Donald Trump uses crude language to mock Hillary Clinton
The Republican presidential candidate’s use of a vulgar Yiddish phrase for penis came in a reference to the 2008 Democratic race, in which Barack Obama bested Clinton for the party’s presidential nomination. “I don’t know who would be worse, I don’t know”.
“It’s gonna take a lot more for me to get upset at a woman who enabled a guy who turned the Oval Office into a frat house and his intern into a humidor”, he said.
That’s close enough for the liberal watchdog Media Matters, which wagged its finger at much of the press for having “fixated on Clinton’s specific statement that the terrorists use Trump’s comments in recruitment ‘videos.'” Her broader point – that Trump is an Islamic State recruiting tool – still stands, the site argued.
“I know where she went”. Dont say it, its disgusting.This isnt the first time Trump has used what could be interpreted as gendered language to criticize Clinton.
While Clinton has not directly addressed the comments herself, several campaign aides did so on Twitter.
The campaign used Palmieri’s Twitter account to serve as its only reaction, which was retweeted by Clinton’s male press secretary, Brian Fallon, who often serves as her mouthpiece on Twitter. “We want to be very straight up, OK?”
So why is Clinton avoiding the same kind of treatment as Trump, whose frequent misstatements earned him Politifact’s “Lie of the Year” this week?
“She was favoured to win and she got schlonged, she lost”. “I don’t need to be another political pundit”.
Hillary Clinton referred to Trump’s policy proposal that all Muslims be barred entry into the United States as being detrimental to the country’s fight against ISIS during the recent Democratic debate, adding that his anti-Muslim rhetoric was actually achieving the opposite effect.
He also said that her brief absence from the debate stage was “disgusting” – an absence where Mrs. Clinton was reportedly using the restroom during a commercial break.
Fifty percent of registered U.S. voters said in a Quinnipiac poll released Tuesday that they would be “embarrassed” to have Trump as president, compared to 23 percent who said they would be proud.
All about the word: The Washington Post conducts a “linguistic investigation” into the term and sums up Trump’s problem: “He’s a gentile who, linguistically, may have wandered too far from home”. During her remarks, Clinton stressed the differences between Republicans and Democrats in the field. Republicans dished out bombast and bluster, while the three Democratic candidates offered policy and objective, reminding Americans that we are strengthened when we abide by our values rather than trample them in panic. They follow everything Donald Trump says.