Washington
DC: As Hillary Clinton made history as the first
woman to accept a major party’s presidential nomination, she told Americans
that their country was “at a moment of reckoning” with “powerful forces ...
threatening to pull us apart”.
Addressing the Democratic National Convention on Thursday night,
Clinton called for unity, saying it is up to Americans “to decide whether we're
going to work together so we can all rise together”.
To much applause, she told supporters of Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders that they shared the same cause. In a speech that resonated with the
audience, the former secretary of state and first lady rebutted many of the
messages delivered by the Republican’s presidential nominee Donald Trump at the
Republican National Convention in Cleveland this time last week.
Having visited more than 100
countries, Clinton presented herself as a more experienced candidate, a bulwark
against Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as ISIS), and as
a leader who will know how to deal with Russia and Iran, and guide a nation
that she knows is frustrated and anxious.
“We are clear-eyed about what our
country is up against. But we are not afraid. We will rise to the challenge,
just as we always have,” she told the convention.
Even though Clinton spoke of threats
at home and abroad, her boarder message was one of hope - a stark contrast to
the dark image painted by Trump in his acceptance speech of an America lacking
“law and order” and marred by “terror”.
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