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The sad truth.
We live amongst proud racists and brainwashed individuals.
Nothing will stop their support for demagogue & charlatan Donald J. Trump.
Hillary was right to call Trump supporters “deplorables.”
And yet...
We are still the majority. Trump lost by 3 million votes.
But it still feels like we are outnumbered.
Don’t let Russia win again in 2020.
We must focus on winning the Electoral College.
Trump only won the swing states by 1%.
Without James Comey and Russia, Hillary would have won the swing states.
Trump is beatable. He already lost by 3 million votes.
We are the majority. Never forget that.
Keep fighting to win the Electoral College!!
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I cried for weeks, sobbed actually. I will never forget.
Never forget: Hillary recieved 3 million more votes.
Forever the “People’s President” 🇺🇸
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I love Hillary Rodham Clinton. She is an inspiration and a mentor.
Her intelligence, knowledge, experience, insight, and command of the English language forever makes her someone we should all listen to. And remember: “Don’t hate the player — hate the game.” Love her referring to this moment in history as the “twilight zone.” Her description of events is truly perfect 👌 Can’t wait for this interview!! Hillary is a warrior. A survivor. Resilient & remarkable. She never quits. It will be a sad day when she is no longer here to share her wisdom.
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Susan Bordo sent me this book autographed for my birthday last year. It’s brilliant!
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The People’s President — 3 million more votes 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
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She’s no Hillary Rodham Clinton but shes 100% right.
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Hillary Rodham Clinton
#internationalwomensday #internationalwomensday mon mentor numéro un. @hillaryclinton J'ai lu «Ça prend un village» au collège et je savais qu'elle était ma source d'inspiration! Puissance Scorpion! Je t'aime Hillary Rodham Clinton! my number one female mentor. @hillaryclinton I read « It Takes a Village » in middle school and I knew she was my inspiration! Scorpio power! I love you Hillary Rodham Clinton. #madamepresident #hillaryclinton #hillaryrodhamclinton #hillary2020 #SheWon #onwardtogether
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Hillary destroys him even in subtweets.
And that’s why she beat you by 3 million votes, Donald.
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Hillary blasts the removal of the 1965 Voting Rights Act.
Hillary was the first Presidential candidate in modern American history to run for President without it.
The result?
Less registered voters in 2016 than 2012.
Thousands turned away at the voting booth. Mostly people of color who lean Democratic. Coincidence? I think not!
Trump won Wisconsin by 22,000.
In 2016, 40,000-80,000 minorities were unable to vote in Wisconsin that were able to vote 4 years earlier in 2012.
That deficit led to Trump winning the Electoral College (but still losing the popular vote by 3 million).
Will there be even less registered voters in 2020?
Whoever is the 2020 Democratic nominee better pay close attention to “What Happened” in 2016.
We need the Voting Rights Act restored as soon as possible. This is a moral outrage in a country founded on the right to vote.
Like almost all other 2020 Democratic candidates have done, maybe Bernie should schedule a one-on-one meeting with Hillary after-all?
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Happy International Women’s Day:
“I’m not going to mislead anybody. Politics is really hard. And it is harder for women. There’s a double standard, and you can’t complain about it. You just have to accept it, and be smart enough to navigate it. And you have to have a pretty tough skin. To paraphrase a favorite quote from Eleanor Roosevelt: If a woman wants to be in politics, she has to have the skin of a rhinoceros. So occasionally I’ll be sitting somewhere and I’ll be listening to someone perhaps not saying the kindest things about me. And I’ll look down at my hand and I’ll sort of pinch my skin to make sure it still has the requisite thickness I know Eleanor Roosevelt expects me to have.” ~Hillary Rodham Clinton
|Hillary’s Career|
WATERGATE:
Youngest lawyer ever appointed to an impeachment trial. 26-year-old Yale Law graduate Hillary Rodham.
CHILDREN’S DEFENSE FUND:
Investigated African American juveniles being placed in South Carolina adult prisons, and posed as a racist housewife to expose segregation throughout schools in the South.
FIRST LADY OF ARKANSAS:
Hillary successfully reformed the entire K-12 Arkansas educational system, expanded healthcare for those in rural Arkansas, worked at the Arkansas Children’s Hospital Legal Services, and co-founded the Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families. First female partner of the Rose Law Firm.
The joke in Arkansas was that they “hired the wrong Clinton.”
FIRST LADY OF THE UNITED STATES:
Hillary spearheaded the Adoption and Safe Families Act, the Foster Care Independence Act, Office on Violence Against Women, the Campaign Against Teenage Pregnancy (lowering abortion and teenage pregnancy rates), and the Children’s Health Insurance Program — providing 8.9 million low-income children with healthcare access.
In 1994, Hillary proclaimed on the world stage in Beijing, China:
“If there is one message that echoes forth from this conference, let it be that human rights are women’s rights and women’s rights are human rights once and for all.”
TWO-TIME NEW YORK SENATOR:
Hillary secured 20 billion in federal funds to rebuild downtown New York City after 9/11. She also secured healthcare for 9/11 First Responders and expanded access to care for the National Guard, Reservists, and their families.
U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE:
Passed the first-ever U.N Resolution on gay rights (proclaiming: “human rights are gay rights and gay rights are human rights” on the world stage), and made it so trans Americans can legally change their gender on their passport. Hillary also rebuilt relations with every nation after the disastrous Bush Administration, traveling to 112 countries — more than any other Secretary of State. Our worldwide favorability rose 20% during Hillary’s tenure. Her primary focus was on women’s rights and health, bringing up issues such as forced abortion and maternal mortality rates. Hillary re-opened relations with Burma, enacted a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, and killed Osama Bin Laden. She also was instrumental in putting together the Paris Climate Agreement, something Trump has since removed us from.
