Hillary Clinton calls Donald Trump a creep in her new book.
Clinton's new memoir, What Happened?, seeks to placate Democratic donors looking for answers after they shelled out $1.4 billion to the biggest loser of 2016. In one passage, Clinton recounts an incredibly uncomfortable moment during the second presidential debate.
Donald Trump was looming behind me.
Two days before, the world heard him brag about groping women.
Now, we were on a small stage, and no matter where I walked, he followed me closely, staring at me, making faces.
It was incredibly uncomfortable.
He was literally breathing down my neck.
My skin crawled.
Clinton explains that she chose to maintain her focus on the debate, rather than turn around and say, Back up, you creep!
Get away from me!
Of course, she blames this on a lifetime of dealing with difficult men trying to throw her off.
Clinton's basically telling us that as the first female president, she would have just smiled like a good girl in the face of terrible men.
But what's rather peculiar about calling Trump a creep is this is a woman who surrounds herself with a bevy of creepy characters.
Clinton's skin didn't crawl when she married her creep of a husband.
Who required even the Washington Post to write up an entire guide detailing Bill Clinton's decades of womanizing in order to fact-check Trump, bail, Clinton's campaign manager was none other than John Podesta, who at the very least of creepiness, was invited to a spirit cooking dinner party thrown by his friend and performance artist, Marina Abramovic.
Her recipes are known to demand breast milk, sperm, and morning urine.
Or there's the serial sexster, Anthony Weiner, who married Clinton's longtime aide, Huma Abedin.
Bill Clinton actually presided over their wedding.
And is there anything more creepy than kissing a Grand Cyclops KKK recruiter?
Well, perhaps if that guy is your self-described friend and mentor, Robert Byrd.
There are a lot of people who wrote these eulogies for Senator Byrd in the newspapers, and I read a bunch of them, and they mentioned that he once had a fleeting association with the Ku Klux Klan.
What does that mean?
I'll tell you what it means.
He was a country boy from the hills and hollows of West Virginia.
He was trying to get elected.
And maybe he did something he shouldn't have done and he spent the rest of his life making it up.
And that's what a good person does.
Huh.
Aligning yourself with creepy characters to get elected.
Well, I guess that's what happened.
Liam McAdoo, InfoWars.com.
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