Most young children understand the basic concept of a Venn diagram: a group with one characteristic in circle, a group with another characteristic in the other circle, and a group with both characteristics in the overlapping area of the circles.
Hillary Clinton, however, is not "most young children," and tweeted out this indecipherable mess of a graphic earlier today:
Dear Congress,
— Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) May 20, 2016
Let's get this done.
Thanks,
The vast majority of Americans pic.twitter.com/23ND36tFFm
That...is not how those work.
Predictably, the internet had a ball laughing at this incredibly odd error:
I want a Venn diagram showing the overlap of people who understand Venn diagrams and people who make Venn diagrams. https://t.co/3IGkoyiwMp
— Josh Greenman (@joshgreenman) May 20, 2016
Overlooked concern in @HillaryClinton #venngate: She's now tweeting on behalf of "the vast majority of Americans"?! https://t.co/JvUlGlg86H
— Katherine Mangu-Ward (@kmanguward) May 20, 2016
"Let's do a Venn diagram! It's this nifty thing I saw on Facebook. It just means you write things inside circles." https://t.co/shKLKuTjP9
— Jesse Walker (@notjessewalker) May 20, 2016
This might be the worst attempted Venn diagram in the history of all of the awful attempts at Venn diagrams. https://t.co/s7rM73RhF8
— Chris Geidner (@chrisgeidner) May 20, 2016
That's literally not how you make a venn diagram. great job everyone https://t.co/3S857m2eiI
— Shoshana Weissmann (@senatorshoshana) May 20, 2016
Yes and yes. This is the proper use of a venn diagram. https://t.co/XSaaUIJcNO
— Lindsay Ballant (@lindsayballant) May 20, 2016
when Hilary can't even use a Venn diagram u know she shouldn't be president https://t.co/bxyYw7sypJ
— christmas ham (@crcunningham14) May 20, 2016
Enough said.