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Dec. 2, 2016 - Rush Limbaugh Program
37:27
December 2, 2016, Friday, Hour #2
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Welcome back, my good friends.
It's a thrill and a delight to have you with us on the Rush Limbaugh program, where nothing unimportant is ever said.
Live from the Southern Command in Sunny South Florida.
It's open line Friday.
Meaning I don't just kill time here.
Meaning, if you can't possibly understand why I might be talking about something, it matters.
It may not matter for a couple weeks because we're on the cutting edge here.
But no matter, it matters.
800-282-2882 if you want to appear on the program.
And the email address is L Rushbo at EIB net US.
We just wrapped up our call with uh justin and uh in Anaheim, California.
Oh, by the way, let me clarify this this definition of low information voter, as I coined it.
I learned from Ann Althouse's blog last night that it seems like everybody has their own definition for it, and a lot of people are misapplying the definition that I've come up with to me.
They're claiming that I think I mean that I mean something I don't mean by it.
I coined the term low information voter shortly after Obama's election in 2008.
There was a Time magazine story that literally said a voluminous number of Obama voters never followed the news.
And I said, Well, there you go.
I mean, it makes perfect sense.
So low information voters began as low information voters.
They don't know anything.
They don't follow the news.
They're pure addicts of pop culture.
They pay attention to what's on TV.
They all dream about it being under red carpet.
They dream about being famous.
Uh they idolize the Kardashians.
I mean, they're they're into that kind of stuff, pop music, movies, and so forth, but they don't have a slightest knowledge of politics.
And they haven't been taught much about it, and that's what low information voters are.
Think of the people from Rio Linda.
I mean, it was real Linda actually the forerunner of the low information voter.
Anyway, Justin was talking about various things he heard Trump say, and he focused on Trump talking about the greatness of America and no longer the fact that globalism was the big thing for the United States.
And I wanted we have the sound bites in Trump's speech last night.
I just wanted to grab that one and play it for you since Justin uh pretty aptly described it.
Here's how Trump described it.
For too long, Washington has tried to put us in boxes.
They separate us by race, by age, by income, by geography, by place of birth.
We spend too much time focusing on what divides us.
Now is the time to embrace the one thing that truly unites us.
You know what that is?
America.
America.
It's America.
Because when America is unified, nothing is beyond our reach.
There is no global anthem, no global currency, no certificate of global citizenship.
We pledge allegiance to one flag, and that flag is the American flag.
USA!
From now on, it's going to be America first.
Okay?
America first.
We're gonna put ourselves first.
And that's why one of the many reasons the left is wetting the bed today.
And one of the many reasons they were wetting the bed last night.
That bite pretty much encompasses the rally last night.
The thank you tour.
We've got sound bites, highlights of many of the things Trump said, but that's pretty much it.
Now, you know this is a great opportunity for me to illustrate something that I have long said about Trump, and that is that he's not ideological.
Conservatism, liberalism, those are not things that help Trump sift through people and information.
He just not I am, I am totally ideological.
I spot liberalism, and when I do, I automatically disagree with it.
Experience guided by intelligence.
He's not.
But he often comes to the same conclusions I do about things, even though he doesn't get there the same way.
And this bite offers a great example and illustration of how.
For too long, Washington has tried to put us in boxes.
Okay?
Trump says, yeah, Washington's trying to...
Well, who's actually been doing it?
In my view, that's what liberalism does.
Liberalism divides and puts people into groups and makes victims out of as many people as it can.
African Americans, Hispanics, gays, lesbians, transgenders.
You name it, there's a group.
Liberalism does not see us as one people.
They see us as a collection of aggrieved minority groups.
The only group that they see that is considered majority is white Christians and they do not like them, and so all of these other groups get added together to try to outnumber white Christians or white males or what have you.
But the real objective of this is to make victims out of all these other people.
When you make victims out of them, you immediately turn them to dependency.
When you begin to become their champion in overcoming whatever it is that's against them, and by the way, what's against them is America.
In the land of the left, America is the biggest obstacle.
And they make victims, the left does.
The Democrat Party makes victims out of all these people.
They immediately therefore turn them into dependent people dependent on the Democrats, dependent on government, and they also destroy, in my mind, an element of their humanity.
Because they tell them there are so many obstacles in your way, you can't possibly overcome them.
You can't become great.
It's not possible because of the bigoted and prejudiced way this country is structured.
They tell people this.
People believe it.
And people believe they have no hope.
They have no chance unless government or the Democrats are out there punishing this phantom enemy.
