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WOW! What week! What a convention! History has been made. And there is a lot more history to be made on November 8, 2016.
Good morning, everyone. Hope this finds you well.
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Hillary’s Acceptance Speech:
x YouTube VideoHere is your Saturday HNV:
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Index
1. Hillary Clinton Makes History
2. Stars celebrate Hillary Clinton’s presidential nomination after powerful DNC speech
3. Don't appreciate the significance of Hillary Clinton's nomination? Too bad. This moment doesn't belong to you
4. In Hillary Clinton’s Nomination, Women See a Collective Step Up
5. Hillary’s first post-convention rally in Harrisburg, PA, with Tim Kaine and Bill Clinton
6. Polls starting to look good
7. The Democrats’ Republican moment
8. Jennifer Rubin: It's wonderful what Trump has done for the party - the Democratic Party
9. Khizr Khan, and the moment American Muslims have been waiting for
1. Hillary Clinton Makes HistoryThe convention and the historical aspect of Hillary’s nomination was still a big topic in the news yesterday. The New York Times Editorial Board gave credence to the historical nature of Hillary’s nomination, and the article reads like a defacto endorsement of Hillary by the New York Times.
Illustration by Joan Wong; Photo by Chang W. Lee/The New York TimesHillary Clinton’s life, in many respects, traces the arc of progress for women in American society. Her mother, Dorothy Rodham, was born in 1919, a year before the 19th Amendment gave women the vote.
It has taken a long, long time for that amendment’s promise of women’s full participation in American democracy to be realized. Mrs. Clinton moved it a big step closer this week, as she became the first woman nominated for the presidency by a major party.
Mrs. Clinton’s nomination — bringing women, barred first by law and then by custom, to the pinnacle of American politics — is to be celebrated as inspiration for young Americans, and as hope for women in nations and cultures that deny them the most basic opportunities. It is further proof that opening doors to women elevates and strengthens our nation.
The historic aspect of Hillary’s nomination is celebrated by women and girls around the world.
For four decades, Mrs. Clinton has listened to and spoken for children and the poor. She has absorbed personal and professional blows that would have left others on the canvas, and she has delivered some, too. Few politicians, and certainly not her opponent, have the intellectual heft that she brings to the race for the White House.
Some Americans remain deeply uncomfortable with women leading corporations, let alone the free world. No woman is more aware of this than Mrs. Clinton, who has struggled as first lady, senator and secretary of state to strike the right balance between what society expected of women and what she aspired to accomplish.
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What is already clear is that Mrs. Clinton has had to work fiercely hard, under a withering scrutiny no male candidate would face, and that that hard work has now resulted in a profound service to the nation: A short time ago, the idea that a woman would attain her party’s presidential nomination was beyond audacious; it no longer is.
2. Stars celebrate Hillary Clinton’s presidential nomination after powerful DNC speechEW has an article on how stars, some of who had been strong supporters of surrogates for Hillary, celebrated Hillary’s nomination via Twitter:
Stars celebrate Hillary Clinton’s presidential nomination after powerful DNC speech
Not to be outdone, Fortune had its own collection of tweets to share:
What Oprah Winfrey, Ellen DeGeneres, and Other Powerful Women Are Saying About Hillary's Nomination
Hillary Clinton made history Thursday when she accepted the Democratic party’s nomination to be the first female presidential candidate. Throughout the week, celebrities like Katy Perry, Meryl Streep, Lena Dunham, and Debra Messing appeared at the DNC to support her, and after her rousing speech, even more stars celebrated Clinton and her campaign.
Oprah Winfrey tweeted about the prospect of a woman in the Oval Office and wrote, “Glass ceiling Cracked Wide Open!”
xGlass ceiling Cracked Wide Open! #HillaryClinton#DemsInPhilly
— Oprah Winfrey (@Oprah) July 29, 2016 x"When any barrier falls in America it clears the way for everyone.. When there are no ceilings the sky is the limit!" Bravo @HillaryClinton
— Oprah Winfrey (@Oprah) July 29, 2016 xPlanting seeds in a garden we may never get to see! #HillaryClinton
— Oprah Winfrey (@Oprah) July 29, 2016Hamilton’s Lin-Manuel Miranda gave Clinton a shoutout for herreference to the Broadway musical smash with a blushing emoji and an American flag saying, “I’m with her. #And ShesBeenListeningToDiscTwo!”
x😳🇺🇸I'm with her.#AndShesBeenListeningToDiscTwo!
