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A boy holds a photo of Hillary Clinton during an election-night block party in the Carroll Gardens neighborhood, in the in the Broo [url=https://www.inkwiz.se]ugg[/url] klyn borough of New York City on Nov. 8, 2016Mark Lennihan鈥擜PBy Charlotte AlterNovember 9, 2016 9:15 AM ESTIt turns out the glass ceiling is reinforced with steel beams. The glass [url=https://www.crocss.com.de]crocs[/url] -walled Javits Center in Manhattan, where Hillary Clinton had planned to give a victory speech Tuesday night under a transparent ceiling, turned instead to a scene of despair as Donald Trump wo [url=https://www.salomons.com.es]salomon[/url] n state after state and the crowd slowly realized that that highest, hardest ceiling would not break after all, not this time anyway. Itrsquo impossible to know how much Clintonrsquo gender contributed to her loss. Trumprsquo victory seemed to be fueled by a supersurge of white voters from rural areas, motivated by economic anxiety with strong undertones of racial resentment. Yet the stench of sexism engulfed Clintonrsquo quixotic bid for the presidency, magnifying her flaws and minimizing her considerable strengths. Itrsquo possible that a male candidate with Clintonrsquo political baggage would have been able to transcend his mistakes. Itrsquo possible that a male candidate would not have faced the same scrutiny and suspicion, or have been held to the same impossible standards. Itrsquo possible a male candidate would not have had such trouble connecting with voters. Therersquo simply no way to know, except to look at all the other male politicians with