Well, Trump doesn't see it that way.
I mean, he doesn't see the the elements he sees it exactly that way, but he doesn't, he doesn't associate liberalism with it.
It's just a bunch of people that are wrong in his mind.
Then he says they separate us by race.
Washington is they.
They separate us by race, by age, by income, by geography, by place of birth.
The liberals do that.
Democrats do that.
Conservatives do not do that.
I am a conservative.
We don't do that.
We see everybody as American.
We see everybody as human, and we see everybody with potential and desire, different degrees of both, but we see every we see people yearning to be free.
We want as much freedom and liberty for people as possible.
Trump sees that, but he doesn't associate liberalism or conservatism with this.
He's simply looking at the state of the country today, and he's seeing all of these divisions, and he listens to TV, watches TV, and he's made the proper conclusion.
He's listened to people, separate us by race, by age, by income, by geography, place of birth, and he knows it firsthand now because of having run a campaign.
But he doesn't, and he's right about every bit of it.
But he doesn't get there by knowing what liberalism is.
The fact that there are liberals and who they are does not assist Trump in his observation or conclusion.
He gets it, but a totally different way.
And then he says we spend too much time focusing on what divides us.
Now's the time to embrace the one thing that truly unites us.
The left in this country is not interested in unity.
They profit from the division.
They profit politically by being elected.
They profit from victimization of people.
The left cannot, in its heart, desire unity.
Unity would kill them off.
Unity would end the need for liberalism.
Trump comes along and what's the one thing we all have in America?
We're all Americans.
In his world, that's always been the case.
World War II, the Vietnam War, we're all Americans.
His instincts are right on the money.
And when America's unified, nothing's beyond our reach.
That's history.
That's historical true.
Historically true.
When we are unified, there's no stopping us.
Every time we've unified and come together on whatever the objective is, we triumph.
History is replete with examples, and he knows it.
He's also very correct, and this is I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna attach uh originality and uniqueness to Trump here because I've not heard anybody else say this.
Not the way he did it in the context.
I've heard people make these independent observations, but not as a premised point.
There is no global anthem.
There is no global currency.
There is no certificate of global citizenship.
He's exactly right, there isn't.
But there are people who want all three of those.
They want a global anthem, they want a global currency, and they want global citizenship.
And to accomplish all of that, they have to eliminate nation states, and then they have to eliminate the power and the defining characteristics of that power of the United States.
And Trump understands full well what's going on.
Identifies that just flawlessly.
There isn't a reasonable person in America who would not be inspired by that.
Are you saying people disagree with Trump run the reason?
Damn right I am.
What's there's nothing unreasonable about this.
Now, if you don't want a strong America, that's not reasonable to me.
That doesn't make sense to me.
That doesn't compute.
If you want a divided America, that doesn't make sense to me.
That doesn't compute.
That's why liberalism is an oddball thing to me.
Liberalism is never going to universally win.
He said we pledge allegiance to one flag, and that flag is the American flag.
Now we know how that irritates people.
But to the people who voted, the vast majority of people in this country, that's just an inspiring one minute and eleven seconds in that rally last night.
That is nothing but upbeat and positive and optimistic.
And it's a rallying cry, and it is comforting to hear.
It's great for people who think who have believed that our country is purposely being taken in the wrong direction.
This is prayers being answered to a lot of people who love their country and who have been scared to death about the direction it has been going and been taken.
And there's humility in this soundbite, that the left will not hear, they're too busy thinking Trump is things that he isn't.
There's humility here.
Contrary to what you might believe, Trump's not making himself bigger than the flag.
He's not making himself bigger than the country.
He's not making himself bigger or more important than the people of this country.
He is recognizing that he's smaller than all of those things.
I doubt that Barack Obama can do that.
So there's everything in that little one-minute and eleven-second soundbite.
There's everything you'd want to know about why Donald Trump won the election right there, one minute and eleven seconds.
And I'm telling you that the Hillary campaign, the American Left Democrat Party, are in utter denial and anger to the point they can't even properly understand or hear that.
Because their minds are so poisoned with their prejudice and their belief that white Supremacy is now ruling the country.
Think of the kind of garbage people who believe that have literally been taught.
Think of the filth, the drivel, and the bilge that has been the education of people who believe that white supremacy is now the order of the day.
I take a break, we'll come back, we'll continue with your calls, and we have the sound from the Contre Ton at Harvard last night between Kellyanne Conway and Jennifer Palmer and the two campaigns.
That's coming up, so don't go anywhere.