— Lin-Manuel Miranda (@Lin_Manuel) July 29, 2016Oscar winner Julianne Moore quoted Clinton’s speech, “America is great because America is good,” and added, “I fell in love with Hillary Clinton all over again.”
x"America is great because America is good." I fell in love with @HillaryClinton all over again.
— Julianne Moore (@_juliannemoore) July 29, 2016 x"The American dream is big enough for all of us" @HillaryClintonâ¤ï¸Ââ¤ï¸Ââ¤ï¸Ââ¤ï¸Ââ¤ï¸Â
— Julianne Moore (@_juliannemoore) July 29, 2016Scandal’s Scott Foley tweeted about the historic moment that he shared with his daughter calling it, “an amazing experience.”
xWatched Hillary accept the presidential nomination with my 6yr old daughter by my side. What an amazing experience.
— scott foley (@scottkfoley) July 29, 2016Award-winning Uzo Aduba from Orange is the New Black praised Clinton and wrote, “The ability to meet The Moment and deliver with a steady hand, is the hallmark of a leader.”
xThe ability to meet The Moment and deliver with a steady hand, is the hallmark of a leader.
— Uzo Aduba (@UzoAduba) July 29, 2016Check out reactions from Amy Schumer, Elizabeth Banks, Matt McGorry, Jennifer Lopez, and more below.
xSo proud to see @HillaryClinton accept the nomination for #POTUS let's fight alongside her. Let's all work together #imwithher
— Amy Schumer (@amyschumer) July 29, 2016 xThree peas in a pod. @conniebritton@SophiaBush These women inspire my and fill me with joy. ✨#DNCinPHLpic.twitter.com/hBxWi0x7AA
— Debra Messing (@DebraMessing) July 29, 2016 xWhen there are no ceilings, the sky's the limit. Beautiful speech, @HillaryClinton. I'm ready.
— Ellen DeGeneres (@TheEllenShow) July 29, 2016 xAfter tonight, this pin will be the only piece of glass ceiling left at #DNCinPHL! #tweetmypins#ImWithHerpic.twitter.com/sm5UUQiVw4
— Madeleine Albright (@madeleine) July 28, 2016 xHillary Clinton gave the best speech I ever saw her give: https://t.co/wNCmnRr5qP via @ESQPoliticspic.twitter.com/baIB84mZUh
— Esquire (@esquire) July 29, 2016 xLove wins. pic.twitter.com/AbGGDbdFAz
— billy eichner (@billyeichner) July 28, 2016 x#HillaryClinton is owning this momentous night! I'm SOBBING!!!!! #herStory#DemsInPhilly@DemConvention#OurRepublic#OurAmerica
— octavia spencer (@octaviaspencer) July 29, 2016 xI just keep yelling YES @HillaryClinton#DemsInPhilly@Everytown#noDonaldyoudon't
— Elizabeth Banks (@ElizabethBanks) July 29, 2016 xSitting with my mom and sister, so excited for the future of our country with her. pic.twitter.com/2S2pFVXDYq
— Lady Gaga (@ladygaga) July 29, 2016 xWe are so much stronger together. #DNC#StrongerTogether#Votepic.twitter.com/tT3VSkN6zO
— Lady Gaga (@ladygaga) July 29, 2016 xFeeling hopeful and inspired #ImWithHer
— Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) July 29, 2016 xSo moved! Herstory in the making tonight! @HillaryClinton#ImWithHer w/ my oh yeah #itsabouttogodown face #letsgetitpic.twitter.com/hQFxI8lziz
— Jennifer Lopez (@JLo) July 29, 2016 xalso really flattered she went with a white power suit... @abbijacobson@broadcity#Hillarysfaveshowobvz
— ilana glazer (@ilazer) July 29, 2016 x@HillaryClinton you have my vote ma'am 🎉🎉🎉 #ImWithHer
— Kelly Clarkson (@kelly_clarkson) July 29, 2016 x— kerry washington (@kerrywashington) July 29, 2016 x@shondarhimes& Chelsea wore red, she wore white & Bill wore blue...the level of detail good lordy!!
— PD Thomas (@TPDTCollective) July 29, 2016 xSo happy he's witnessing this pic.twitter.com/Nt9k8EGeSW
— Tyra Banks (@tyrabanks) July 29, 2016 x@HillaryClinton Mean and divisive rhetoric will never prevail anywhere in life.There is hope in the air!#ImWithHerpic.twitter.com/w9dg9fK0SA
— Paula Abdul (@PaulaAbdul) July 29, 2016 xHillary- the humane choice.
