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Top 5 Things Hillary Clinton Should Have Known, but (Apparently) Didn’t

Hillary

Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton delivers the keynote address at the Dreamforce convention Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2014, in San Francisco. Clinton said Tuesday the nation needs to close a "word gap" between low-income children and their more affluent peers. Other topic included her support of "net neutrality", her new granddaughter Charlotte and the importance of philanthropy. (AP Photo/Ben Margot)

by Jenna Ranger

1. “C” stands for “Classified”


Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told the FBI that she did not know what the (C) in the body of her emails meant, stating she could “only speculate it was referencing paragraphs marked in alphabetical order” according to FBI notes from the interview. A “C” in parentheses in the body of an email means that specific paragraph contains classified information.

2. You cannot send, receive, or store Classified emails on a private server


Clinton claimed her private email server was “set up in accordance with the rules and regulations in effect,” but a federal judge stated Clinton “violated government policy” when she used her private server for official state department messages.

3. Businesses and corporations do in fact create jobs


Clinton stated in a 2014 speech while campaigning on behalf of Martha Coakley, “Don’t let anyone tell you businesses and corporations create jobs.” Though likely partly based on Clinton’s disdain for free market economics, the statement is nonetheless blatantly false on a factual level.

4. To be under “sniper fire,” there must be a sniper, and a gun being fired


While running for president in 2008, Clinton falsely claimed that she landed under sniper fire in Bosnia. Video from the referenced incident proved otherwise.

5. Benghazi


Hillary Clinton representatives from the State Department allegedly claimed that the Benghazi terror attack that resulted in 4 American deaths was an escalation of a demonstration against a YouTube video. In reality, it was a planned assault by Islamic terrorists on the US Embassy in Tunisia.

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