I just got an email.
Check the email during the break.
Rush, did you see how Trump introduced Mad Dog Maddis the way you used to tweak the media?
Oh, yes, I saw that.
Did you guys watch this last night?
Did you see the way he introduced Mattis, Mad Dog as a defense secretary?
You didn't see it?
He said, Okay, folks, look, I don't want you to tell anybody, okay.
We gotta keep this in the room.
It's a secret.
I'm not telling anybody else until next week.
Now the whole thing's on TV all over the world.
But I've got a big announcement, and I'm not gonna make it until next week, so shh.
The media is in the back of the room, but they won't hear it because they never pay attention anyway.
I'm gonna tell you mad dog madness is the new defense secretary.
That place went nuts.
Now, of course, I particularly admired that because I have frequently on this program said to you, hey folks, pst.
Don't tell anybody in the next 20 minutes I'm gonna do something.
You'll recognize it.
That's gonna tweak the media, it's gonna freak them out, and the headlines are gonna be something along the lines of I'm a reprobate tomorrow.
Just want to let you in.
I used to do this all the time.
Here the media could, for all I know, be listening.
But you know what that is?
You know what that device is?
In addition to being a device of humor, it's a device that connects.
I will tell you from the depths of my heart.
There are people who watched that speech last night or any other Trump rally, and for the life of them to this day, do not understand the connection that Trump's supporters have for him and he with them.
They do not understand the bond.
They're too busy making fun of Trump.
They're too busy being offended by Trump.
They're too busy thinking Trump's supporters are white supremacy.
They're too busy.
They don't recognize the genuine humanity that occurs in one of these rallies.
They don't understand the connection.
They don't understand how Trump conveys his love for them.
They don't it's it's right in front of their faces and they don't see it.
They miss it.
They don't see or hear Trump express his appreciation and his thanks.
Even when he uses the words.
They don't see that love and respect sent back to Trump.
They see a bunch of people going nutshell, locker up, locker up.
They do not see this bond of call it what you want, love, support, devotion, what have you, and it goes both ways.
And it's existed since Trump came down the elevator on June 16th of last year.
And they don't see it.
Maybe most people don't.
I do.
I've spotted it from the get-go.
And it was on full display last night.
And it's entirely wholesome.
It's the essence, in fact, of politics.
What politics ought to be.
It's genuine.
Nobody's BSing anybody.
Nobody's lying to anybody.
Nobody thinks they're being lied to and having to shove it.
Genuine.
If they find out they are being lied to, be held a pay.
But they don't think they're being lied to.
They're not suspicious.
They would be of anybody else up there telling them things, but they're not of Trump.
They know him.
They trust him.
They feel entirely comfortable with him.
And maybe some people do get that and are jealous.
I don't know.
But I still think most don't get it.
Rebecca Albuquerque, New Mexico, great to have you.
Open line Friday, your next hello.
Hi.
Right.
Thank you for having me on.
Yes, ma'am.
How are you?
I'm great.
I'm great, thank you.
Well, I just want to get fake to the point.
Um, you know, I've been listening to you for nearly ten years now.
Um I'm 19 years old, and I recognize that every news outlet is biased and it carries uh a mom mentality.
And um I know that your show is uh a news outlet that I know I can get the truth from.
And I I wanted to ask you if you'd ever consider creating a news service in competition with Fox.
Hmm.
Well, uh no, I haven't.
I haven't actually considered you mean a televised news service like a cable news network or no, I I I haven't.
Uh I have way, way back, not in any recent times.
I had at one time considered providing a radio news service for our affiliate stations that would be EIB news at the top of the hour for five or six minutes.
Okay.
We toyed with that.
Uh I th I've the answer to this is I I uh I focus almost exclusively on this, and it's all I want to, and it takes everything I've got to do this for three hours every day as well as I can.
Uh so and it satisfies me.
It satisfies me like n like nothing in life ever satisfies.
So the the desire for more I don't have.
But I need you to hang on here, Rebecca.
Don't don't go away.
Hang on to the break.
Okay, back to Rebecca in uh in Albuquerque.
I have a little bit more time to answer your question.
I I I I'm gonna treat your question seriously because I think you mean it seriously.
Uh yes, I do.
And I you know, it it's it's a fascinating thing for me to watch.
I've I'm into my twenty-ninth year of this, and I don't mean to harp on that, but it does equal a lot of years of experience.
And I think back when the program first started in 88, and it it it launched and it was huge and it was growing fast, and here came the television show offers, and I did one for four years.
