Federal Workers Shocked to Learn They're Not Royalty and Forced by Trump to...
Eight More Years! President Trump Trolls Media by Hinting He’s Ready to Serve...
He’s Everywhere! ‘Journalists’ Lament Energetic, Omnipresent Trump After Boring Biden’s Ca...
‘Hatch’ Act: Elie Mystal Goes on Race Rant Blaming White People for Trump...
Remaining Red: Florida Republicans Celebrate Nikki Fried’s Democrat Party Chair Victory
Stand-Up Guy: Trump Creates Comedy Skit Out of Sleepy Joe Biden’s Inability to...
Maddow in Tears! Trump Predicts the Demise of ‘Enemy of the People’ MSNBC...
Brit Goes Undercover With the Far-Right Patriotic Alternative for BBC
America’s Golden Age: White House Releases List of Trump’s Actions Over His First...
Here’s a Peek at Anthony Fauci’s Old Taxpayer-Funded Security
President Donald Trump Announces We Are Now in a Merit-Based World
The Left's Warped View of Women Is Bound to Backfire
'USA! USA!' Trump Hit a Vegas Casino and What Happened Next Is a...
Historian Amazed by How Well Fed and Looked After Released Hamas Hostages Appear
Following Pete Hegseth's Confirmation, Media Double Down on Former Sister-in-Law's Debunke...

Is it OK if we hold our cheers until another woman besides Hillary breaks the highest glass ceiling?

Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s timing wasn’t the best when she spoke during the contentious opening day of the Democratic National Convention and told the crowd, “People get it: The system is rigged.

Advertisement

No kidding: Warren’s comments came in the wake of WikiLeaks’ release of DNC emails that made clear the already obvious attempt by party chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz to tip the scales for Hillary Clinton to the point that her speaking role at the convention was pulled and she was escorted out of the Florida delegation’s breakfast by security amid boos.

So while it’s nice that New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof thinks all Americans should take pride in Clinton’s shattering of the glass ceiling (which, when rendered with special effects on the big screen at the DNC, reminded a lot of people of Kool-Aid Man barging through another wall), not everyone feels obligated to stand up and cheer.

Wow — “whatever one thinks of Clinton” is a really big hurdle to get over. Not only was Bernie Sanders undercut by the Democratic Party, but don’t forget the time Yamiche Alcindor, also of the New York Times, asked Sanders if staying in the race was sexist, because by refusing to concede he was standing in the way of what could be the first female president.

Advertisement

So, whatever one thinks of, um, election fraud and accusing male candidates of being sexist by not stepping out of her way, her nomination is still a milestone, right?

https://twitter.com/M240H/status/759505280178724865

Believe it or not, some even doubt President Obama’s personal assurance that Clinton is the most qualified person ever to run for president, even though when it came time to talk about jobs on the campaign trail, she suggested she might put her husband in charge of revitalizing the economy — a suggestion that she walked back pretty quickly.

https://twitter.com/sangeap/status/759476643790544900

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement