Hillary Clinton "did everything from trying to learn to tango to making acorn soup," she says. - Hallo friend WELCOME TO AMERICA, In the article you read this time with the title Hillary Clinton "did everything from trying to learn to tango to making acorn soup," she says., we have prepared well for this article you read and download the information therein. hopefully fill posts
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If I understood correctly, this show consists of her and Chelsea getting together with some other celebrity mother and daughter — e.g., Goldie Hawn and Kate Hudson — and all 4 of them getting "out of their comfort zone" by doing something they hadn't done before. How far out of your comfort zone is a particular dance when you have danced or a particular soup when you have made soup?
They do move on to the serious topic of the documents seized in the Mar-a-Lago raid. Hillary is sharp and substantive, avoiding the display of animus toward Trump. Asked if she thinks he will be indicted, she says: "I don't want to judge. I've been prejudged — wrongly — enough."
She wants to know how it was possible that these documents could have been moved to Mar-a-Lago, when they were in a category that, when she was Secretary of State, she would read in a secured room, supervised by a person who carried the document in a briefcase handcuffed to his wrist. I wrote "when they were" and not "if they were" only because that's how she spoke.
A fair-minded listener will contemplate making an inference that the documents at Mar-a-Lago were not documents in that category of secrecy. Perhaps Hillary herself was thinking that when she spoke of her own experience: "I don't want to judge. I've been prejudged — wrongly — enough."
Now, most people probably think she said that because she knows Trump's document problem is getting compared to her notorious email problem, and that's reason to distance herself. Let others jump into where-there's-smoke-there's-fire arguments. She got out the part that's most useful: Explaining the care taken with these documents. That's a basis for outrage against Trump.
But she left a ray of hope for him. She explained why it's just not possible that documents at that secrecy level traveled to Mar-a-Lago. Then, what happened? I won't prejudge, but just sketch out what could have happened: There really were no such documents found at Mar-a-Lago? Or: someone out to destroy Trump stuck these files in the boxes? As Hillary herself asked: Who packed these boxes?
She didn't add, but I'll add: Why wouldn't Trump, once asked, return the documents voluntarily out of concern for national security, a desire to look concerned for national security, and in order to fend off a swarm of FBI agents going through his entire home?
Don't miss the moment at 7:10 when she stares down the camera and sternly intones: "No one is above the law."
A bit after that, Chelsea gets her turn to speak. She's such a lackluster speaker that she got no applause when she said — answering a question about a threat of violence if Trump is indicted — "I'm very concerned that we are in a country now where we have more guns than people." She even underscores it with: "We have more than 400 million guns that we know of in the United States." Not even a spatter of applause.
She struggles forward, eventually getting to the phrase "the white nationalist insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th" — said emphatically with a choppy hand gesture. And they didn't even clap for that! Even the most hot-headed, daring accusations turn bland coming from Chelsea.
If I understood correctly, this show consists of her and Chelsea getting together with some other celebrity mother and daughter — e.g., Goldie Hawn and Kate Hudson — and all 4 of them getting "out of their comfort zone" by doing something they hadn't done before. How far out of your comfort zone is a particular dance when you have danced or a particular soup when you have made soup?
They do move on to the serious topic of the documents seized in the Mar-a-Lago raid. Hillary is sharp and substantive, avoiding the display of animus toward Trump. Asked if she thinks he will be indicted, she says: "I don't want to judge. I've been prejudged — wrongly — enough."
She wants to know how it was possible that these documents could have been moved to Mar-a-Lago, when they were in a category that, when she was Secretary of State, she would read in a secured room, supervised by a person who carried the document in a briefcase handcuffed to his wrist. I wrote "when they were" and not "if they were" only because that's how she spoke.
A fair-minded listener will contemplate making an inference that the documents at Mar-a-Lago were not documents in that category of secrecy. Perhaps Hillary herself was thinking that when she spoke of her own experience: "I don't want to judge. I've been prejudged — wrongly — enough."
Now, most people probably think she said that because she knows Trump's document problem is getting compared to her notorious email problem, and that's reason to distance herself. Let others jump into where-there's-smoke-there's-fire arguments. She got out the part that's most useful: Explaining the care taken with these documents. That's a basis for outrage against Trump.
But she left a ray of hope for him. She explained why it's just not possible that documents at that secrecy level traveled to Mar-a-Lago. Then, what happened? I won't prejudge, but just sketch out what could have happened: There really were no such documents found at Mar-a-Lago? Or: someone out to destroy Trump stuck these files in the boxes? As Hillary herself asked: Who packed these boxes?
She didn't add, but I'll add: Why wouldn't Trump, once asked, return the documents voluntarily out of concern for national security, a desire to look concerned for national security, and in order to fend off a swarm of FBI agents going through his entire home?
Don't miss the moment at 7:10 when she stares down the camera and sternly intones: "No one is above the law."
A bit after that, Chelsea gets her turn to speak. She's such a lackluster speaker that she got no applause when she said — answering a question about a threat of violence if Trump is indicted — "I'm very concerned that we are in a country now where we have more guns than people." She even underscores it with: "We have more than 400 million guns that we know of in the United States." Not even a spatter of applause.
She struggles forward, eventually getting to the phrase "the white nationalist insurrection at the Capitol on January 6th" — said emphatically with a choppy hand gesture. And they didn't even clap for that! Even the most hot-headed, daring accusations turn bland coming from Chelsea.
Thus articles Hillary Clinton "did everything from trying to learn to tango to making acorn soup," she says.
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