* With T-E-N days left until Election Day *
Tuesday, November 8, 2016 it is time to make sure a “plan to vote” for Hillary is in place! If you've got one in place, it's time to double-check it!
1st
Please go to I Will Vote, provided by the Democratic National Committee where you can easily get all of the information you will need to vote.
2nd
If you are doing in-person voting ~ as opposed to absentee ballot, by mail, online ~ make a date with a friend to go vote. If you run into long lines you will be able to hold each others places if you need to step away from your spots in the line for any reason.
3rd
Pack a bag with water and a snack. (In recent years, some voters have found themselves stuck in long lines for hours!) If you need it and if possible, bring an easy-to-carry chair, too!
Wishing you a lovely experience casting your 2016 ballot for Hillary (& other Democrats on your ballot who will be in a position to assist her in executing our Democratic Platform!)
TY!!!
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Focused Hillary Read 5-8 minutes
(maybe 10 if you go into the second piece, which I encourage you to do, to view the 1993, under five-minute video for a glimpse into who Hillary was and who Hillary is...)
“Hillary wants to talk to you about love and kindness
… Here is how Hillary
Clinton sees herself: radically consistent, motivated by a core
philosophy — voiced now through two words rarely associated with
her. “Love and kindness.” If this sounds unlikely, she knows it.
For 50 years, she’s struggled to explain the values that motivate
her — in public life, as a candidate, as a person. The one time she
really tried to, in the early 1990s, she was brutally mocked. In the
view of some of her closest aides, Clinton never fully recovered from
the critical backlash.
Now, Clinton doesn’t
talk about this much, not like she did then. On this particular day,
after a routine campaign event at a college in Manchester, New
Hampshire...Clinton is shepherded away to the quiet of an available
room: the building’s industrial-style kitchen. And it’s in this
setting, seated in a fold-out chair at a small table, that Clinton
seems almost surprised by the most basic line of questioning: why she
runs.
“I think most people who
interview me never ask me,” she says. “They nibble a little bit
around the edges but there’s very—” Clinton turns to the one
aide present, her press secretary, also seated at the table, and asks
him to think back: “I don’t know of very many instances in the
last 14 years that we’ve had these kinds of conversations.”
She has been asked every
day, for decades, what she thinks, but rarely why. And here, next to
a dishwasher, Clinton slides right back into the subject. Her words
are slow and deliberate and she takes the conversation to this
discussion she’s been trying to talk about, to bring up on the
trail, as she is again ensnared in a campaign that’s more difficult
than expected, in an election dominated by the language of anger and
fear.
“I am talking about love
and kindness,” she says.
As Clinton sees it, she’s
really talking about a “shorthand” for her personal and political
beliefs, for all the impulses that shape what she does and how she
does it. She is talking about the core of “what I believe and who I
am.” Even if no one views her that way. Even if she’s never been
quite able to explain it. Even if she still isn’t known for the
vision she’s been trying to share for decades, going back to the
beginning. Even if her earnest efforts to connect with people are
hampered not just by her image, but by the actual barriers of public
life. After so many years, how do you convince a nation full of
people who think they know everything about you that they don’t?
“I can only just be the
person I am and continue to stand for what I feel like I have always
stood for, in terms of values and in terms of my core beliefs,”
Clinton says.
“And of course,
policies come and go, policies change. I mean, good grief, of course
that’s the case. But who I am is pretty much who I’ve always
been.”
… It wasn’t
something she planned. Just an ad lib.
This was the day in June
after nine people were gunned down, mid-prayer, inside their church
in South Carolina. Clinton had even been there that day, in
Charleston, and received the news of the shooting on the plane ride
out. She was speaking at a conference on the West Coast, and that’s
where it slipped out for the first time. “I know it’s not usual
for somebody running for president to say what we need more of in
this country is love and kindness,” she said. “But that’s
exactly what we need more of.” … “
You can read the January
2016 story here
( You can view the 1993 4:49 video clip
here )
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Focused Hillary thought! 30 seconds
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Focused Hillary action to share in 30 seconds
You can share Hillary's Tweet on Twitter here
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Please check in with Hillary on a regular basis, communicate with her and share her message by clicking on the following links...
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Also, you can find great Hillary information here...
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Thank you for Networking for Hillary today!
#ACT #ImWithHer #StrongerTogether #WomenTogether
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It's the final countdown & I'd like to add to the opportunity to read and to share Hillary at a glance the opportunity to donate to OUR WIN ON NOVEMBER 8! From $1 on up. Whatever you are comfortable with. Every little bit helps...TY!
It's easy. Just hit the link here
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Curated by Gail Mountain, Network for Hillary Daily is not affiliated with the official campaign of Hillary Clinton in any capacity. This is an independent pilot blog committed to electing Hillary Clinton as the next President of the United States. The hope is that you will, at a glance, learn more about the candidate and that you will, with a click or two, also take action on her behalf daily!
( You can also find me on Twitter at https://twitter.com/GKMTNtwits and at GKMTNblogs http://gkmtnblogs.blogspot.com/ )
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