Bill Maher makes Trump assassination joke: ‘Why do you think they let Hinckley out?’

Bill

Malarkeyville

During his set at DAR Constitution Hall, Politico reported, the Real Time host said, “I’m nervous. And I saw the headline today — race tightening. Trump ahead in Ohio and Florida. If this race is even the week before the election, somebody is going to have to go out there…”

He paused for effect, then said, “Why do you think they let Hinckley out?”


John Hinckley, Jr. shot and wounded Pres. Ronald Regan in 1981. Last week, he was released from St. Elizabeth psychiatric hospital where he was sentenced after being found not guilty by reason of insanity.

Maher’s remarks will no doubt outrage Trump followers who are still resentful that the media seized upon the GOP candidate’s reference to “Second Amendment people” resolving the issue of a Pres. Hillary Clinton and her judicial nominees.

It should be noted, however, that Bill Maher isn’t running for president, whereas — in spite of how it may look sometimes — Donald Trump is.

Listen to audio from the show, embedded below:
 
That's nothing. Libtards made a feature length movie about Bush being assassinated. First liberalism, then fascism.
 
It was a joke. I got it lol.

If Maher said they let him out to get Hillary, or heaven forbid Obama, it wouldn't be a joke.
 
That's nothing. Libtards made a feature length movie about Bush being assassinated. First liberalism, then fascism.

You ever get ANYTHING correct??
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_a_President_(2006_film)

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Clueless Teabaggers.....​
 
Director's notes[edit]
The film's director, Gabriel Range, noted that the film is not "a leftist jeremiad"[5] and further said:

The purpose of the film was not to imagine how the world stage would reset with the assassination of George Bush. The intent of the film is really to use the assassination of President Bush as a dramatic device—using the future as an allegory to comment on the past. [....] If people go to the cinema expecting to have some great moment of catharsis watching the president being shot, I suspect they’re in for a pretty big surprise. I think that anyone who’s expecting this to be a liberal wet dream is in for quite a shock ... It was very important that the film was not a political rant. It was not just a condemnation or polemic because I think that polemics are easy to dismiss.[5]
 
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