And then the book offers, and I did two of those.
And I I grabbed at every opportunity I could because I could.
And because it was it was being the opportunities were being offered, the chances were there.
And uh I in in all of this, I never lost focus on what was causing it all to happen, and that was this show.
And I never lost focus on that, never lost sight of it.
I've never, like some people are embarrassed to be in radio, I love radio.
I think radio done right can have more influence and have a a greater connection with people and be more deeply meaning than another medium like TV, which is on all the time and you're paying attention to it half the time.
But a good radio show will captivate you, and it's passive uh active listening, it's not in the background.
And and if it's if it's done right, uh radio can can just be far more important than television, and I've always believed that.
TV provides pictures, therefore it creates fame, and that's what makes it seductive to a lot of people.
They want to be famous, they want to be recognized.
And I've gotten all that out of my system.
And I I've realized now I'm just completely fulfilled by this job.
And it's a it's a 24-7 job for me.
I've had I've had doctors uh make note of the fact that I burn more calories sitting down doing this program than I will in a whole day of playing golf.
Which includes walking, walking five miles.
I mean, that's how much I I put into it.
And I'm watching people who are younger who are just starting out go through the same process.
They get their show and that launches a book, and maybe for T V people launches a radio show, and you you you you do.
You grab every opportunity that that comes your way, because you never know when it'll come again.
And because I grabbed those opportunities and I had the opportunity to engage in all of them, I was able to reaffirm how much I love this.
And I just decided, since it's so rewarding and so fulfilling, that I devote everything I've got to it.
And so I've I've I I don't want any more.
I don't have a desire to dominate in another medium or to go I'm I'm I'm perfectly happy and rewarded and fulfilled where I am.
Now I know your question is about more than that.
Your question is, do you well rush, do you think maybe you could provide additional ammunition, additional service by expanding and taking what you do and making a news network.
And I'm very flattered, by the way, at your question about that.
But I've looked if if there were ten more of me that I could put on the air twenty four seven on TV for a week, I would do it.
I would love that.
And if I could delegate myself to somebody else and then sit there and manage it, I would do it.
But I I haven't I haven't found that yet.
Yeah.
Well, the reason I ask is we just my whole family and I listen to you and uh we we just love hearing you and and hearing the truth because it really is.
Um the media is just so it's full of lies, and I feel like this is you know, your show is really.
I know, it's frustrating.
It's all the same.
It it's it's homogenous, it's all the same, and it's and it's all the same ignorance.
It's the same blindness.
It's the same prejudice, it's the same bias.
No matter where you go in it.
New York Times, TBS, it's the same thing everywhere.
Yeah, oh, and I it's school too.
I I go to the University of New Mexico and it's definitely there.
Um Yeah, that too.
Yeah.
The professoriate.
The teachers, the faculty, it's all the same.
And it's it's uh it doesn't inspire anything.
It it it just makes you mad.
It doesn't it doesn't inspire critical thinking, it doesn't inspire the desire to learn.
I know I know, I know how frustrating it is.
You know, I'm a little selfish too.
And what in one sense, Rebecca, I have my three hours here, and I have my microphone here, and I can come here every day and tell people what a pack of lies the rest of the media is.
And at the end of that, I'm satisfied.
You know, you don't have a microphone like I do, and you don't have three hours to tell people what you think.
So it I understand your frustration.
And you want like somebody like me who's got the opportunity to make it even bigger.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
I get it.
I really do.
Um look, I don't foreclose anything.
But I have to.
You ask me the question, and I'm not gonna sit here and say, Yeah, you know what?
Rebecca, I was just thinking about that last night.
Wouldn't that be cool?
I don't want to mislead you.
And no future in that, but I don't foreclose anything coming along.
Uh but it isn't there right now.
Now, before you go, everybody today gets their choice of an iPhone 7 or iPhone 7 Plus.
Don't have to take it.
If you have a phone you like, that's fine.
But if you if you want to have if you want to gift it to somebody, I mean it's yours if you want it.
You just need to tell me.
Oh, yes, I would love that.
Thank you.
Okay.
So which one?
Yeah, do you know the difference in the two?
Uh no.
I know one has like two cameras or something, but I don't know.
Well, here's a the the one's big, it's got a five and a half inch screen, and it's tough to use it with one hand, just your thumb.
The other one is a four point seven-inch screen.
It's easier to use with one hand.
The big phone I like.
I I have two different ones.
And it's got two cameras, genuine telephoto, optical photo, uh digital photo.
