Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton gives an address on national security, Thursday, June 2, 2016, in San Diego, Calif.
The pundits say Hillary ‘s words were swiped from a speech given by Jimmy Carter years ago and was plagiarized by Hillary’s campaign.
Now, when will she give a real national security speech?

Associated Press Associated Press
“What a tangled web of lies we weave, when we first choose to deceive.”
(Still waiting for the national security part. Is that how she and her Muslim entourage are going to protect the country since the Muslims are the ones who want to kill us – will she keep us safe by attacking Donald Trump? She has stated her election would mean four more years of Obama’s policies, folks.)
Wrapped in the guise of a foreign policy speech, Clinton delivered a political thrashing of Donald Trump on Thursday that was unquestionably a standout moment for a candidate who has often struggled to focus her White House campaign.
(Didn’t realize Trump was part of a foreign policy?)
Clinton’s sharply targeted remarks served notice on the presumptive Republican nominee that she’s prepared for a bruising general election fight, one that’s centered squarely on his competency to serve as commander in chief.
(And she is – by taking bribes from foreign and domestic entities? How did her – RED RESET BUTTON work out and how about Benghazi and how she lied to the parents and wives of those who were killed – that is still not settled?)

“He is not just unprepared — he is temperamentally unfit to hold an office that requires knowledge, stability and immense responsibility,” Clinton said.
(Dear God – and she is stable – ask the women who her husband had affairs with and how Hillary drove them into the ground?)
She cast Trump as dangerously thin-skinned, someone who might plunge the nation into war over a perceived slight. She repeatedly referred to her White House rival by his first name only — a knowing dig at a billionaire businessman whose closest advisers reverentially call him “Mr. Trump.”
(Didn’t her chief of staff state that Hillary has a hard time remembering anything – much less her schedule and had to take naps?)
For Clinton, who has acknowledged her weakness as a campaigner, it was a confident and well-timed performance. Though she has struggled for months to shake Democratic primary rival Bernie Sanders, Clinton is poised to clinch the nomination in the coming days and secure her place in history as the first woman ever put forward by a major U.S. political party.
(Yup – she is trying to clinch the nomination by hook or crook.)
But the long primary season has come at a cost. Sanders has been unrelenting in his criticism of Clinton’s judgment and transparency, evaporating much of the goodwill she accrued with Americans during the four years she spent outside the political arena as secretary of state.
Some of Clinton’s own supporters also worry that she’s failed to articulate a clear rationale for her own candidacy and will struggle to counteract Trump’s ability to command the spotlight.
For Clinton’s strong showing to have lasting impact, it will need to be more than just a one-off moment.
Some of Trump’s primary rivals had fleeting success in rattling the supremely confident businessman and in raising issues that appeared to give voters momentary pause. But those arguments were rarely made in a sustained fashion and in some cases came too late to change the trajectory of the Republican race.
(She needs to come up with some of her own words instead of stealing someone else’s words. But – what the heck – I forgot that what she does best is – stealing.)
kommonsentsjane