WhatFinger

Who let the dogs out!

‘Baracka’s’ heir apparent will be remembered as ‘Barka’ Clinton


By Judi McLeod ——--February 16, 2016

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Hillary Clinton’s trademark, fingernail-on-a-chalkboard strident screech was replaced, albeit momentarily for a dog bark in Reno, Nevada, yesterday when she literally barked like a dog in going after Republicans she claims must be barked at whenever they blame the recession on too much Wall Street regulation. Resurrecting from cobwebbed memory a dog bark from an old Arkansas radio ad she liked, Clinton went into an “ARH!” “ARH!” sounding like any family’s Fido, barking for a bone. Dogs are super intelligent and most of them would wish that Clinton was a tree.
Dogs are also known to have super strong scenting abilities. Perhaps this politician, who would stoop to barking like a dog in reaching to get her point across, is finally sniffing coming disaster. With daughter, Chelsea, campaigning to empty seats in Cleveland, where American Mirror posted a video, showing numerous empty seats “in an already small room” and according to Drudge headlines, ‘Bubba Blowing it’ in Florence, S.C., Hillary had plenty to be barking mad about. First came the bearded lady of the circus and other supposed freaks on display, now it’s a barking former Secretary of State. Clinton wants people to take to barking when Republicans start saying things that are not true, leaving us to conclude that it is only she and fellow progressives that should be bypassed in the Big Lie Department. “Clinton was in the middle of a riff about how, in her view, Republicans say things that are not true, when she remembered a radio ad that she said ran in rural Arkansas while her husband, Bill Clinton, was running for office. (Fox News, Feb. 15, 2016)

"(Republicans) actually, with a straight face, say that the great recession was caused by too much regulation on Wall Street. They actually say that," Clinton said.  “Then she launched into her story.  "One of my favorite political ads of all time was a radio ad in rural Arkansas where the announcer said, 'Wouldn't it be great if somebody running for office said something, we could have an immediate reaction to whether it was true or not. Well, we have trained this dog. Well, the dog, if it is not true, he is going to bark,'" Clinton said. "And the dog was barking on the radio and so people were barking at each other for days after that." "I want to figure out how we can do that with Republicans. We need to get that dog and follow them around and every time they say these things like, 'Oh, the Great Recession was caused by too much regulation,' arh, arh, arh, arh," Clinton said, letting out a barking noise that caused the audience to laugh and some people to mimic her. "I think," Clinton concluded, "we could cut right through a lot of their claims."
That Clinton would remember the sound of a barking dog in a radio ad from almost 30 years ago when her husband was running for office in Arkansas underscores the lie: “I don’t recall” she used repeatedly during the congressional investigation into the role she played in the Benghazi scandal. Hurling the charge “LIAR!” seems to be a big part of Election 2016 in both political camps. But the sound of barking coming from Republican presidential hopefuls, where Big Dog Donald Trump keeps the fur flying, sounds more like “YIP!” “YIP!” as one dog bites into the rump of another. Meanwhile, back-biting candidates seeking Republican nomination should learn how to start playing nice with each other before barking mad Clinton gets to claim the presidency.

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Judi McLeod—— -- Judi McLeod, Founder, Owner and Editor of Canada Free Press, is an award-winning journalist with more than 30 years’ experience in the print and online media. A former Toronto Sun columnist, she also worked for the Kingston Whig Standard. Her work has appeared throughout the ‘Net, including on Rush Limbaugh and Fox News.

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