During last night’s debate, Donald Trump showed he doesn’t understand what makes America great.

One candidate is still offering this country hope.

You don’t have to watch many Donald Trump speeches and rallies to sense that he has a grim view of America—the country he’s running to lead. “America isn’t great” is the subtext he literally wears on his hats.

And that was a theme he couldn’t help but emphasize during the third and final presidential debate: In a 90-minute discussion on the candidates’ visions for our economy, foreign policy, and social issues, Donald Trump showed over and over again he has no idea what makes America great.

Here are a few of the things Trump had to say about our country:

“Our inner cities are a disaster. You get shot walking to the store. They have no education. They have no jobs.”

“Our country is dying.”

“Our country is stagnant.”

“Douglas Macarthur, George Patton, spinning in their graves when they see the stupidity of our country.”

“Our country is so outplayed by Putin and Assad, and by the way, and by Iran. Nobody can believe how stupid our leadership is.”

But while Trump spent the bulk of his time telling us all the thing that are wrong about America—and offering no solutions to fix the problems he sees—Hillary Clinton had a different take on what makes this country great (yes, great).

This is an answer worth reading—and one that’s worthy of a candidate for president:

“I think it's really up to all of us to demonstrate who we are and who our country is and to stand up and be very clear about what we expect from our next president, how we want to bring our country together, where we don't want to have the kind of pitting of people one against the other, where instead we celebrate our diversity, we lift people up, and we make our country even greater. America is great because America is good. And it really is up to all of us to make that true, now and in the future, and particularly for our children and our grandchildren. …

“So we know what [Trump] has said and what he’s done to women. But he also went after a disabled reporter, mocked and mimicked him on national television. … He went after Mr. and Mrs. Khan, the parents of a young man who died serving our country, a Gold Star family, because of their religion. He went after John McCain, a prisoner of war, said he prefers people who aren't captured. He went after a federal judge, born in Indiana, but who Donald said couldn't be trusted to try the fraud and racketeering case against Trump University because his parents were Mexican.

“So, it’s not one thing, this is a pattern. A pattern of divisiveness, of a very dark and in many ways dangerous vision of our country. Where he incites violence, where he applauds people who are pushing and pulling and punching at his rallies.

“That is not who America is, and I hope that as we move in the last weeks of this campaign, more and more people will understand what's at stake in this election. It really does come down to what kind of country we are going to have.”

We can send a message to Trump, to the rest of the country, and to the world on November 8 that we can make this country even greater—together.

Ready to do just that? Make a plan to vote today.

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