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[brid video=”65396″ player=”2077″ title=”Between Two Ferns With Zach Galifianakis Hillary Clinton”]

Hillary Clinton is not as cool or as funny as Barack Obama or Donald Trump, and her hilarious appearance on “Between Two Ferns” was painful to watch. The only winner in this 5-minute exchange, which was meant to be an attempt to attract younger voters, was Zach Galifianakis, the host of the web series.

The former secretary of state actually said she regretted the interview in a comment that was unclear whether it was meant to be a joke, but she should. It was a total flop that millennial and younger voters–many of whom are either taking a hard look at her Republican rival or third-party candidates–are going to see right through.

President Barack Obama used the The Funny Or Die forum to push ObamaCare when enrollment was flopping in 2014, but Mrs. Clinton used it to just flop.

“As secretary [of state], how many words per minute could you type?” the host and comedic actor said. “And how does President Obama like his coffee? Like himself? Weak?”

“You know, Zach, those are really, really out-of-date questions. You need to get out more,” Mrs. Clinton said in a not-at-all funny response.

“What happens if you become pregnant? Are we going to be stuck with Tim Kaine for nine months?” he asked.

The worst part of the interview was her attempt to be serious and give serious answers.

Galifianakis at one point claimed that she’d told him off air that she is going to take Americans’ guns away.

“I really regret doing this,” Mrs. Clinton said.

At what was perhaps the most entertaining moment, Galifianakis interrupted the interview to play “a word from our sponsor,” which was a campaign commercial for Donald Trump. He ended the interview by telling Mrs. Clinton the two should stay in touch and asking her a question.

“What’s the best way to reach you? Email?”

Hillary Clinton is not as cool or

Democratic President Barack Obama, left, embraces Hillary Clinton, right, after speaking to the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Arena in Philadelphia. (Photo: AP)

Democratic President Barack Obama, left, embraces Hillary Clinton, right, after speaking to the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Arena in Philadelphia. (Photo: AP)

Hillary Clinton is the worst kind of political animal, one who will exploit anything for political gain, distort facts and shift her positions at will for votes, significantly more than your garden-variety pandering politician.

Remember when Clinton was for the Iraq War and then later savaged anyone who believed as she had as if they were reprobates? Remember when she opined that marriage is between a man and a woman? Remember her claim that she left the White House “not only dead broke but in debt”? Her pathetically laughable yarn that she came under sniper fire in Bosnia in the ’90s? That all her grandparents were immigrants? That she was named after Sir Edmund Hillary, who didn’t gain fame for climbing Mount Everest until Clinton was 5 years old? That she applied for the Marines in 1975? Yeah, that’s believable. LOL. Oh, and I promise I won’t rehash her email and Benghazi lies here.

She told MSNBC’s Chris Matthews in 2002 that she wouldn’t apologize for her vote to invade Iraq — emphasizing Saddam Hussein’s “megalomania.” She also defended her position in 2008 against then-candidate Barack Obama’s attacks, only much later changing her position.

On same-sex marriage, she wasn’t remotely ambivalent. She went out of her way to clarify her position in 2000, saying, “I think a marriage is as a marriage has always been, between a man and a woman.” In the 2008 presidential campaign, she reiterated her opposition to same-sex marriage. Both PolitiFact and Snopes.com affirm that she didn’t fully flip on the same-sex marriage issue until March 2013, when she openly embraced “marriage equality.”

Movingly — for the easily deceived, anyway — she changed her “H” logo to be rainbow-colored (it’s all about solidarity, you know) and tweeted, “Every loving couple & family deserves to be recognized & treated equally under the law across our nation. #LoveMustWin #LoveCantWait.” She forgot to add “except for those Christian bigots,” but I digress. Clinton is utterly hostage to her political ambitions.

I recall (a term that is alien to Clinton) when people running for chief executive officer of the United States and those already serving as such appreciated the president’s duty to execute the laws and the importance of promoting law and order.

