I wasn't thinking of him being a hypocrite. I was thinking of how phony this makes the whole Republican thing look. The words people heard from that woman weren't her words. Now we find that the person who wrote the words for her will definitely NOT vote for the Republican candidate and may vote for the person the words were attacking.Ibanez wrote:What's the story here? He's a political speechwriter. He was paid for a job. Him voting for Clinton doesn't make him a hypocrite. I work for Bank of America, am I a hypocrite b/c I don't bank with them?JohnStOnge wrote:Here's another good one:
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinio ... story.html
The Republican guy who wrote the speech for the Benghazi Mom who spoke at the Republican convention pens an op ed saying he can't vote for Trump and may vote for Clinton.
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Contrast that to the Khan guy at the Democrat convention. First of all, those were his words. No one wrote them for him. Secondly, I don't think we have to worry about the person who crafted the words saying at some point that he's not going to vote for Clinton and may vote for Trump. It just comes off as way more genuine.



