I will be voting for Hillary Clinton.

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Catholic Crusader

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Hillary 2016: Recycled Lines and Clichés

Clinton revives old lines, her 1990s biography, to restart her campaign
by PoliZette Staff | Updated 29 Jul 2016 at 12:24 PM - SOURCE LINK

QUOTE:
“It Takes A Village.” We’ve all heard it and frankly, it’s getting pretty stale.

Hillary seems to be running out of lines, as she dug back into the archives Thursday night in her speech to the Democratic National Convention, bringing up things we’ve all already heard.

She fondly reminded us that it still “takes a village,” a shameless plug for her book and a flashback to her 1996 DNC speech.

“Twenty years ago I wrote a book called ‘It Takes a Village.’ A lot of people looked at the title and asked, what the heck do you mean by that? This is what I mean. None of us can raise a family, build a business, heal a community — or lift a country — totally alone,” Clinton said.

Compare this with her famous “It Takes a Village” speech during the 1996 Democratic National Convention. “And we have learned that to raise a happy, healthy, and hopeful child it takes a family, it takes teachers, it takes clergy, it takes business people, it takes community leaders, it takes those who protect our health and safety. It takes all of us,” she said. “Yes, it takes a village.”

The message is exactly the same 20 years later, and it seems that the only way for Hillary to refresh her campaign is by going back to the past.

"Hillary Clinton's speech was an insulting collection of clichés and recycled rhetoric. She spent the evening talking down to the American people she's looked down on her whole life," said Stephen Miller, Donald Trump's senior policy adviser.

In addition to the repetitive line about the village, Clinton was sure to include everyone's favorite clichés as well.

A few one-liners sprinkled throughout her speech included, "your cause is our cause," and "no one gets through life alone." If that wasn't enough, Clinton urged, "but we are not afraid" and "it truly is up to us."

We've all heard these lines before, and it's becoming insulting. "It's a speech delivered from a fantasy universe, not the reality we live in today," Miller said in a statement.

Her campaign is blanketed in unrealistic comparisons and warm sentiments that aren't tangibly fulfilled in the political climate in which we live. One such comparison drew on the Revolutionary War comparing our situation with that of the Founding Fathers.

After discussing the courage of the Founders standing up to King George III, she said, "America is once again at a moment of reckoning. Powerful forces are threatening to pull us apart."

The comparison seems rather far-fetched as she uses a powerful historical example to supplement her "Stronger Together" slogan that feels tired in a hard-pressed country. Part of Clinton's modus operandi is to rely heavily on generalized statements, that don't convey a message. Trump can undoubtedly be abrasive but he's hardly ever unclear.

"The thing that appeals to people about Donald Trump, the reason why I'm so incredibly honored to have the opportunity to run and serve with him as vice president of the United States, is because the man speaks his mind," vice presidential nominee Mike Pence said Thursday on "The Laura Ingraham Show."

In a last notable cliché, Clinton said, "So don't let anyone tell you that our country is weak. We're not. Don't let anyone tell you we don't have what it takes. We do."

The sentiment is nice, but tangible options and actual solutions are a lot more comforting than warm platitudes that don't mean much.
 

aCultureWarrior

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Quote Originally Posted by ClimateSanity

Jesus would say to Donald, you have garnered the trust of millions of people downtrodden by the system. Do not ever betray them. As for your money, make good use of it in this world.

Is that what Jesus would say CS? Do you stand behind that, and take responsibility for what you said?

I'll stand behind the following and take responsibility for it:

Jesus Christ, the Son of God/God in the flesh wouldn't say kind words to Donald Trump because amongst other things he defends things that God abhors (abortion, homosexuality/transgenderism, etc.).

The question is: Would Jesus take a whip to Donald Trump like He did to the money changers in the temple, or go with the millstone around the neck route?

YESHUA%20OF%20NAZARETH%20CLEANSING%20THE%20TEMPLE.jpg


matthew18-6.jpg
 

Tambora

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QUOTE:
“It Takes A Village.” We’ve all heard it and frankly, it’s getting pretty stale.
Dumbest book ever.
It did not take a village to raise me and it did not take a village to raise my children.

When you have a village pulling folks into every different direction, it is YOUR choice of which direction to take (not the choice of the village).


And Michelle Obama's speech was atrocious.
Bringing up slavery????
Good grief woman, you are 150 years behind.
And to point to Hillary as a cause for her daughters to believe a woman could be president?????
Again, she's way behind.
Victoria Claflin Woodhull, later Victoria Woodhull Martin, ran for President in 1872.

List of female United States presidential and vice-presidential candidates
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_...presidential_and_vice-presidential_candidates
 

kmoney

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In answer to answer kmo's question, I think there's a real concern that his advisors would hesitate to stand in opposition to him. That they'd pull their oppositional punches.
Perhaps in some areas, but I would hope military leaders would not be afraid to tell him something he might not like.
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Trump stirs outrage after he lashes out at the Muslim parents of a dead U.S. soldier

Several of Trump’s critics said Saturday that Trump’s attacks on the Khans are part of a broader pattern in which the candidate lashes out at others in extraordinarily personal terms for criticizing him. Many say that voters should worry about what it means in terms of Trump’s temperament and, in particular, how he would deal with foreign leaders as president.

“He’s a person that has no self-control. He just has no sense of decency or empathy when it comes to dealing with others,” said Tim Miller, a veteran GOP strategist and former communications director for Jeb Bush. “It’s always zero sum. You compliment me, I compliment you. You criticize me, I mock you. That’s what this is about. It’s all about him and his egotism.”
 

annabenedetti

like marbles on glass
Perhaps in some areas, but I would hope military leaders would not be afraid to tell him something he might not like.


Here's a look at the kind of thing his aides fear. They must be pulling their hair out:

Trump’s brain trust was worried about his discipline and steadfastness, and with good reason. As The Hill revealed last month, "Some of his advisers have expressed concern that he could decide to tweet the announcement without warning." By midday Friday, both MSNBC’s O’Donnell and Dana Bash of CNN were reporting that a frantic Trump wanted to change his pick into the wee hours Thursday night.
 
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