Hillary Clinton sparked outrage last week by planting a big kiss-off on conservative women. Speaking at a New York conference, the failed 2016 Democrat presidential candidate sneered that “most women on the other side of the aisle” act as “handmaidens to the patriarchy.” That’s rich coming from the same woman who defended her husband Bill Clinton amid multiple sexual misconduct claims.
Clinton claimed her sexist smear “kind of eliminates every woman on the other side of the aisle, except very few” – like Sen. Lisa Murkowski and Liz Cheney. How charitable of her to allow a tiny fraction of Republican women to pass her purity test. The rest, she implied, are mindless pawns of the evil patriarchy.
Conservative women fired back, recalling her infamous “basket of deplorables” insult from 2016. Back then, she dismissed millions of Trump supporters as racists and xenophobes. She apologized when backlash hit, but now she’s doubling down with another divisive attack.
Ben Shapiro roasted Clinton in a viral video, calling her the “Miss Havisham of American politics” – a bitter has-been clinging to the past. He exposed her hypocrisy: “You lecture women about subjugating to men, but you spent years threatening Bill Clinton’s accusers and enabling his abuse.”
Clinton’s self-righteous rant ignored her own history of attacking women. She reportedly pressured Monica Lewinsky to stay quiet and later smeared victims as liars. Now she pretends to care about women’s rights? Please.
The backlash grew as conservative voices condemned her elitist snobbery. Clinton’s message: Only women who vote Democrat deserve respect. Those who dare challenge leftist doctrine get labeled traitors to the sisterhood.
This garbage is why millions of American women reject Clinton’s brand of feminism. True equality means respecting choices – not trashing women for voting Republican. Clinton’s patriarchy fantasy is just a excuse to silence dissent.
To Hillary: Please, for the love of America, stop insulting the women who disagree with you. We don’t need your approval. We need leaders who unite us, not elites who split us with hate. Your time is up – let the people speak.