In a new book former secret service agent Gary Byrne paints a pretty bizarre and disturbing picture of the Clinton White House which includes drug use, mistresses, and the extremely volatile, angry, verbally abusive, and sociopathic personality of Hillary Clinton.

Byrne said that staffers would often be deathly afraid of Clinton for minor things like mistakes made on invitations.

“There’s many examples that I site in my book where she blows up at people,” Byrne said. “Like I’ve said, she has blown up at me before, and agents, and her staff. At one time, I saw her staff so afraid to tell her about a mistake that was made. They weren’t upset about the waste of the mistake, ordering the wrong invitations, they were terrified that someone was going to have to tell Hillary Clinton that there was a mistake made.“

During a recent interview on Fox, Byrne describes the alleged cocaine use of the Clintons:

“There was one particular staff member that they had come in in the morning, and they’d be so beat up and exhausted looking, worn out, exhausted to the point where they couldn’t be seen saying good morning. And they’d go in their office and go the bathroom and come out of the bathroom completely elevated and happy and smiling.”

Byrne could very well be lying to sell books. But the thing is, I’ve been around cocaine users, and a lot of Hillary’s strange behavior kind of reminds me of the emotional volatility of those people – like when she blew up at a Greenpeace reporter, or the numerous accounts of her being really explosive and nasty at people, seemingly for no reason. Hillary’s obvious neurological problems have been speculated about elsewhere, typically blamed on post-concussion syndrome. But what if it’s just the deterioration of her mind due to a lifetime of cocaine use? From drugabuse.gov:

In addition to the increased risk for stroke and seizures, other neurological problems can occur with long-term cocaine use.7,18 There have been reports of intracerebral hemorrhage, or bleeding within the brain, and balloon-like bulges in the walls of cerebral blood vessels.7,18 Movement disorders, including Parkinson’s disease, may also occur after many years of cocaine use.7 Generally, studies suggest that a wide range of cognitive functions are impaired with long-term cocaine use—such as sustaining attention, impulse inhibition, memory, making decisions involving rewards or punishments, and performing motor tasks.14