Carly Fiorina Delivers Major Foreign Policy Speech – IOTW Report

Carly Fiorina Delivers Major Foreign Policy Speech

Our founders never intended us to have a professional political class. They believed that citizens and leaders needed to step forward…It is time for citizens to stand up to the political class.” —Carly Fiorina

VictoryGirlsBlog- Carly Fiorina is trying her darnedest to launch herself onto Fox’s GOP debate stage next week, which will feature the top ten candidates as determined by current polling, marking the first debate of the much-anticipated election season. And last night, to a sold-out crowd, she gave a major foreign policy speech at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Library in Simi Valley. Give it a read (updated with video at the bottom). I’m betting you won’t hear any of the other candidates offer a more detailed understanding of the world today: more

8 Comments on Carly Fiorina Delivers Major Foreign Policy Speech

  1. I’ll admit it . . . I’m a Carly fanboy.
    She’s saying the right things . . . knows a lot of stuff and can deliver it without a teleprompter.
    I’d love to see her in a free-for-all debate with Hillary.

  2. “Our founders never intended us to have a professional political class. They believed that citizens and leaders needed to step forward…It is time for citizens to stand up to the political class.”

    Let me fix that:

    “Our founders never intended us to have a professional press. They believed that citizens and leaders needed to step forward to report on the politicians…It is time for citizens to stand up to the professional media!”

  3. Fantastic speech. She’d turn Killary into a brussel sprout.

    However she used the words “black eye,” and the term “dark period in our history.” I wonder will the MSM pick that up and run with it. Are they racist buzz words? Just sayin’.

  4. Never in the history of the Nation has nearly every elected individual been a LAWYER, and only one of the sitting Supreme Court Justices been a military VETERAN.

    And both of those realities are consequentially problematic.

    Florin makes (again) a good point.

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