— Amanda Seyfried (@AmandaSeyfried) July 29, 2016 xShe is so fierce. BACKBONE unlike any other. #ImWithHer
— ashley judd (@AshleyJudd) July 29, 2016 x"In America if you can dream it, you should be able to build it!" Get it! @HillaryClinton🇺🇸🇺🇸
— Jaime King (@Jaime_King) July 29, 2016 3. Don't appreciate the significance of Hillary Clinton's nomination? Too bad. This moment doesn't belong to you.The LA Times’ Melissa Batchelor Warnke chimed in about the historical nature and context of Hillary’s nomination:
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Yesterday evening, I watched a woman accept a major party’s nomination for President of the United States for the first time in history. I cried. My friend, sitting next to me on the couch, cried. We were so moved to see a woman that represented the things we try to be — strong, discerning, hard-working — stand onstage and speak to us in a way that no other candidate had.
You know what was completely bittersweet about that moment? That I’d had to defend my joy all week. That each and every time I opened my mouth to say, wow, this is meaningful for women and the men who stand with them, and I’m so glad to be living through it, there was someone there — whether a Bernie diehard or a third party supporter or a conservative friend or an internet troll — to say: Here’s a reason why you don’t get to be excited. Here’s a thing she did wrong in 1998. Here’s a community she hasn’t fully shown up for. She’s a warmonger. She’s just the nominee. Did you hear about her emails? (Yes. Five hundred times.)
Detractors like that, you can sense their jealousy, their blatant disregard for the historic moment is nothing but a defense mechanism, because Hillary threatens their patriarchal world views.
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So let me set the record straight, for everyone who hears a woman say it’s meaningful to her that a woman was nominated for President — something which has not happened in the 240 years since the colonies declared their independence — and says in response: “Yes, but.…”
This is not your moment.
When you’re used to having power look like you, it’s baffling to live in a moment that isn’t yours. It’s hard to parse. My friend last night said: “I think some people don’t understand how revolutionary it is to watch Hillary not just refuse to apologize for being a woman, but to own it.”
This is the real revolution…
Let me be very clear on what celebrating this historic moment means:
— It’s incredible and long overdue to see a woman accept the presidential nomination.
— It’s meaningful for me to hear that woman’s capacity, qualifications, and hard work be publicly praised by powerful people of all genders.
— It moves me that, in this campaign, she didn’t downplay her gender in order to fit the mold of what a president has been in the past.
— I gratefully recognize that we walk on a path paved by those women who go before us. We walk on a path trod by my mother, and grandmother, and friends, and aunts, and Susan B. Anthony, and Lilly Ledbetter, and Audre Lorde, and bell hooks, and millions of other strong women and male allies. Hillary Clinton’s grit is shared by many women of her generation who have pushed for greater parity between the sexes. They have worked and continue to work so hard to get a seat at the table.
— A woman just sat at the head of the table.
I like that last one. A woman just sat at the head of the table.
Regardless of how you feel about Hillary, I encourage you to recognize the significance of this moment. It will not come again.
And if you still refuse to acknowledge the moment, fine. But at least let us have it.
4. In Hillary Clinton’s Nomination, Women See a Collective Step UpThe New York Times analyzes the significance of Hillary’s nomination for women:
In Hillary Clinton’s Nomination, Women See a Collective Step Up
Conventiongoers cheered for Hillary Clinton during her speech on Thursday night at the Wells Fargo Center. CreditDamon Winter/The New York TimesThe president would know what it is like to be pregnant. Top military leaders would answer to a female boss, when there has never even been a woman on the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Workplaces and home life could be transformed through expanded parental leave and pay equity. Or nothing could change. The symbolism would be supernova-level. The backlash could be withering.
On Thursday night, 240 years into an unbroken chain of all-male leadership, Hillary Clinton accepted the Democratic nomination for president. The country may be one hard-fought election away from a woman in charge, making a question that has always been abstract more concrete: How could having a woman as president alter the experience of being an American woman?
The significance of this nomination is confounding. If Hillary can become President, it would usher in a new era for America, and in my view for a better America.
Some female leaders of other countries, like Indira Gandhi in India and Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, accumulated power in sharp contrast to their countrywomen, who had very little. But if Mrs. Clinton wins the presidency, she would take office during a period of economic and demographic transformation for American women, who are outnumbering men in college enrollment by ever widening margins, becoming primary breadwinners and heading their own households.
