Democratic presidential hold out Hillary Rodham Clinton is very confused about the 2nd amendment in the U.S. Constitution as her white trash law experience left a lot out. If the citizens foresee a corrupt and illegal government they can vote the leaders out of power, and even jail them after a proper trial by law. CNN lied about the Secret Service talking to Donald Trump about his 2nd amendment comments, never happened.
Hillary Clinton, now known as the Crooked Babe on Wall Street surely remembers her husband - Bill Clinton - being impeached by Congress?
What regular people know and understand is that there is a chance that the entire system is corrupt as the most recent example is the DNC stacking the cards against Bernie Sanders and making sure the socialist little bastard didn't take the gold ring from Hillary.
So, The Clinton Gang is prone to criminal activity and a good private eye could prove all the rumors before the election since the FBI was brought to heel by political favors, bribes and most likely official secrets and threats that WikiLeaks can leak about later.
So, if the system is proven to be corrupted the people, the citizens, the true power of the nation can take direct actions, I would assume it means the pitchfork theory. A million people walking to Washington D.C.with pitchforks tends to cause crooked and cheating politicians bad dreams.
So, the people are the government and in fact at this moment Hillary Rodham Clinton is not a member of government and as a private citizen she should have been indicted, jailed and waiting for trial. Maybe the 12 year old rape victim she abused in court in Arkansas is a lawyer now and could represent Hillary?
Trump made a comment in North Carolina that Hillary Clinton is interpreting as a call for violence against Hillary Clinton and I guess other crooks inside the DNC. We already know that Hillary does not interpret very well as Americans were murdered by terrorists in Benghazi Libya as she tried to interpret dinner and a movie.
I guess a lot of people are worried about crooked Hillary appointing liberal nut jobs like Barack Obama to the Supreme Court that would attempt to crush the 2nd amendment of the Constitution, which is your right to keep and bear arms. Hillary should reason that if people have the right to keep and bear arms they also have the right to use them? If people have the right to a pitchfork she would most likely want a law making them illegal, and then knives, and then rocks and then who knows.
Hillary is worried about your one old shotgun that you haven't fired in 20 years but 25 million illegal aliens are o.k running guns, drugs and whores.
As WikiLeaks spreads the word (email) about the DNC and some DNC associates are being murdered on the streets I'm sure she would love to change the topic.
Hillary Clinton tells her friends that words matter. Wow.
Hillary should also understand that her words (called lies) have consequences and the people, the honest and legal citizens, do not and will not accept a lying cheating Clinton called Hillary to operate a corrupt government like she did at the Clinton Foundation.
She says Donald Trump crossed the line, like that never happened before, but she forgets the people hold all the power and only share it to the president and allow that same person to live in the peoples house, as long as they do the peoples work, in an honest manner.
There was no casual inciting of violence but there was a clear call to Hillary that the power from the people will always win as the pitchfork has been replaced by honest voting.
Donald Trump has the perfect temperament to be president and Hillary has the perfect background to be in prison. Hillary will discover the political power in November and then President Trump can install a real DOJ FBI professional and hire that one private eye on the cheap to seal the indictment of both Clinton's.
The GOP comics continue as the GOP Republican Elites continue to run away from Trump which is very refreshing because they'll be fired or jail later. The boys and girls that failed the entire nation, left the borders open, agreed to feed 25 million illegal aliens, traded killers for a cowardly soldier, gave Iran a nuclear program, let the Russians run wild will have their day in front of a Federal judge.
Donald Trump does not need the endorsement of the GOP Elite like Mit Romney, Jeb Bush, Paul Ryan, John McCain or other failed leaders and they should vote for Clinton or stay home.
Hillary should calm down, maybe the purge is over at the DNC and I really don't know if you can even buy a pitchfork or if 20 year old shotgun shells even work.
She is safe and sound.
She is protected by law.
There is a blue line around her.
But we're going to vote, and that's the power that will in fact crush her.