It's not digital, it's an actual optical two times telephoto.
It therefore has more camera features.
It also has battery life that's a at least day and a half.
Sometimes I get three days on on my phone without having to charge it.
It'll be down to ten percent, but I can get three days with mine.
Oh, well, that'd be nice.
Now, I don't make phone calls, which eats up a lot of batteries.
So but you can easily get a full day or day and a half, depending on how you use the phone.
So the uh but they're both beautiful.
It's just uh it's a matter of preference.
And if you if you don't mind using two hands to use the phone, and if you wear tight jeans, you can't put the big one in your back pocket, that wouldn't be cool.
If you wear mom jeans like Obama, no problem.
Um I you know what?
I'll do the I'll do the plus.
There you go.
A wise show.
Who's your carrier?
Uh I have Verizon.
Verizon.
Cool.
Do You have a color preference.
It better be black in Verizon.
I've I still well, no, wait a minute.
No, it's only in the plus, all I've got is the two versions of black.
But they're beautiful.
They're both beautiful.
You you just tell me you want shiny black or matte black.
Oh, which one do you prefer?
Uh well.
Which one do I prefer?
The shiny, because it's still really hard to get.
If you ordered one today, it'd be a month before you'd get it.
All right, I'll do the I'll do the shiny black.
Okay, and it's going to come without a SIM card.
It's totally unlocked.
It'll work on any carrier.
It's a world phone.
It'll work on any carrier.
What kind of you have a cell phone now?
Uh yeah.
What kind?
Uh it's a 4S, I think.
4S.
SIM card will not fit.
You'll have to take this to Verizon and have the number move to the new phone.
Okay, we'll deal.
Take the box, tell them it's a gift, and it's unlocked from the factory, and they'll set you up.
They'll love seeing you.
Okay?
Now hang on so we can get the address.
You'll have it.
FedEx Saturday delivery tomorrow.
We'll be right back, folks.
Do not go away.
Okay, gonna take a break here from the phones.
We'll get back to the phones in due course.
If you're on hold, hang on, we will get to you.
But I want to get back to the audio sound bites.
Uh Wednesday night at the Kennedy School of Government in Harvard.
It happens every four years.
The campaign managers and other members of the campaign staff of both major party campaigns gather for a post-mortem on the election.
And how the winners did it and what the losers think they learned.
And it's usually very polite.
The Republicans know very well how to lose, and they know how to be very civil in defeat.
And so it generally goes without consequence or event.
We seldom even hear about this every four-year event.
It actually takes place over a couple of days.
It has an audience of students and faculty and other big time donors at Harvard.
Well, this year's was a little different because the Republicans won, and it was the Democrats and particularly the Hillary campaign staff which lost.
Now, the Clinton campaign, you you must understand something about the Clintons.
And it's true of Obama, and it's true of most Democrats.
They are always in campaign mode.
Even after they win elections, they stay in campaign mode in terms of how they reach people.
Clinton remained in campaign mode the first years of his first term.
Obama still is in campaign mode.
The Limbaugh theorem explains it.
We've had eight years of Obama, and he still isn't being held accountable for the horrible policies that he has implemented because he continues to portray himself as not attached to them.
He's still fighting these mysterious powerful forces trying to stop him.
Yet he's the president.
Obamacare is his.
And yet he still treats it as though it's being run by others, and he's still fighting them and he's running into obstacles.
And that is because they, as a it's a strategic thing to be in permanent campaign mode.
Also, being in permanent campaign mode allows you to never stop the process of destroying your opponents.
When you're in permanent campaign mode, you are constantly threatened.
You're always threatened.
You're always threatened by the people you beat.
They're always trying to come back and take it away from you.
So in permanent campaign mode, you get to continue destroying them.
Republicans are never in campaign mode, much less permanent campaign mode.
But now the roles have been reversed, and this thing in Harvard last night blew up because the Hillary campaign is livid that they lost.
And they think they lost.
Because Trump sent out bird whistles, dog whistles, what have you, to the white supremacists out there.
And the white supremacists are the ones that came out of the shadows, not the illegal immigrants.
White supremacists came out of the shadows and they got their hoses and they got their whatever else's and they started beating up on Democrats.
And poor Hillary.
So they've still got this on their brain.
Jennifer Palmieri and Joel Benninson and all these people on the Hillary side just can't come to grips with the fact that they lost.
Everybody was telling them.
The media, everybody telling them they're gonna win in a landslide.
Trump's a buffoon.
Look at his campaign staff, a bunch of nobodies and no-nothings.
