Somewhere in the Hillary Clinton campaign headquarters must be a poster with the slogan, “The beatings will continue until morale improves.”

MookIn a stunning email to supporters Wednesday night titled “No intention of losing,” campaign manager Robby Mook wrote:

Friend —

No mincing words here: We lost New Hampshire.

And while I’m so proud of what this team did, I have to ask: Did we do absolutely everything we could? Did we all step up and chip in what we could when it mattered most?

Bernie Sanders’ team certainly did. The results from last night are proof of that.

I have no intention of losing this nomination, and neither does Hillary. Winning it — and the presidency — is just too damn important.

That’s remarkable rhetoric from the campaign pundits claim has front-runner status, despite the drubbing Tuesday in New Hampshire.

And browbeating supporters is an unusual tactic to take when they’re facing a surging opponent.

It’s not the first email from Mook to raise eyebrows.

In late January, Hillary’s campaign manager predicted if Republican front runner Donald Trump is nominated, he’ll win the presidency.

“If Donald Trump takes the Republican nomination, our party will lose more than the presidency,” Robby Mook wrote to supporters.

“Years of progress will be ripped away. Obamacare will be repealed. Marriage equality will be rolled back. Get excited to visit the wall on the Mexico border — and get ready to pay for it if President Trump can’t magically get Mexico to cough up the cash for it.”

While Mook stoked fear over an apparently inevitable Trump presidency, he’s also panicked over a surging Bernie Sanders.

Late last night, Bernie Sanders’ campaign announced they’d raised $1.4 million from 50,000 donations in a single day. The day before, they announced that the Reddit community had contributed more than $1 million to his campaign.

There’s no denying this: His supporters are stepping up. They see a chance to win in Iowa and they’re willing to go all in for their guy.

“We can’t let Bernie Sanders’ supporters out-match us,” Mook concluded. “It’s not just about the nomination. It’s about what comes next.”

The tone and tenor of the campaign’s emails are truly bizarre for a candidate claiming to want to build on President Obama’s “hope and change.” Has there ever been a campaign successful at inspiring the free help by finger waving and doom and gloom?