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But high-profile Republicans and rank-and-file voters appeared shaken on Wednesday after a string of Trump missteps, struggling with how to best reject Trump's divisive candidacy. Some pledged to withhold their endorsement and others backed Clinton. Some sought for an unprecedented way to oust Trump from the Republican ticket.
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough, a former Republican congressman from Florida, in an opinion piece in the Washington Post, said the party was in "uncharted waters" and called for leaders to start looking for ways replace him.
A new Reuters/Ipsos poll taken Aug. 5-8, showed that nearly one-fifth of 396 registered Republicans said they want Trump to drop out of the race for the White House and another 10 percent said they "don't know" whether the Republican nominee should or not.
Clinton's campaign, seeing an opening, moved to bring disenchanted Republicans into the fold by announcing an official intraparty outreach effort on behalf of the Democratic nominee.
James Rohrscheib, 74, a registered Republican and retired U.S. Navy officer from Washington state, told Reuters the reality is the Nov. 8 election will be a "tough one."
"I'm in a quandary as to who I am going to vote for," Rohrscheib said.
PROMINENT DEFECTIONS
Clinton's campaign now has a website for Republicans and political independents to sign up to pledge their support, listing 50 prominent Republicans and independents who have endorsed her so far, including Meg Whitman, a high-profile Republican fundraiser and chief executive of Hewlett Packard Enterprise, and former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
John Negroponte, former director of national intelligence under President George W. Bush, and former U.S. Representative Chris Shays of Connecticut, also a Republican, were among those who announced their support on Wednesday.
On Monday, 50 Republican national security officials signed an open letter questioning Trump's temperament, calling him reckless and unqualified to be president.
Other top Republicans, including Senator Susan Collins of Maine this week, have disavowed Trump but said they cannot back Clinton.
Strategists and Trump detractors agreed that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to remove Trump from the Republican ticket.
"It's wishful thinking to believe the Republicans are going to replace its nominee after the convention. People are grasping at straws," Ron Bonjean, a Republican strategist unaffiliated with Trump, told Reuters.
Trump has dismissed the defections and criticism as an unsurprising reaction of the so-called Washington elite to his drive to change the status quo.
"The support he has from Republicans almost seems obligatory rather than voluntary," Mike Smith, a Republican voter and Reuters/Ipsos poll respondent, said of Trump's remaining defenders.
"I'm almost at the point where I think I'm going to vote for Hillary. I don't like her," said Smith, a 74-year-old retiree who lives in Clearwater, Florida. "But Mr. Trump is making me very nervous."
RESET ABANDONED
Republican strategist and Trump supporter Ford O'Connell said Trump has "dug himself a deep hole" and that to win the election he will need to "make it a referendum on Hillary Clinton and the 'rigged system.'"
Trump sought to do just that by using an economic policy speech in Detroit on Monday after a series of missteps that included a prolonged clash with the parents of a fallen Muslim American soldier. But his remarks Tuesday undermined that effort.
"If she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do folks," Trump said at the rally at the University of North Carolina. "Although the Second Amendment people, maybe there is, I don't know," he continued.
The U.S. Secret Service, which investigates threats against sitting presidents and party nominees, has had "more than one conversation" with the Trump campaign about his remark, CNN reported on Wednesday.
Trump's comment and the resulting backlash occurred as Reuters/Ipsos polling showed some 44 percent of 1,162 registered voters believe Trump should exit the race, and that as of Tuesday, Clinton led Trump by more than 7 percentage points, up from a 3-point lead late last week.
Republican Party rules and state laws would make it difficult at this juncture to replace Trump on ballots ahead of the Nov. 8 election.
A more likely scenario would be a replay of the 1996 presidential race, when Republican nominee Bob Dole was badly trailing President Bill Clinton. The party essentially deserted Dole by urging its congressional candidates to cut ties and concentrate on maintaining a Republican majority in the U.S. Congress.
(By Amanda Becker and James Oliphant; Additional reporting by Alana Wise, Emily Flitter, Ginger Gibson, Susan Heavy, Doina Chiacu, Grant Smith and Jonathan Allen; Editing by Leslie Adler and Jonathan Oatis)
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