Women make up 54% of all voters. High time we have a nominee that is a woman, and likely President of the United States.
Some of the women interviewed took for granted that Mrs. Clinton would be hit with nasty attacks, like the recent chants of “lock her up” at the Republican convention. But they sounded even more worried that she would face harsher criticism than a male president for whatever large or small mistakes she makes. (A recent Yale study found that women in traditionally male occupations are judged more severely when they make the same mistakes as men in those jobs.)
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Other women say that if she wins, they may change their own behavior. The novelist Ann Patchett, 52, said that the election of a female president could convince her to hand over more domestic chores to her husband. She is a best-selling author and bookstore owner, but a woman in the Oval Office would help her believe that her work is as important as her physician husband’s, she said.
Other women feel dawning possibility, but are not entirely sure what to expect. Nancy Lyons, 50, the chief executive of a design and technology agency in Minneapolis, came up with her own analogy to describe what the moment means for her.
Watching Mrs. Clinton accept the nomination is like witnessing the space missions of her childhood, she said. Hillary Clinton is in a place no woman has ever been before, possibly about to go even further. She needs to execute precisely, to show great endurance and daring. Ms. Lyons is both cheering and dreading failure.
“Hillary Clinton is like an astronaut now,” she said.
5. Hillary’s first post-convention rally in Harrisburg, PA, with Tim Kaine and Bill Clinton x YouTube VideoHarrisburg crowd reacts after Hillary Clinton rally: 'It was worth waiting hours in the heat'
"I loved it," said Maria Vargas, of Harrisburg, who waited hours in line to get a prized position on a riser next to the stage. "It was worth the hours in the heat. The best part was when Hillary arrived to the music, 'Ain't No Mountain High Enough.'"
x YouTube VideoWatch Hillary Clinton arrive in HarrisburgElle Richard called Clinton's remarks in front of the Broad Street Market "powerful.
"I loved her," said Richard, a retiree from Harrisburg. "She's so real. She supports us with fair pay for women. She supports kids and education. It was awesome."
No official crowd estimate was provided, but the crowd appeared to be much larger than the 2,000 people who were initially expected.
Jeb Stuart, a Harrisburg historian, said the choice of the Broad Street Market for the rally was remarkable.
"Being in an urban setting was wonderful," he said. "She could have had it at a lot of other places, but having it in midtown was very wise in my opinion."
Clinton's running mate, Tim Kaine, of Virginia, also impressed, Stuart said.
"I think he could relate a lot to Harrisburg because of its similarities to Richmond, where he's from," Stuart said.
Pics from the event:
6. Polls starting to look goodThe poll numbers we have been seeing over the last couple of days are looking good.
In the national picture we’ve seen the Ipsos-Reuters poll showing a 6% Hillary lead over Donald Trump, in what looks like the beginning of a strong convention bounce for Hillary:
Newsweek:
HILLARY CLINTON LEADS DONALD TRUMP IN THE POLLS POST DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton held a 6- percentage-point lead over Republican rival Donald Trump, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll with new wording that was released on Friday, the day after she formally accepted her party's nomination for the Nov. 8 election.
Nearly 41 percent of likely voters favor Clinton, 35 percent favor Trump, and 25 percent picked "Other," according to the new July 25-29 online poll of 1,043 likely voters, which overlapped with the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.
Also, Republican pollster Rasmussen showed Hillary leading Trump by 1%, whereas that same poll had shown Trump lead Hillary by 7% two weeks ago, prior to either convention, an 8% turnaround in that poll.
STATE POLLS:
Very good looking state polls this week.
Pennsylvania showed a 9% Hillary lead via Suffolk, 50% to 41%, signaling that the state is in good shape for Hillary:
Georgia, GEORGIA !, showed a tied race via Landmark/Rosetta Stone, 45% Trump, 44% Hillary. Georgia might well be in play this year, folks.
Missouri, MISSOURI!, shows a tied race, Hillary 41%, Trump 40%, via Mason-Dixon. Missouri could well be in play.
Trump, Clinton in virtual tie in Missouri
Many Republicans view the Democratic convention very positive. There might be major fissures in the party now due to the Donald Trump candidacy, something we can take advantage of.
CNN:
7. The Democrats’ Republican momentThe Democrats' Republican moment
Over four flag-waving days in Philadelphia, Democrats stole the Republicans' mojo.
