A stop by Democrat presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s campaign Sunday at a black church in Cleveland, Ohio, went barely noticed by the liberal media for one pivotal reason: Clinton made no mention of it on her Twitter account because barely anyone showed up for the event.In fact, a picture shared on Twitter by Emily Rutherford, a supporter of GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump who stopped by the church to observe the event for herself, showed under 100 people in attendance.A lot of empty seats were even on stage that day at at Imani Temple Ministry.Take a look at the picture below:But I thought all black people love Hillary Clinton? Not necessarily.Nor should they, according to Crystal Wright, founder of the Conservative Black Chick blog, who in February penned a piece for The U.K. Telegraph explaining why Clinton does not deserve the black vote.“Hillary has been in public office for 32 years and she has yet to demonstrate any marked improved (sic) on key indicators, such as the high crime, incarceration and unemployment rates among black who represent only 13 percent of the U.S. population,” she wrote.Moreover, as a loud proponent of on-demand abortion and free birth control, Clinton champions policies that harm marriage and family stability.“Data shows that children born to unmarried households, like 72 percent of all black babies born in the U.S., have futures of crime and poverty awaiting them, not jobs and prosperity,” Wright added.It therefore stands to reason that a Clinton presidency would spur even more out-of-wedlock births, abortions, poverty, unemployment and crime — all of which, incidentally, have risen under President Barack Obama.Clearly, Clinton winning the November election would not be a positive for the black community, and the fact that barely anyone showed up at Imani Temple Ministry on Sunday hopefully means that more people are starting to realize this. conservativetribune.com/clinton-camp-censors-pics-after/?utm ;amp;utm_medium=NeverHillary&utm_content=2016-08-02&utm_campaign=manualpost