But President Barack Obama has repeatedly undermined law enforcement in this country and has inflamed racial tension, especially between the minority community and police — though he occasionally pays lip service to opposing violence. If he opposes the looting and violence in Charlotte, he has taken his time saying it, as any such announcement, to be effective, should be immediate and heartfelt.

But Obama is on his way out, and Clinton seeks to replace him. She lumped together the police shootings of Terence Crutcher in Tulsa and Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte when she tweeted, “Keith Lamont Scott. Terence Crutcher. Too many others. This has got to end.”

What has got to end? Of course unjustified shootings must end, and unjustified police shootings of innocent civilians, when they occur, even more so. But Clinton has brazenly rushed to judgment on both shootings, while investigations are proceeding and evidence is being gathered.

No halfway decent person would attempt to defend unjustified police shootings. But what about legally justified shootings? Do they have to end, too, Mrs. Clinton? Are you saying that cops are never justified in shooting? Do you have even the slightest pangs of conscience for pouring gas on these issues?

Clinton can’t possibly believe what her tweet recklessly implies. But she is obviously less concerned about being levelheaded and fair than with pandering to drive minority voter turnout, which she’ll desperately need if this race continues to tighten.

Such rhetoric is igniting a powder keg, and it’s harming minorities, not helping them. Also disproportionately harming minorities are Obama’s dramatically increased government dependency programs, which have had a devastating impact on the nuclear family, on the economy overall and on jobs.

How can we be surprised that there is widespread discontentment in America, especially in minority communities, when liberal policies are destroying their standard of living and that sense of “hope” that Obama glibly promised?

One of the cruelest lies is that leftist solutions lead to greater prosperity and income equality — that Democratic and liberal policies benefit the black community and that conservatives are indifferent.

No, these policies continue to trap minorities in woefully inferior inner-city schools and torpedo their upward economic mobility. Obama has had his way for eight years, and the plight of minorities is painfully worse. Clinton would give us more of the same, not because it will help but because it’s her ticket to power.

I long for the day when a majority of Americans and a substantial percentage of minorities finally decide that liberals will no longer get a pass from minorities because of their allegedly good intentions when decades of abominable results scream otherwise.

Hillary Clinton is the worst kind of

Donald-Trump-CNN-Republican-Debate-FL

“So far I cannot believe how civil it’s been up here,” Donald J. Trump said at the Republican debate hosted by CNN in Florida. The comment came a mild exchange with Sen. Ted Cruz over the senator’s flip-flops on ethanol and immigration. (Photo: AP)

On one of my first trips to New Hampshire in 1991, to challenge President George H. W. Bush, I ran into Sen. Eugene McCarthy.

He was returning to the scene of his ’68 triumph, when he had inflicted the first crippling wound on Lyndon Johnson.

“Pat, you don’t have to win up here, you know,” he assured me. “All you have to do is beat the point spread.”

“Beat the point spread” is a good description of what Donald Trump has to do in Monday night’s debate.

With only a year in national politics, he does not have to show a mastery of foreign and domestic policy details. Rather, he has to do what John F. Kennedy did in 1960, and what Ronald Reagan did in 1980.

He has to meet and exceed expectations, which are not terribly high. He has to convince a plurality of voters, who seem prepared to vote for him, that he’s not a terrible risk, and that he will be a president of whom they can be proud.

He has to show the country a Trump that contradicts the caricature created by those who dominate our politics, culture and press.

The Trump on stage at Hofstra University will have 90 minutes to show that the malicious cartoon of Donald Trump is a libelous lie.

He can do it, for he did it at the Mexico City press conference with President Pena Nieto where he surprised his allies and stunned his adversaries.

Recall. Kennedy and Reagan, too, came into their debates with a crucial slice of the electorate undecided but ready to vote for them if each could relieve the voters’ anxieties about his being within reach of the button to launch a nuclear war.

Kennedy won the first debate, not because he offered more convincing arguments or more details on the issues, but because he appeared more lucid, likable and charismatic, more mature than folks had thought. And he seemed to point to a brighter, more challenging future for which the country was prepared after Ike.