That's how many conservatives felt, at least, watching their opponent's pageant this week in Philadelphia. And it may be enough to sway some of them to cross the aisle on Election Day. "How can it be that I am standing at my kitchen counter sobbing because of the messages being driven at the DNC?" Republican strategist Rich Galen asked on Twitter. "Where has the GOP gone?" As Democratic delegates chanted "USA! USA!" and military leaders celebrated America's power, speaker after speaker at the Democratic National Convention struck themes that have long been hallmarks of Republican rhetoric: tributes to service, sacrifice, American leadership and, above all, a repeated reaffirmation of American exceptionalism. Donald Trump claims the country is broken and in bad shape, the military is in disarray, everything is terrible and only he can fix it. Democrats see a great country where our diversity makes us strong and great, and despite a lot still remaining to do we are don’t need to be made “great again”, we are already great. "We have the most powerful military. The most innovative entrepreneurs. The most enduring values -- freedom and equality, justice and opportunity," Hillary Clinton said as she accepted her party's nomination on Thursday night, "We should be so proud that these words are associated with us. That when people hear them, they hear America." And the performance drew praise from many Republicans who object to GOP nominee Donald Trump -- particularly those who concentrate on foreign policy and national security, many of whom have been harshly critical of Trump's positions on Russia, NATO, Asia and nuclear weapons, among other issues. "The Democratic convention was a convention of patriotism this year," wrote Erick Erickson, a conservative radio host and blogger. "Democrats were for you. If you want to be free, the GOP was doom and gloom." ... The praise echoed many of the reactions that followed President Barack Obama's speech Wednesday night, when conservatives took to Twitter to praise its optimism and bemoan the fact that a Republican wasn't making it. John Podhoretz, a former speechwriter for President Ronald Reagan, tweeted that Obama's address "could have been a Reagan speech. Trust me. I know." Noah Rothman, a conservative writer at Commentary magazine, tweeted that "for Bush-era GOPers, a convention of Dems cheering 'USA' as military brass pledge to defeat 'evil' is disorienting." Former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele tweeted that he was "enjoying this Republican Convention with a 4 Star General commanding the stage and chants of "USA, USA." …. The military's service and sacrifice -- as well as the Constitution, a Republican touchstone -- were movingly evoked Thursday night when the father of a fallen Muslim serviceman spoke of his son. Holding up his pocket-sized copy of the country's founding document, Khizr Khan addressed Trump directly, telling him to look through the Constitution for the word "liberty." "You have sacrificed nothing. And no one," Khan said. Throughout the convention, Clinton and other speakers offered a direct rebuttal to her Republican rival's insistence on American decline by emphasizing the positive force Americans can be at home and abroad. The Democratic convention was "about loving America," said prominent conservative writer Jonah Goldberg, "the Republican convention was about loving Trump. If you didn't love Trump, it offered nothing." 8. Jennifer Rubin: It's wonderful what Trump has done for the party - the Democratic PartyJennifer Rubin, conservative writer for WaPo’s “Right Turn”, is not at all enthralled with Trump, and it shows:
Jennifer Rubin: It's wonderful what Trump has done for the party - the Democratic Party
The bad news is that Donald Trump is almost single-handedly destroying the Republican Party. As Hillary Clinton said, “He’s taken the Republican Party a long way from ‘Morning in America’ to ‘midnight in America.’ ” She might have added that he has taken the GOP from the party of William F. Buckley Jr. to the party of know-nothings, from Abraham Lincoln to alt-right bigots and from Cold Warriors to Vladimir Putin’s poodles.
The good news is that he’s helping the Democratic Party improve considerably.
When was the last time the Democratic Party had a general at its convention who gave a rip-roaring speech as Marine Gen. (Ret.) John Allen did Thursday night?
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When was the last time the Democratic Party had the parents of a slain war hero rebuking the Republicans’ callousness and cluelessness about the Constitution? That’s what happened Thursday with the stirring appearance of the Muslim immigrant parents of Capt. Humayun Khan, who gave his life to save his comrades. It may have been the best comeback to Trump of the campaign:
“If it was up to Donald Trump, he never would have been in America.
When was the last time a Democratic presidential nominee fervently and without reservation praised America as Hillary Clinton did? (“We have the most dynamic and diverse people in the world. We have the most tolerant and generous young people we’ve ever had. We have the most powerful military, the most innovative entrepreneurs, the most enduring values: freedom and equality, justice and opportunity. We should be so proud that those words are associated with us.”) Indeed, the robust celebration and affection for the real America — not 1950s America — was heartwarming.
