Donald Trump for President

thismybgolname

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OG Investor
Re: Donald Trump's marathon of meanness reaches new low, mocks reporter's physical ha

It is amazing what they let this man get away with.

He is entertaining as fuck though.

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Donald Trump acted confused in video deposition when asked about former senior advisor, a convicted felon with Mafia ties

They don't call him “The Don” for nothing.

A newly-revealed video deposition shows real-estate mogul Donald Trump confused when asked under oath about his relationship to a twice-convicted felon with ties to the Mafia.

Trump has long faced allegations of connections to the mob, but his relationship with Felix Sater — who pleaded guilty in 1998 to racketeering in a fraud scheme involving the Genovese and Bonanno crime families — represents a more direct link between the presidential candidate and organized crime.

“If he were sitting in the room right now, I really wouldn't know what he looked like,” Trump testified in the video deposition,which was obtained by ABC News.

DONALD TRUMP'S BAN ON MUSLIMS ECHOES EARLIEST DAYS OF NAZI PROPAGANDA: EXPERT

But Trump reportedly named Sater as a senior business adviser in 2010. The Russian émigré carried a Trump Organization business card with the title “Senior Advisor to Donald Trump” and appeared in numerous photos with Trump.
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Donald Trump's former senior advisor was a convicted felon with ties to the Mafia.
Trump and Sater were seen together attending a Denver business conference in 2005 and at a 2007 launch party for the Trump SoHo Hotel and Condominium project,according to ABC News.

Sater was not immediately available for comment Thursday.

Trump had worked with Sater previously during the man's stint as an executive at Bayrock Group LLC, a real estate development firm that partnered with Trump on numerous projects after renting office space from the Trump Organization. But Sater's past was not widely known at the time because he was working as a government cooperator on mob cases and the judge overseeing Sater's own case kept the proceedings secret. After Sater's criminal history and past ties to organized crime came to light in 2007, Trump distanced himself from Sater.

Less than three years later, Trump tapped Sater for a business development role that came with the title of senior adviser to Donald Trump.

KING:DONALD TRUMP HAS GONE FULL BLOWN NAZI ON US

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FELIX SATER/VIA YOUTUBE
Felix Sater previously worked as a senior advisor to Donald Trump.
According to Trump lawyer Alan Garten, Sater's role was to prospect for high-end real estate deals for the Trump Organization. The arrangement lasted six months, Garten told the Associated Press.

The revelation about Sater's role is significant because of its timing and directness, and marks the first time the Trump Organization has acknowledged publicly that Sater worked for Trump after the disclosures of Sater's criminal background. Trump has said that among his secrets of success is that he surrounds himself with the “best and most serious people” and with “people you can trust.”

Sater never had an employment agreement or formal contract with the Trump Organization and did not close any deals for Trump, Garten said.

“He was trying to restart his life,” Garten told the Associated Press. “I believe he was regretful of things that happened in the past.”

KING:WIN OR LOSE, TRUMP HAS ALREADY AWAKENED THE WHITE SUPREMACIST BEAST IN AMERICA

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VIA LINKEDIN
A screengrab of Felix Sater's work history on his LinkedIn page shows his former position as senior advisor to Donald Trump.
Sater's LinkedIn profile shows him working as a senior advisor for Trump from January 2010 until 2011.

Trump did not know the details of Sater's cooperation with the government when Sater came in-house in 2010, Garten said. But Garten noted that U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch praised Sater's cooperation with the federal government, when senators asked about him during her confirmation hearings early this year. She said Sater cooperated against his Mafia stock fraud co-defendants and assisted the government on unspecified national security matters.

“If Mr. Sater was good enough for the government to work with, I see no reason why he wasn't good enough for Mr. Trump,” Garten said.

Sater pleaded guilty in 1998 to one count of racketeering for his role in a $40 million stock fraud scheme involving the Genovese and Bonanno crime families, according to court records. Prosecutors called the operation a pump-and-dump scheme, in which insiders manipulate the price of obscure stocks and then sell them to hapless investors at inflated prices. Five years earlier, a New York State court had sentenced Sater to more than a year in prison for stabbing a man in the face with a broken margarita glass.

With News Wire Services
 

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A Trump-driven conspiracy to elect Clinton?


Washington (CNN)In the 1990s, Hillary Clinton claimed there a "vast right-wing conspiracy" against herself and her husband.