After that first debate, Americans could see JFK sitting in the Oval Office.

Reagan won his debate with Carter because his sunny disposition and demeanor and his “There you go again!” airy dismissal of Carter’s nit-picking contradicted the malevolent media-created caricatures of the Gipper as a dangerous primitive or an amiable dunce.

Even George W. Bush, who, according to most judges, did not win a single debate against Al Gore or John Kerry, came off as a levelheaded fellow who was more relatable than the inventor of the internet or the windsurfer of Cape Cod.

The winner of presidential debates is not the one who compiles the most debating points. It is the one whom the audience decides they like, and can be comfortable taking a chance on.

Trump has the same imperative and same opportunity as JFK and Reagan. For the anticipated audience, of Super Bowl size, will be there to see him, not her. He is the challenger who fills up the sports arenas with the tens and scores of thousands, not Hillary Clinton.

If she were debating John Kasich or Jeb Bush, neither the viewing audience nor the title-fight excitement of Monday night would be there. Specifically, what does Trump need to do? He needs to show that he can be presidential. He needs to speak with confidence, but not cockiness, and to deal with Clinton’s attacks directly, but with dignity and not disrespect. And humor always helps.

Clinton has a more difficult assignment.

America knows she knows the issues. But two-thirds of the country does not believe her to be honest or trustworthy. As her small crowds show, she sets no one on fire. Blacks, Hispanics and millenials who invested high hopes in Barack Obama seem to have no great hopes for her. She has no bold agenda, no New Deal or New Frontier.

“Why aren’t I 50 points ahead?” wailed Hillary Clinton this week.

The answer is simple. America has seen enough of her and has no great desire to see any more; and she cannot change an impression hardened over 25 years — in 90 minutes.

But the country will accept her, if the only alternative is the Trump of the mainstream media’s portrayal. Hence, the strategy of the Democratic Party for the next seven weeks is obvious:

Trash Trump, take him down, make him intolerable, and we win.

No matter how she performs though, Donald Trump can win the debate, for he is the one over whom the question marks hang. But he is also the one who can dissipate and destroy them with a presidential performance.

In that sense, this debate and this election are Trump’s to win.

Trump has the same imperative and same

In this image made from a Friday, Sept. 16, 2016 police video, Terence Crutcher, left, is pursued by police officers, including Betty Shelby, right, as he walk to an SUV in Tulsa, Okla. Photo, right, provided by the Tulsa Oklahoma Police Department shows Officer Betty Shelby. (Photos: Tulsa Police Department via AP)

In this image made from a Friday, Sept. 16, 2016 police video, Terence Crutcher, left, is pursued by police officers, including Betty Shelby, right, as he walk to an SUV in Tulsa, Okla. Photo, right, provided by the Tulsa Oklahoma Police Department shows Officer Betty Shelby. (Photos: Tulsa Police Department via AP)

DEVELOPING: Prosecutors filed first-degree manslaughter charges against Tulsa Police Officer Betty Shelby in the death of Terence Crutcher. Shelby, a white police officer, shot Mr. Crutcher, an unarmed black man, on a city street during a confrontation was captured on a police dashcam and in aerial footage.

Officer Shelby makes the second Tulsa police officer charged this year following a former volunteer deputy with the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office. He was sentenced to four years in prison after he was convicted of second-degree manslaughter in the shooting death of Eric Harris.

The charges come as North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory declared a state of emergency following rioting in Charlotte resulting from the officer-involved shooting death of Keith Lamont Scott. Violence broke out after the daughter of the 43-year-old Scott posted a profanity-filled, hourlong video on Facebook claiming her father had some kind of disability and was unarmed.

In the footage, she claimed he was only carrying a book and was waiting for his son to get off the school bus. On Wednesday, a man identifying himself as Scott’s brother said to media that “all white people are devils, all white cops are devils.”