The Democrats are the party of patriotism, pride in America, but the right way. As a tapestry of diversity that makes America great.
By contrast, the GOP nominee is a man who worships only himself and is nearly bereft of religious values (e.g. humility, generosity, kindness, empathy, fidelity). He conducted the most secularized GOP convention in memory.
And, Rubin has been on the daily warpath against Trump:
Jennifer Rubin: Trump reveals the right's intellectual corruption
Jennifer Rubin: Republicans have a problem: Trump-Putin
9. Khizr Khan, and the moment American Muslims have been waiting for x YouTube VideoCNN:
Khizr Khan, and the moment American Muslims have been waiting for
The 2016 presidential campaign has not been easy on American Muslims.
Donald Trump, the GOP presidential nominee, has proposed banning immigrants from Muslim-majority countries. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich suggested that Muslims who believe in Shariah should be deported. And former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani said Muslims on the federal government's terrorism watch list -- a secretive and some say overly broad list -- should be forced to wear electronic bracelets to monitor their whereabouts. … So when Khizr Khan, the father of a slain American soldier, took the stage at the Democratic National Convention on Thursday night and shook his copy of the Constitution at Trump, you could almost see the collective fist pump from Muslims across the country. "I was choking back tears," said Arsalan Iftikhar, author of the book "Scapegoats: How Islamophobia Helps Our Enemies and Threatens Our Freedoms." "At a time when Islamophobia is growing thanks to hateful demagogues like Donald Trump, it was heartening to see the Democratic party give a prime-time slot to the father of a fallen Muslim-American soldier who rhetorically slapped Donald Trump in the face with his pocket-size Constitution." Khan, whose son, Army Capt. Humayun Khan, 27, died from a suicide bombing in Baghdad 12 years ago, said Trump's shifting proposals to ban Muslims from entering the country would have prevented his late son from serving in the military. The Khans, originally from Pakistan, immigrated to the United States in the 1970s from the United Arab Emirates. "Have you ever been to Arlington Cemetery?" Khan asked Trump. "Go look at the graves of the brave patriots who died defending America -- you will see all faiths, genders and ethnicities. You have sacrificed nothing and no one." In challenging Trump, Khan was "representing so many American Muslims who endured having sand kicked in our faces for too long," wrote Shahed Amanullah, a media entrepreneur and former State Department adviser. xGod bless the Khan's who said what so many of us want to say. God bless them and their son. #DNCinPHL
— Suhaib Webb (@ImamSuhaibWebb) July 29, 2016 xI've seen #KhizrKhan's speech a few times now. It takes a Desi Muslim uncle to remind America of its core values & freedoms. Amazing.
— Wajahat Ali (@WajahatAli) July 29, 2016I will leave you with some exciting recent tweets from Hillary:
xLet's go win this, together. pic.twitter.com/vCKpROauyZ
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 xHillary accepted the Democratic nomination for president on Thursday. (There were balloons.) https://t.co/yURPGlmYkRpic.twitter.com/jbh1J7Oqwx
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 30, 2016 xDonald Trump has painted a dark, divisive picture of America. We have 102 days to stop him from becoming president.https://t.co/hp3Bb0AS5Y
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 30, 2016 xBig victory for democracy as the 4th Circuit just struck down a NC voter discrimination law. Let’s keep fighting to make voting easier. -H
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 xCapt. Khan embodied the best of our values when his actions saved his unit. Last night, his parents told his story:https://t.co/3z8Wvf8Xdg
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 x“Contrary to Donald Trump, I believe every time we knock down a barrier in America, it liberates everyone in America.†—Hillary
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 x"We've got to make this economy work for everyone, not just those at the top." —Hillary: https://t.co/Et5D2WbDNI
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 x"This has been such an exciting...week!We heard the man from Hope, Bill Clinton & the man of hope, Barack Obama." pic.twitter.com/gefWILX2iW
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 xWe share this basic belief: Do all the good you can and serve one another. That's what this election is about. pic.twitter.com/5w70TtVfay
— Senator Tim Kaine (@timkaine) July 29, 2016 x"Let’s look to the future with courage and confidence.Let’s build a better tomorrow for our beloved children." https://t.co/jcMy9VIuIJ
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016 xThank you. pic.twitter.com/zTgGmMfHQg
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) July 29, 2016