Look at his supporters, a bunch of white supremacist goombas.
They're in utter denial.
And so there was no civility.
There was no sophistication.
There was nothing but raw resentment and anger on the part of the Hillary campaign staff.
Jennifer Palmyary going after Kellyanne Conway.
And the first sound bite is a discussion of Steve Bannon and what a reprobate the Clinton people think that he is, and how dare you, Kelly?
How dare you have somebody like that on your t-how dare you campaign on white supremacism?
Jennifer Palmer starts it off.
If providing a platform for white supremacists makes me brilliant street str uh a brilliant tactian, I am glad to have lost.
I am more proud of Hillary Clinton's all-right speech than any other moment on the campaign because she had the courage to stand up.
I would rather lose than win the way you guys did.
No, you wouldn't.
Yes.
No, you wouldn't.
Yes.
Yes.
That's very clear in today.
No, you wouldn't, respectfully.
I'm sorry, how exactly did we win?
Now go for it, Jen.
How exactly did we win?
I'd like to know, because I've sacrificed the last four months of my life to do it.
Excuse me.
And we did it.
And we did it by looking at the schedule and looking at, yes, the electoral map of 270, because that's how you win the presidency.
Jennifer Palmer, did were you able to understand all that with a crosstalk?
You got, okay, well, let me let me run through some of it because uh if I hadn't got the transcript here, I wouldn't have understood half of that.
But she starts out by saying, if providing a platform for white supremacists makes me a brilliant uh tactician, she's insulting Kellyanne Conway.
And Conway says, that's just crap.
And Palmyri says, I'm glad to have lost.
I'm more proud of Hillary Clinton's alt-right speech than any other moment in the campaign.
Conway goes, wow.
And Palmary, because she had the courage to stand up.
I would rather lose than win the way you guys did.
Conway said, No, you wouldn't.
Yes, I would.
No, you wouldn't.
Yes, yes.
It's very clear today you wouldn't, respectfully.
I'm sorry, how exactly did we win?
No, go for it, Jen.
How exactly did we win?
I'd like to know because I sacrificed the last four months of my life to do it, excuse me, and we did it.
And we did it by looking at the sketch.
Anyway, they are livid white supremacy.
Hillary's all does anybody remember this alt-right speech that she gave?
To tell you how out of touch these people, they made an alt-right.
The alt-right is a manufactured movement in their head.
In their minds.
The alt-right.
I couldn't tell you one if there was one standing in this room.
I'd have to.
The alt-right is one of these Democrat manufactured groups of people, and they do it every election.
Some segment of conservatism.
Conservatism in general is bad, and it's racist and sexist.
But then, like the alt-right, well, that's where the white supremacists and the Nazis are.
Yeah.
And so Hillary went out of speech condemning them, I guess.
And Palmary said that was the proudest moment of the campaign.
And it it continued.
Here's Kellyanne Conway picking up this next bite.
Do you think I ran a campaign where white supremacists had a platform?
You're going to look me in the face and tell me that.
It did.
Kelly Ann Clinton.
Do you think you could have just had a decent message for the white working class voters?
You think this woman who has nothing in common with the children?
Over 200 counties that President Obama won and Donald Trump just won.
You think that's because of what you just said, or because people aren't ready for a woman president?
Really?
How about it's Hillary Clinton?
She doesn't connect with people.
How about they have nothing in common with her?
She's taking Palmyri to school.
You had a lousy candidate.
You've got a candidate as arrogant and aloof and didn't even campaign in states she thought she was going to be coronated in.
She thinks she's better than everybody else.
She's run around calling people that didn't vote for her deplorables and this kind of thing.
You really think, Jennifer, could it possibly be that Hillary Clinton just doesn't connect with people?
That she just doesn't relate to people.
If Hillary Clinton doesn't have anything in common with anybody, did it ever strike you, Jennifer, that maybe she's a lousy candidate?
She's now lost two times in a row, is the message that Conway was sending.
But to the to the to the Clinton camp, the campaign's never over.
It's going to continue because she wants to continue raising money for the foundation.
She's floating the fact she might run again in 22 months.
All about raising more money.
And they have to keep this alive.
So Hillary got cheated.
Hillary got defeated by the alt-right or by white supremacism or what have you.
And they continue to lie to themselves, as does the entire Democrat Party.
She just can't believe it.
A political consultant told her that in a focus group of Hillary, that most people saw Hillary as a man.
They didn't see her humanity.
And it is devastating to Andrea Mitchell and BC News Washington.
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