No, that's just not true Rich. Every decision Hillary made as Secretary of State was heavily vetted by dozens of people high up in the State Department, based on formal recommendations, position papers, etc. Given that the notion that Hillary was able to "peddle influence" seems far-fetched.
As for the emails, there were thousands of those to go through and determine which were public and which were not. I strongly doubt Hillary spent a single second on this project, and never even considered it until it became a scandal.
Re: influence peddling, we'll have to agree to disagree. I should note that I'm not singling the Clintons out on this one. Virtually every politician does it. Doesn't make it right.
Re: e-mail, your stunning ignorance on how e-mail works continues to amaze me, and probably lots of others here. Do you have an e-mail account? I'm beginning to think you don't, just based on your unfamiliarity with the basics. Imagine the following scenario.
1. Joe sends Jane an e-mail.
2. Jane opens the e-mail using her e-mail client (let's call it Microsoft Outlook, or Apple iOS e-mail).
3. Jane reads the e-mail, absorbs the info, then clicks the delete button.
4. Depending on the retention policy on Jane's server, the e-mail eventually disappears (i.e. permanently deleted) from Jane's side.
5. Joe's side may or may not retain a copy permanently or for a specified period of time, depending on half a dozen configuration options with respect to Joe's e-mail client and Joe's server.
Now, why does anyone have to go through Jane's e-mail to delete stuff at a later date?