'.

When it was discovered that the blood was tainted, prisons instituted a 'screening process' which was merely a 'screening clerk' who was selling 'the right to bleed' to prisoners.

Infected prisoners continued to sell their blood as long as they bribed the screening clerk. Instead of the $7 fee, some received drugs.

Arkansas prisons were banned from selling blood when government officials learned that the bad blood was coming from the state.

Getting around that ban, dummy corporations were set up in other states to purchase the bad blood and then resell it.

All of that infected blood went to Canada, where between 8,000 and 10,000 people died.

Little Rock journalist Suzi Parker took on Clinton and his role in the tainted blood scandal in an exposé. She quit her investigation when she started receiving threatening phone calls in the middle of the night, writes Dolly.

The infamous Whitewater scandal was another 'good investment' for the Clintons.

The Whitewater scandal came about in the late 1970s when the Clintons partnered with friends James and Susan McDougal to purchase 220 acres of land in Arkansas that would become the Whitewater Development Corporation and was a quick-money-making scheme to build vacation homes.

They then got involved in the Whitewater scandal - a quick-money-making scheme - with friends James (pictured) and Susan McDougal. James McDougal was later found guilty of fraud and conspiracy

With a quarter-million dollars from Madison S&L, the team bought land in an undeveloped area with 'no roads, infrastructure, amenities, shopping and no chance to draw the kind of people who had money to buy a vacation home'.

The venture failed, thousands of dollars were lost, and James McDougal moved on to start Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan.

When federal regulators began to investigate another McDougal deal, questions about the Clintons' involvement in the Whitewater arose during President Clinton's first term in office. An investigation into the legality of the Whitewater transactions was launched.

Hillary was a partner in the Rose Law Firm as well as a partner in the Whitewater deal.

When criminal charges were brought against McDougal, he hired the Rose Law Firm.

Some of the players went to jail, one died in jail and 'the half of it has not been told'.

The Rose Law Firm was once the preeminent firm in Little Rock before the arrival of Hillary Clinton.

During the Whitewater investigation, one of the old-timer partners was asked for his opinion on Hillary.

'That b**** is going to ruin my firm', he answered.

Vince Foster, Bill's Deputy White House Counsel, had been a childhood friend of Bill's and a former partner of Hillary's at the Rose Law Firm.

He knew all of the Whitewater secrets including 'Hillary's double-billing practices that had enabled her to receive questionable foreign money with strings attached,' says the author.

He knew the skinny on the firing of the White House Travel Office [ostensibly so Hillary could hire her Arkansas cronies] and using FBI files to go after people through the IRS.

Hillary pushed Foster to end the fifty-day standoff during between the Branch Davidians and the federal and Texas state law enforcement in Waco, Texas in 1993.

Vince Foster (left with Hillary), Bill's Deputy White House Counsel, had been a childhood friend of Bill's and a former partner of Hillary's at the Rose Law Firm. He was aware of all the Whitewater secrets

Foster (pictured with his wife, Hillary and Bill) was found dead in Fort Marcy Park off the George Washington Parkway in Virginia on July 20, 1993. His death was ruled a suicide

Seventy-four men, women and children died a violent death, and Foster was devastated.

Dolly writes: 'I believe that Vince Foster was a man of integrity, despite his friendship with Billy and Hillary Clinton.

'I believe that Vince was about to resign because of what he had seen in his first six months of the Clinton co-presidency. I believe that his resignation would have raised a lot of probing questions.'

But before he could leave Washington, the Deputy White House Council was found dead in Fort Marcy Park off the George Washington Parkway in Virginia on July 20, 1993.

An antique, rarely-fired, gun was found in his hand.

His office safe was opened and emptied by Hillary's people, and his death was quickly ruled a suicide.

'I do not believe that Vince Foster committed suicide,' Dolly writes. 'You don't have to believe what I believe, but know this.

'The news of Vince Foster's death was being talked about in beauty shops here in Little Rock before his dead body was found in Fort Marcy Park.'

When Hillary moved into the White House, she requested nine hundred files from the FBI containing private information on people from both political parties.

'Thousands of politicians in Washington still wonder what Hillary has on them.' Dolly writes. 'If they have any secrets at all, they must live in constant dread of being publicly exposed.

'Terrorism is the use of violence and intimidation for political aims. By this definition, Hillary Clinton is a terrorist.

'With her silent threats to the nine hundred, who is going to make a peep?'

The files were subpoenaed and Hillary declared, 'We are the president'. These were the files that had been removed from Vince Foster's office and found two years later.

Hillary has been declaring herself president since Bill stepped into office in 1992.