Hillary Clinton Is Spot On With Basket of Deplorables
It’s high time media call out the women-haters and that the rest of us do the same.
It’s high time media call out the women-haters and that the rest of us do the same.
Another Republican conspiracy about Hillary Clinton just got killed and even worse, the truth makes the Democratic candidate look like Superwoman.
For a pathological liar like Trump, honesty and straight talk from any woman is something he is unaccustomed to and can never accept.
Fifteen years ago? Seems like only yesterday
With only months remaining in his second term, President Barack Obama’s job approval has reached its highest level since July 2009 as the American people are giving him credit for a presidency well done.
Donald Trump has refused to release any details about his medical history, but some in the mainstream press are legitimizing Clinton health conspiracies after Democratic nominee overheated on 9/11.
Republicans want voters to believe that Hillary Clinton getting overheated at a 9/11 ceremony is a big deal, but they couldn’t be more wrong.
President Obama memorialized the 15th anniversary of the tragic attacks on 9/11 with unifying words. The President said, “The most enduring memorial to those we lost is ensuring the America that we continue to be — that we stay true to ourselves, that we stay true to what’s best in us, that we do not let others divide us.”
Fifteen years ago on this very day, the current Republican nominee for president Donald Trump bragged about his 71-story building being the tallest building in downtown Manhattan after the twin towers of the World Trade Center collapsed.
On the anniversary of 9/11, Republican former Vice President Dick Cheney attacked the sitting president of the United States in order to blame President Obama for the mistakes of the Bush Cheney administration.
In the midst of our tributes to the first responders of then and now, in our gratefulness for those who serve in our nation’s military and for those who have given their lives in this service, and in our hope for tomorrow, can we also make room again to ponder the call to welcome the world’s exhausted, suffering, homeless ones for whom this nation’s welcome light shines?