Now, some say Clinton might be benefiting herself from a conspiracy that would get her elected president -- this time driven by Donald Trump.

The Republican presidential front-runner has a long history of positive comments about Democrats -- he was one himself earlier in his life, he's said -- and Clinton specifically.

He's donated to Democrats. The Clintons attended Trump's wedding. Their daughters -- Chelsea Clinton and Ivanka Trump -- are friends.

"I just like her," Trump said before. "I like her and I like her husband."

Some GOP presidential candidates are now calling Trump -- who's created a firestorm by proposing to ban Muslims from entering the United States -- a gift to Clinton.

Republican rival Carly Fiorina tweeted: "Donald Trump is Hillary Clinton's Christmas gift wrapped up under a tree."


Trump revived talk Tuesday of an independent run when he highlighted on Twitter a USA Today/Suffolk University poll that shows 68% of his supporters would back him, rather than the GOP nominee. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush responded by saying Trump would only be helping Clinton by splitting the conservative vote.

Bush tweeted: "Maybe Donald negotiated a deal with his buddy @HillaryClinton. Continuing this path will put her in the White House."
 

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Woah! Funny how they all say "Obama's a liar" but they can't tell you any details as to why. Best part: SHE'S LYING HERSELF! She says she's "never been involved in politics" yet she was elected in 2010 as a Republican to the New Hampshire House of Representatives. Shameless!:roflmao3:
 

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Russian President Vladimir Putin Praises Donald Trump as 'Talented' and 'Very Colorful'
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Getty


Russian President Vladimir Putin offered praise for GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump today, telling ABC News, "He's a very colorful person. Talented, without any doubt,” and that he believed Trump was “absolutely the leader in the American presidential race.”

Speaking after his annual marathon news conference, Putin said it wasn’t Russia’s place to determine Trump’s “worthiness” for the presidency, but said he believed Trump wants to “move to a more solid, deeper level of relations” between Russia and the United States.

“How can Russia not welcome that? We welcome that,” Putin told ABC News.

Despite the apparent character recommendation, Putin did, however, seem to question Trump’s populist methods and often inflammatory statements.

“As for his internal political issues and his turns of speech which he uses to raise his popularity, I repeat, it’s not our job to judge them," Putin said.



Bernie Sanders on What If He Doesn't Win the Election




Hillary Clinton Records Video Message for Trump Supporter




Trump Hints He May Ditch His Jet for Air Force One If Elected


Even so, Putin’s words were swiftly taken up as an endorsement for a Trump presidency from the inscrutable Russian leader, known for his remorseless foreign policy and his ability to manipulate the Russian public.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest, asked by a reporter later whether he thought Putin’s comments qualified as an endorsement, cut short the question to say, “It sounds pretty close.”

Earnest added: “It’ll be up to Mr. Trump to decide whether to accept it.”

Trump himself has repeatedly said he thinks he would get on well with Putin, in part because of what he says is a shared dislike of President Obama.

Putin spoke to ABC News after his traditional end-of-year news conference today, where he took questions from among hundreds of journalists for hours on issues ranging from his favorite historical figure to his plans for Syria.

Nearly 1,400 journalists packed into a Moscow auditorium to try and put a question to Putin, with many holding banners to attract the Russian leader’s attention, some with words like “Pensioners” or “I’m pregnant” written on them. The event lasted over three hours -- the record is close to five -- and is an occasion for Putin to express himself on Russia’s major foreign policy and domestic issues.

Putin spoke about the many foreign crises in which Russia is entangled, commenting on Syria and Ukraine, as well as again lashing Turkey over its shooting down of a Russian bomber last month.



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Sasha Mordovets/Getty Images
PHOTO:Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his annual press conference on December 17, 2015 in Moscow.


On Syria, Putin said Russian military operations will continue until a political process begins, and echoed comments made by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry earlier this week, that Russia and the United States are moving “in the same direction” over the conflict.

“Strange as it may seem,” Putin said, the Russian and U.S. positions on Syria coincide on many basic points.

Putin often uses the occasion to speak colorfully and, on Turkey, he suggested that the Turkish government had shot down the Russian jet perhaps in order to please the United States, in his words, to “lick the U.S. in a certain place.”

He added he didn’t know whether the United States wanted to be licked or not, to loud laughter in the hall.

