As unsurprising as it is unsophisticated. Out
Post# of 65629
Out of context video, photo-shopped images, bogus Fox News graphs and false attribution are the stock in trade of the that part of the electorate that needs an 'alternate reality' to reinforce their beliefs.
Cause you know, actual reality doesn't get her done for those folks!
See last 7 years of 'Obama Derangement Syndrome' fueled by all of the above.
In any case, that ad will sway no one inclined to vote for Hillary and already highlights Trump's lack of 'quality control'.
She had a pretty good idea with that barking dog though.
They'd need several to cover for those dogs who would lose their bark from overuse!
http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/03/16/...arking-ad/
Quote:
The actual clip comes from a rally in Nevada, where Clinton referenced a political ad on the radio from her days in Arkansas.
Describing the ad, Clinton said: “The announcer said, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if somebody running for office said something, we could have an immediate reaction as to whether it was true or not? Well we’ve trained this dog and the dog, if it’s not true, he’s going to bark.'”
“I’m trying to figure out how we can do that with the Republicans, you know? We need to get that dog and follow them around and every time they say things, like, ‘Oh, the great recession was caused by too much regulation—’” she said, then barking, like the fact-check dog she was imagining. “I think we could cut right through a lot of their claims.”
While we don’t have dogs trained to follow around candidates and bark the alarm when they lie, we do now have near-instantaneous fact-checking via the internet. The fact-checking site Politifact rolled Donald Trump’s campaign statements together and awarded them “2015 Lie of the Year,” — the majority of Trump’s claims checked on the site are some degree of false, from “mostly” to “pants on fire.” Bark bark.