POPULAR VOTE WINNER — 3 MILLION MORE VOTES:
First female Presidential nominee of a major political party.
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You won’t see Hillary Clinton in the same light ever again. Read Meryl Streep’s introduction of Hillary Clinton during the recent 2012 Women in the World conference:
Two years ago when Tina Brown and Diane von Furstenberg first envisioned this conference, they asked me to do a play, a reading, called – the name of the play was called Seven. It was taken from transcripts, real testimony from real women activists around the world. I was the Irish one, and I had no idea that the real women would be sitting in the audience while we portrayed them. So I was doing a pretty ghastly Belfast accent. I was just – I was imitating my friend Liam Neeson, really, and I sounded like a fellow. (Laughter). It was really bad.
So I was so mortified when Tina, at the end of the play, invited the real women to come up on stage and I found myself standing next to the great Inez McCormack. (Applause.) And I felt slight next to her, because I’m an actress and she is the real deal. She has put her life on the line. Six of those seven women were with us in the theater that night. The seventh, Mukhtaran Bibi, couldn’t come because she couldn’t get out of Pakistan. You probably remember who she is. She’s the young woman who went to court because she was gang-raped by men in her village as punishment for a perceived slight to their honor by her little brother. All but one of the 14 men accused were acquitted, but Mukhtaran won the small settlement. She won $8,200, which she then used to start schools in her village. More money poured in from international donations when the men were set free. And as a result of her trial, the then president of Pakistan, General Musharraf, went on TV and said, “If you want to be a millionaire, just get yourself raped.”
But that night in the theater two years ago, the other six brave women came up on the stage. Anabella De Leon of Guatemala pointed to Hillary Clinton, who was sitting right in the front row, and said, “I met her and my life changed.” And all weekend long, women from all over the world said the same thing:
“I’m alive because she came to my village, put her arm around me, and had a photograph taken together.”
“I’m alive because she went on our local TV and talked about my work, and now they’re afraid to kill me.”
“I’m alive because she came to my country and she talked to our leaders, because I heard her speak, because I read about her.”
I’m here today because of that, because of those stories.
I didn’t know about this. I never knew any of it. And I think everybody should know. This hidden history Hillary has, the story of her parallel agenda, the shadow diplomacy unheralded, uncelebrated – careful, constant work on behalf of women and girls that she has always conducted alongside everything else a First Lady, a Senator, and now Secretary of State is obliged to do.
And it deserves to be amplified. This willingness to take it, to lead a revolution – and revelation, beginning in Beijing in 1995, when she first raised her voice to say the words you’ve heard many times throughout this conference: “Women’s Rights Are Human Rights.”
When Hillary Clinton stood up in Beijing to speak that truth, her hosts were not the only ones who didn’t necessarily want to hear it. Some of her husband’s advisors also were nervous about the speech, fearful of upsetting relations with China. But she faced down the opposition at home and abroad, and her words continue to hearten women around the world and have reverberated down the decades.
…
She’s just been busy working, doing it, making those words “Women’s Rights are Human Rights” into something every leader in every country now knows is a linchpin of American policy. It’s just so much more than a rhetorical triumph. We’re talking about what happened in the real world, the institutional change that was a result of that stand she took.
…
Now we know that the higher the education and the involvement of women in a culture and economy, the more secure the nation. It’s a metric we use throughout our foreign policy, and in fact, it’s at the core of our development policy. It is a big, important shift in thinking. Horrifying practices like female genital cutting were not at the top of the agenda because they were part of the culture and we didn’t want to be accused of imposing our own cultural values.
But what Hillary Clinton has said over and over again is, “A crime is a crime, and criminal behavior cannot be tolerated.” Everywhere she goes, she meets with the head of state and she meets with the women leaders of grassroots organizations in each country. This goes automatically on her schedule. As you’ve seen, when she went to Burma – our first government trip there in 40 years. She met with its dictator and then she met with Aung San Suu Kyi, the woman he kept under detention for 15 years, the leader of Burma’s pro-democracy movement.
This isn’t just symbolism. It’s how you change the world. These are the words of Dr. Gao Yaojie of China: “I will never forget our first meeting. She said I reminded her of her mother. And she noticed my small bound feet. I didn’t need to explain too much, and she understood completely. I could tell how much she wanted to understand what I, an 80-something year old lady, went through in China – the Cultural Revolution, uncovering the largest tainted blood scandal in China, house arrest, forced family separation. I talked about it like nothing and I joked about it, but she understood me as a person, a mother, a doctor. She knew what I really went through.”
When Vera Stremkovskaya, a lawyer and human rights activist from Belarus met Hillary Clinton a few years ago, they took a photograph together. And she said to one of the Secretary’s colleagues, “I want that picture.” And the colleague said, “I will get you that picture as soon as possible.” And Stremkovskaya said, “I need that picture.” And the colleague said, “I promise you.” And Stremkovskaya said, “You don’t understand. That picture will be my bullet-proof vest.”
Never give up. Never, never, never, never, never give up. That is what Hillary Clinton embodies.
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Hillary Rodham Clinton was right about fucking everything!
The only national emergency is Republicans giving Trump every chance to destroy our country and empower our enemies.
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Hypocrisy and the double standard define the Right Wing. It is woven into every response and contrived outrage.
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