Some democrat apologists wish to concentrate on

Russia. How many times big homie visit Wisconsin? Also, Hillary has been hated by WHITE PEOPLE since the fucking 90s. Only demographic in this country that consider the Clintons sacred is the black vote -- except 2008.
This Russia shit has now turned into a blanket that SOME democrats wish to throw over a pile of incompetence that exists with the party. Hillary ran a shit campaign and was second in history only to Trump in being disliked AND black people have every fucking right to call out democrats.
Sadly, we will see democrat shills countering with this

Russia or bot shit leading up to 2020. And they will have the backing of cacs who only have ever given a fuck about party power, not the betterment of the black community.
Some have OBJECTIVELY addressed Russian interference.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-it-made-a-difference/?utm_term=.ef7f1d131d08
But there are reasons to be skeptical of the claim that Russia swung the election for Trump.
First, Russian information warriors produced far less fake news and polarizing rhetoric than did domestic and other international sources. Russia simply added to the already deafening cacophony of inflammatory rhetoric and misinformation.
Second, the hacked emails had little obvious impact. The first batch of Democratic National Committee emails was released in July 2016, amid the two party conventions — after which Clinton’s lead increased. Similarly, after WikiLeaks released John Podesta’s emails in October, Clinton’s
support increased, apparently in response to such other campaign events as the release of the “Access Hollywood” tape.
Trust in Clinton remained more or less the same throughout October — not what we’d expect to see if the emails had made a difference.
Of course, Russia may still have influenced the outcome. As FiveThirtyEight’s Harry Enten
notes, “the drip, drip, drip” of these email releases “makes it all but impossible to measure their effect precisely.” And Trump won by such a thin margin that even a small Russian impact could have tipped the election.
But there is far stronger evidence that other factors were more critical. For instance, public opinion shifted suddenly after Oct. 28, when FBI Director James B. Comey announced that he was reopening an investigation into Clinton’s use of a private email server while serving as secretary of state. And the closeness of the election mostly resulted from polarization between Democrats and Republicans that
long predates Russian President Vladimir Putin or the rise of Trump.
It’s true that Russia has been increasingly trying to meddle in Western elections. But it hasn’t gotten much for its efforts — and these efforts have often backfired. For instance, the U.S. uproar about Russian interference has almost certainly made it less likely that the United States will lift its sanctions. Thus, on balance, Putin’s expansion of Russian interference may not be in Russia’s interests.