While law enforcement officials have refused to release video of the Scott shooting by Officer Brentley Vinson—who is also African-American—the preponderance of evidence backs up the police version of the story. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Kerr Putney agreed to show the footage, which clearly shows Mr. Scott with a gun, to his family only.

Police say Mr. Scott ignored repeated law commands to drop his gun, which was corroborated by non-police witnesses. Neighborhood residents say otherwise, but images leaked clearly show a gun on the ground near Mr. Scott’s foot, which the family says was planted.

The Republican governor called in the National Guard at the request of Chief Putney.

But the incidents of police shootings in North Carolina and Oklahoma are not the same, despite some attempting to wrap them in one narrative. Officer Shelby, who joined the Tulsa Police Department in December 2011, was responding to a domestic violence call when she came across Mr. Crutcher with his vehicle abandoned on a city street on the center line.

The video footage shows 40-year-old Terence Crutcher walking away from Officer Shelby with his arms in the air. However, the video does not show Officer Shelby firing the single shot that killed Mr. Crutcher and her attorney said he was not following lawful police commands. He said that Officer Shelby opened fire when the man began to reach into his SUV window.

Because she did not turn on her dashcam the only police footage available shows Mr. Crutcher walking toward the driver’s side of the SUV before more officers walk up. He appears to lower his hands and place them on the vehicle when man inside a police helicopter hovering overhead says, “That looks like a bad dude, too. Probably on something.”

DEVELOPING: Prosecutors filed first-degree manslaughter charges against

[brid video=”65329″ player=”2077″ title=”Hillary Clinton “Why Aren’t I 50 Points Ahead””]

After blowing $35 million on campaign ads last month alone, Democrat Hillary Clinton is left asking supporters, “Why aren’t I 50 points ahead?”

In August, the former secretary of state led the New York businessman and Republican Donald Trump by roughly 6 points on the PPD average of polls. Now, she trails on the 4-way average by the tiniest of margins and by 3 points on the PPD U.S. Presidential Election Daily Tracking Poll.

The question was uttered to supporters in a “remarks via video” speech to supporters in a pro-union audience. A recent [content_tooltip id=”37989″ title=”FOX Poll”] in Ohio, a must-win state for any Republican, found Mrs. Clinton trailing Mr. Trump by 2 points among voters in union households. The Buckeye State is rated LIKELY TRUMP on the PPD 2016 Presidential Election Projection Model.

After blowing $35 million on campaign ads

pending-home-sales-reuters

Existing and pending home sales reported by the National Association of Realtors. Photo: Reuters)

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday existing home sales in the U.S. fell for the second straight month in August, missing the median forecast. Total existing home sales fell 0.9% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.33 million, down from a downwardly revised 5.38 million in July. Following last month’s decline, existing home sales are at their second-lowest pace of 2016, though still a bit higher (0.8%) than the 5.29 million a year ago.

“Healthy labor markets in most the country should be creating a sustained demand for home purchases,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at NAR. “However, there’s no question that after peaking in June, sales in a majority of the country have inched backwards because inventory isn’t picking up to tame price growth and replace what’s being quickly sold.”

Regional Breakdown

Existing home sales in the Northeast increased 6.1% to an annual rate of 700,000, which was flat from a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $274,100, 0.8% higher than August 2015.

In the Midwest, existing home sales decreased 0.8% to an annual rate of 1.27 million in August, but are still 0.8% higher from a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was $190,700, up 5.5 percent from a year ago.

Existing-home sales in the South in August fell 2.7% to an annual rate of 2.16 million, but are still 0.9% above August 2015. The median price in the South was $209,700, up 6.7% from a year ago.

Existing-home sales in the West lessened 1.6% to an annual rate of 1.20 million in August, but are still 0.8% higher than a year ago. The median price in the West was $347,400, which is 9.2% above August 2015.

The National Association of Realtors said Thursday

unemployment-benefits

Weekly jobless claims, or first-time claims for unemployment benefits reported by the Labor Department.

