The hits keep coming after a day in which social media teed off twice against one unseemly Hillary Clinton event that shows Clinton, who once was one of the most powerful women in the world, struggling to maintain relevance.
“Hillary Clinton’s invitation to join her new presentation on “MasterClass,” a video streaming platform, on the ‘skills’ she developed throughout her career, was met with sarcasm and mockery on Wednesday,” said Fox News.
But not just because of the “MasterClass”.
Clinton read part of her never-before delivered 2016 “victory” speech on the NBC’s Today Show as a preview of the new course that she’s selling online, which she said will teach anyone “the skills I’ve developed throughout my career—the challenges, the triumphs and all the rest,” according to her post on Twitter.
“I had the misfortune of watching all of [the speech],” Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett told Sean Hannity. “It was pathetic and embarrassing. And actually nauseating. I kept thinking – ‘what kind of a person does this?’”
I’m excited to invite you to join my new @Masterclass.
I’ll be teaching the skills I developed throughout my career—the challenges, the triumphs, and all the rest.
I hope these lessons will help you chart your own path with passion and purpose. https://t.co/1hCU0gbu6b pic.twitter.com/1Mo1jxwwxC
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) December 8, 2021
The ultra-liberal New York Magazine for one wasted no time in teasing “Hillary Clinton Announces MasterClass in Losing to Donald Trump.”
But that was nothing compared to the brutality of Twitter.
“The responses overwhelmingly dripped with sarcasm,” said Fox. “Several asked Clinton whether her class would include tips on how to wipe clean an email server, referencing her 2016 scandal that often overshadowed her campaign, while others asked if the clip was satire.”
Tweeted Caleb Hull: “lesson #1: how to delete emails.”
Wrote Alex Joffe on Twitter: “Are you teaching mishandling of classified documents or how to make a killing in cattle futures?” referencing the scandal where the Clintons made outsized gains in the notoriously complex cattle futures market, despite not having experience.
Still others made references to the Benghazi scandal and some others implied she was a war criminal.
A decided group of women, however, also took time to encourage the former first lady and secretary of state.
“I love you so much. I am still heartbroken,” said NYAnna22.