Despite his praise for Trump, Putin said Russia was neutral on the U.S. presidential race, saying “whoever the American people choose, we are ready to work with,” adding a sly jab, “we won’t interfere, like they do with us.”

One of the more striking comments came when Putin was asked about the corruption scandal involving FIFA and its former chief Sepp Blatter. Putin said Blatter, who stepped down amid allegations of massive financial misconduct under his administration, deserved a Nobel Peace Prize for his “colossal” humanitarian contribution.

Most questions tend to be on expected themes, for which Putin heavily prepares. And many answers are long monologues, with Putin often speaking in detail on specific projects, such as road taxes or Russia’s agricultural sector.

Putin was challenged over corruption among the children of high level officials, presented with specific cases by one journalist, but he swiftly stepped around them, moving on to a lengthy discourse about meeting the concerns of a recent trucker protest.

Another question, about the identity and profession of Putin’s two daughters, was also dodged. Putin, who has fiercely guarded his children from the public eye, said only that the two lived in Russia, and were able to use several languages in their work.

As the hours wore on, the journalists pressed harder to be chosen. When the conference approached its third hour, people, waving their placards, began to jump up and down, shouting their theme to Putin, who finally abruptly closed the discussion.

As he pressed his way out of the room, one journalist from the scrum, using Putin's middle name, could be heard to yell:

“Vladimir Vladimirovich, you can’t just leave us like this!”
 

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Trump Loves Putin, Black Pastors Love Trump

Published on Dec 18, 2015
Donald Trump embraces Russian President Vladimir Putin. Putin makes Trump compliments. Trump sends his love to Russia. A creepy string of Black Pastors from predominantly Black Churches recently showed love for Trump. Tim Black gives you the update on all this Trump "Man-Love".
 

thoughtone

Rising Star
Registered
source: Quartz


Woody Guthrie really did not like Donald Trump’s racist dad

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In December 1950, Woody Guthrie signed his name to the lease of a new apartment in Brooklyn. Even now, over half a century later, that uninspiring document prompts a double-take.

Below all the legal jargon is the signature of the man who had composed “This Land Is Your Land,” the most resounding appeal to an equal share for all in America. Below that is the signature of Donald Trump’s father, Fred. No pairing could appear more unlikely.

Guthrie’s two-year tenancy in one of Fred Trump’s buildings and his relationship with the real estate mogul of New York’s outer boroughs produced some of Guthrie’s most bitter writings, which I discovered on a recent trip to the Woody Guthrie Archives in Tulsa. These writings have never before been published; they should be, for they clearly pit America’s national balladeer against the racist foundations of the Trump real estate empire.

Recalling these foundations becomes all the more relevant in the wake of the racially charged proclamations of Donald Trump, who last year announced, “My legacy has its roots in my father’s legacy.”

A champion for equality

By the time he moved into his new apartment, Guthrie had traveled a long road from the casual racism of his Oklahoma youth.

He’d learned along the way that the North held no special claim to racial enlightenment. He had written songs such as “The Ferguson Brothers Killing,” which condemned the out-of-hand police killing of the unarmed Charles and Alfonso Ferguson in Freeport, Long Island, in 1946, after the two young black men had been refused service in a bus terminal cafe.

In “Buoy Bells from Trenton,” he denounced the miscarriage of justice in the case of the so-called “Trenton Six” – black men convicted of murder in 1948 by an all-white jury in a trial marred by official perjury and manufactured evidence.

And in 1949, he’d stood shoulder to shoulder with Paul Robeson, Howard Fast and Pete Seeger against the mobs of Peekskill, New York, where American racism at its ugliest had inspired 21 songs from his pen (one of which, “My Thirty Thousand,” was recorded by Billy Bragg and Wilco).

A postwar housing haven – for whites

In the postwar years, with the return of hundreds of thousands of servicemen to New York, affordable public housing had become an urgent priority.

For the most part, low-cost housing projects had been left to cash-strapped state and city authorities. But when the Federal Housing Authority (FHA) finally stepped in to issue federal loans and subsidies for urban apartment blocks, one of the first developers in line, with his eye on the main chance, was Fred Trump. He made a fortune not only through the construction of public housing projects but also through collecting the rents on them.

When Guthrie first signed his lease, it’s unlikely that he was aware of the murky background to the construction of his new home, the massive public complex that Trump had dubbed “Beach Haven.”

