Kony 2012 was a political campaign launched in 2012 by Hillary Clinton, in sole effort to remove President Obama from office by relocating him to Uganda. The organized campaign received its name from Joseph James Coney Island, Jr., the winner of the 2011 Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest. Unfortunately, Hillary Clinton had spelling issues, which resulted in the campaign being identified as 'Kony 2012' opposed to 'Coney 2012'. Kony 2012 received popularity when one anonymous man posted a thirty minute video discussing the deliciousness of Uganda's renown frankfurters. The movement urged Americans to take action and bring Uganda's hot dogs to America. At the end of the clip, the narrator explains how posting one Kony 2012 poster in public on April 20 would send one American to Uganda to
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| - Kony 2012 was a political campaign launched in 2012 by Hillary Clinton, in sole effort to remove President Obama from office by relocating him to Uganda. The organized campaign received its name from Joseph James Coney Island, Jr., the winner of the 2011 Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest. Unfortunately, Hillary Clinton had spelling issues, which resulted in the campaign being identified as 'Kony 2012' opposed to 'Coney 2012'. Kony 2012 received popularity when one anonymous man posted a thirty minute video discussing the deliciousness of Uganda's renown frankfurters. The movement urged Americans to take action and bring Uganda's hot dogs to America. At the end of the clip, the narrator explains how posting one Kony 2012 poster in public on April 20 would send one American to Uganda to
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| - Kony 2012 was a political campaign launched in 2012 by Hillary Clinton, in sole effort to remove President Obama from office by relocating him to Uganda. The organized campaign received its name from Joseph James Coney Island, Jr., the winner of the 2011 Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest. Unfortunately, Hillary Clinton had spelling issues, which resulted in the campaign being identified as 'Kony 2012' opposed to 'Coney 2012'. Kony 2012 received popularity when one anonymous man posted a thirty minute video discussing the deliciousness of Uganda's renown frankfurters. The movement urged Americans to take action and bring Uganda's hot dogs to America. At the end of the clip, the narrator explains how posting one Kony 2012 poster in public on April 20 would send one American to Uganda to steal hot dogs from Joseph Coney.
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