Nothing you quoted goes to how much negative press she brings onto herself.
Had you bothered to actually read the
Harvard study you would have noted the following:
To journalists, the real issues of presidential politics are not the candidates’ policy commitments but instead the controversies that ensnare them. The 2016 campaign fit the pattern to a tee. Everything from Clinton’s emails to Trump’s taxes was grist for the media mill. They accounted for 17 percent of the coverage—one in every six news reports.
...
Controversies are a candidate’s nightmare. Opponents and journalists alike have a stake in keeping a controversy alive, so the candidate’s only hope is that the revelation is small enough or transient enough to die down on its own. When it’s in the news, there’s no upside for the candidate. During the 2016 general election, more than 90 percent of the news coverage of controversies was negative in tone.
...
Clinton’s controversies got more attention than Trump’s (19 percent versus 15 percent) and were more focused. Trump wallowed in a cascade of separate controversies. Clinton’s badgering had a laser-like focus. She was alleged to be scandal-prone. Clinton’s alleged scandals accounted for 16 percent of her coverage—four times the amount of press attention paid to Trump’s treatment of women and sixteen times the amount of news coverage given to Clinton’s most heavily covered policy position.
...
No aspect of Clinton’s coverage, however, was more negative than the controversies that enveloped her campaign. The tone of this coverage was ten times more negative than positive—91 percent to 9 percent. The state of her health was one such controversy. It ran four to one negative over positive. The bulk of the controversies took the form of a “scandal”— emails, Benghazi, ongoing investigations, and the like. News reports on this topic ran 19-to-1 negative over positive. Figure 17 provides an indication of just how fully Clinton’s coverage was fueled by the scandal allegations. There was no week in which the subject accounted for less than 7 percent of her coverage and, in the campaign’s final week, it consumed more than a third of her coverage.
As has literally been chronicled to death and beyond, there never was any issue with her emails; her health; she committed no wrong-doing in Benghazi; and the "ongoing investigations" were also in regard to her emails and some bullshit about their charitable foundation that also was not legitimate. Not to mention the endless horseshit about the audacity of being paid to give speeches when she was no longer in office, thus ironically rendering her independently wealthy and therefore equal to Trump in his claims that he couldn't be "bought" because he was already rich.
Iow, she never did anything to warrant any of the "controversies" that others made up about her, while Trump otoh actually did and yet she was the more vilified. She never said she was against "gay marriage"; she never said black kids were "super predators"; her "basket of deplorables" comment was fully qualified in the very next paragraph of her speech that was never referenced; and, of course, "pizzagate" is just idiotic.
So, no, we cannot just agree to disagree. What was done to her in just the 2016 election--let alone the
decades of identical smear tactics prior--makes this thread look like a five year old's understanding of politics and also betrays the fact that she was so desperately feared by the right and for good reason. She won the election by millions of votes and would have been our first female POTUS had it not been for several variables, the least of which had to do with her personality as is readily proved (once again) by not only the record setting outcome of her raw votes, but also in the follow up
PEW study of validated voters that uncovered a 37% preference for Hillary Clinton among those who were registered to vote, but did not for various non-partisan reasons.
In that same study, Trump garnered 30%, which meant that a full 7% of registered voters who did not end up voting--or approximately 8 million votes--would have washed to Clinton, making her final tally over ten million more votes. A
preferential landslide and more than enough to have wiped the floor with Trump in the electoral.
As Nate Silver noted, the Comey letter
alone accounted for the differential shift in late voters and had the election been conducted just one month earlier, Clinton would have taken the WH as well, so were it not for fake controversies and the supposedly "left biased press" (including the Washington Post, btw, which the Harvard study showed accounted for 77 percent negative to 23 percent positive coverage of her and was only outdone by Fox news with 81 percent negative to 19 percent positive), she would be POTUS.
"Ignored" implies that he had some sort of right to be focused on
When he was the only opponent Hillary had
No one knew who the fuck he was or what he was about and he had to
earn focus, not just magically be granted full and equal time. And he wasn't the "only opponent she had." There were
four others who you don't seem to give a flying fuck about. Former Governor of Maryland Martin O'Malley, former Governor of Rhode Island Lincoln Chafee, former Virginia Senator Jim Webb and Harvard Law Professor Lawrence Lessig.
Where is the fake outrage over their lack of equal coverage that never exists and is not a legitimate argument to make about any nobody stepping into the national spotlight regardless?
The press owes no one automatic and equal attention just because they have decided to run for office. That is a
two year old's understanding of the press, so congratulations. You
Benjamin Buttoned yourself in one post.