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims for the week ending September 17 fell by 8,000 to 252,000 last week, lower than the estimate for 262,000. The prior week was unchanged at 260,000.

The four-week moving average–widely considered a more stable gauge–was 258,500, a decrease of 2,250 from the previous week’s unrevised average of 260,750. The report marks 81 consecutive weeks of initial claims below 300,000, which is the longest streak since 1970. However, as PPD has repeatedly reported, long-term unemployment has simply shrunk the pool of eligible applicants for first-time unemployment benefits.

A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors impacting this week’s initial claims and no state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending September 3.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending September 3 were in Puerto Rico (2.7), New Jersey (2.6), Alaska (2.5), Connecticut (2.2), Pennsylvania (2.1), California (2.0), the Virgin Islands (1.9), West Virginia (1.9), Massachusetts (1.8), and New York (1.8).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending September 10 were in Virginia (+1,051), Oklahoma (+434), Wisconsin (+268), West Virginia (+178), and Minnesota (+93), while the largest decreases were in California (-4,627), Illinois (-4,389), Pennsylvania (-2,810), Texas (-2,635), and New York (-1,730).

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims

Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks at the Dallas Regional Chamber at the Hyatt Regency Hotel on March 16, 2015. He spoke on the 2015 State of the State. (Michael Ainsworth/The Dallas Morning News) 03182015xALDIA

Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks at the Dallas Regional Chamber at the Hyatt Regency Hotel on March 16, 2015. He spoke on the 2015 State of the State. (Michael Ainsworth/The Dallas Morning News) 03182015xALDIA

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday he intends to withdraw the nation’s largest conservative state from the federal refugee resettlement program. The governor, who handily won his election in 2014 over Democrat Wendy David, sent a letter to the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) giving the agency notice of his intention if the ORR does not unconditionally approve Texas’ state plan by September 30th.

“The federal government’s refugee settlement program is riddled with serious problems that pose a threat to our nation,” Gov. Abbott said in a statement. The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Director of National Intelligence have repeatedly declared their inability to fully screen refugees from terrorist-based nations. Even with the inability to properly vet refugees from Syria and countries known to be supporters or propagators of terrorism, President Obama is now ineptly proposing a dramatic increase in the number of refugees to be resettled in the U.S.”

The announcement comes as President Barack Obama plans to increase the number of refugees accepted into the United States next year to at least 110,000, an increase of some 30% from the number resettled in 2016. Mr. Obama’s plan for the 2017 fiscal year, beginning Oct. 1, would accept 110,000 refugees fleeing persecution and conflict throughout the world — a nearly 60 percent increase over the 2015 fiscal year.

“Despite multiple requests by the State of Texas, the federal government lacks the capability or the will to distinguish the dangerous from the harmless, and Texas will not be an accomplice to such dereliction of duty to the American people,” Gov. Abbott said. “Therefore, Texas will withdraw from the refugee resettlement program. I strongly urge the federal government to completely overhaul a broken and flawed refugee program that increasingly risks American lives.”

Yet, ignoring national security concerns and U.S. public opinion, President Obama still made the case for increasing the flow of predominantly Muslim refugees during his final speech to the United Nations General Assembly. A recent study found the percentage who were Christian Mr. Obama resettled from the region, undoubtedly the most persecuted and displaced subgroup in the refugee population, was less than 1%.

Gov. Abbott’s letter comes after ORR declined to approve Texas’ updated state refugee plan, which would require national security officials to ensure that refugees do not pose a security threat to Texas. Americans by a wide margin support the governor’s decision on a nationwide level.

According to a recent survey, roughly half of American voters don’t want to take in any refugees, at all, let alone 100,000. A Rasmussen Reports survey survey found 49% of likely voters say no to any and all alleged Syrian refugees, while 20% said they would only support taking in 10,000 total. Still, 50% said they were opposed to the idea of allowing 10,000 to come to the U.S. in a poll conducted immediately after the president’s first announcement, and just 36% supported it.

But Mr. Obama was unable to make the case for increased security measures, instead opting to argue the U.S. has a moral duty to put themselves as risk on humanitarian grounds. It’s an argument Gov. Abbott isn’t buying.

“Empathy must be balanced with security. Texas has done more than its fair share in aiding refugees, accepting more refugees than any other state between October 2015 and March 2016,” he added. “While many refugees pose no danger, some pose grave danger, like the Iraqi refugee with ties to ISIS who was arrested earlier this year after he plotted to set off bombs at two malls in Houston.”

The voters’ and governor’s concerns aren’t exactly unwarranted.

At least one terrorist in the Paris terror attacks in November, 2015 entered the European Union through a popular entry point for so-called Syrian refugees, while a teenage Afghan refugee injured multiple people when he went on a slashing spree using an axe and a knife on a train in Germany last July. National security officials have long admitted that the U.S. has no real way to vet the refugee population, which ISIS and other terrorist groups have openly admitted they have infiltrated.

“Despite opposition by the American people, a documented link between terrorism and individuals admitted to the United States as refugees, and over $19 trillion in debt, the Obama Administration has committed the United States to admitting 110,000 refugees during Fiscal Year 2017 — a roughly 57 percent increase in the number of refugees the United States admitted as recently as FY 2015, and a roughly 29 percent increase from the Administration’s target for FY 2016,” Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions, who chairs the Immigration and the National Interest subcommittee, said in a statement.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott announced Wednesday he

Demonstrators protest Tuesday's fatal police shooting of Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte, N.C. on Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2016. Protesters rushed police in riot gear at a downtown Charlotte hotel and officers have fired tear gas to disperse the crowd. At least one person was injured in the confrontation, though it wasn't immediately clear how. Firefighters rushed in to pull the man to a waiting ambulance. (Photo: AP/Associated Press)

Demonstrators protest Tuesday’s fatal police shooting of Keith Lamont Scott in Charlotte, N.C. on Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2016. Protesters rushed police in riot gear at a downtown Charlotte hotel and officers have fired tear gas to disperse the crowd. At least one person was injured in the confrontation, though it wasn’t immediately clear how. Firefighters rushed in to pull the man to a waiting ambulance. (Photo: AP/Associated Press)

North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory declared a state of emergency following rioting in Charlotte resulting from the officer-involved shooting death of Keith Lamont Scott. The Republican governor called in the National Guard at the request of Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Kerr Putney.

“Any violence directed toward our citizens or police officers or destruction of property should not be tolerated,” Gov. McCrory said in a statement. “I support and commend the law enforcement officials for their bravery and courage during this difficult situation.”

Charlotte-Macklenburg police said early Thursday in a statement that at least four officers suffered non-life threatening injuries in the unrest. A civilian protestor also suffered a life-threatening shot to the head early on in the protest, a crime that was perpetrated by another protestor. The victim, who is male, is currently on life support, though police officials initially said he was deceased.

The violence broke after the daughter of the 43-year-old Scott posted a profanity-filled, hourlong video on Facebook claiming her father had some kind of disability and was unarmed. In the footage, she claimed he was only carrying a book and was waiting for his son to get off the school bus. On Wednesday, a man identifying himself as Scott’s brother said to media that “all white people are devils, all white cops are devils.”

Worth noting, the “white people are devils” is a preferred racist and inflammatory statement of the Nation of Islam, the group that turned on and assassinated 1960s civil rights leader Malcolm X. While law enforcement officials have refused to release video of the shooting of Mr. Scott by Officer Brentley Vinson—who is also African-American—the preponderance of evidence backs up the police version of the story.

Police say Mr. Scott ignored repeated law commands to drop his gun, which was corroborated by non-police witnesses. Neighborhood residents say otherwise, but images leaked clearly show a gun on the ground near Mr. Scott’s foot, which the family says was planted.

[brid video=”65217″ player=”2077″ title=”GRAPHIC Protestor in Charlotte North Carolina Shot on Life Support”]

North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory declared a

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