Trump would be investigated by a U.S. Senate committee in 1954 for profiteering off of public contracts, not least by overestimating his Beach Haven building charges to the tune of US$3.7 million.

What Guthrie discovered all too late was Trump’s enthusiastic embrace of the FHA’s guidelines for avoiding “inharmonious uses of housing” – or as Trump biographer Gwenda Blair puts it, “a code phrase for selling homes in white areas to blacks.” As Blair points out, such “restrictive covenants” were common among FHA projects – a betrayal, if ever there was one, of the New Deal vision that had given birth to the agency.

‘Old Man Trump’s’ color line

Only a year into his Beach Haven residency, Guthrie – himself a veteran – was already lamenting the bigotry that pervaded his new, lily-white neighborhood, which he’d taken to calling “Bitch Havens.”

In his notebooks, he conjured up a scenario of smashing the color line to transform the Trump complex into a diverse cornucopia, with “a face of every bright color laffing and joshing in these old darkly weeperish empty shadowed windows.” He imagined himself calling out in Whitman-esque free verse to the “negro girl yonder that walks along against this headwind / holding onto her purse and her fur coat”:

I welcome you here to live. I welcome
you and your man both here to Beach Haven to love in any
ways you please and to have some kind of a decent place to
get pregnant in and to have your kids raised up in. I'm
yelling out my own welcome to you.

For Guthrie, Fred Trump came to personify all the viciousness of the racist codes that continued to put decent housing – both public and private – out of reach for so many of his fellow citizens:

I suppose
Old Man Trump knows
Just how much
Racial Hate
he stirred up
In the bloodpot of human hearts
When he drawed
That color line
Here at his
Eighteen hundred family project ....

And as if to leave no doubt over Trump’s personal culpability in perpetuating black Americans’ status as internal refugees – strangers in their own strange land – Guthrie reworked his signature Dust Bowl ballad “I Ain’t Got No Home” into a blistering broadside against his landlord:

Beach Haven ain't my home!
I just cain't pay this rent!
My money's down the drain!
And my soul is badly bent!
Beach Haven looks like heaven
Where no black ones come to roam!
No, no, no! Old Man Trump!
Old Beach Haven ain't my home!

In 1979, 12 years after Guthrie had succumbed to the death sentence of Huntington’s Disease, Village Voice reporter Wayne Barrett published a two-part exposé about Fred and Donald Trump’s real estate empire.

Barrett devoted substantial attention to the cases brought against the Trumps in 1973 and 1978 by the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Justice Department. A major charge was that “racially discriminatory conduct by Trump agents” had “created a substantial impediment to the full enjoyment of equal opportunity.” The most damning evidence had come from Trump’s own employees. As Barrett summarizes:

According to court records, four superintendents or rental agents confirmed that applications sent to the central [Trump] office for acceptance or rejection were coded by race. Three doormen were told to discourage blacks who came seeking apartments when the manager was out, either by claiming no vacancies or hiking up the rents. A super said he was instructed to send black applicants to the central office but to accept white applications on site. Another rental agent said that Fred Trump had instructed him not to rent to blacks. Further, the agent said Trump wanted “to decrease the number of black tenants” already in the development “by encouraging them to locate housing elsewhere.”

Guthrie had written that white supremacists like the Trumps were “way ahead of God” because

God dont
know much
about any color lines.

Guthrie hardly meant this as a compliment. But the Trumps – father and son alike – might well have been arrogant enough to see it as one. After all, if you find yourself “way ahead of God” in any kind of a race, then what else must God be except, well, “a loser”? And we know what Donald Trump thinks about losers.

One thing is certain: Woody Guthrie had no time for “Old Man Trump.”

We can only imagine what he would think of his heir.

“Racial Hate at Beach Haven,” “Beach Haven Race Hate,” “Beach Haven Ain’t My Home” and Guthrie’s untitled notebook writings: all words by Woody Guthrie, © copyright Woody Guthrie Publications, Inc., all rights reserved, used by permission.
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Published on Jan 23, 2016
When Saturday Night Live began the Ronda Rousey-hosted episode on January 23, it was a pretty good bet that they'd start with a political cold open. That's basically what they do every week. And, in an election year, there's plenty to write sketches about. What wasn't totally unexpected, though, was how the cold open didn't feature anybody in the current cast of the show. Darrell Hammond reprise his Trump impression, which was surprising considering Taran Killam had done it a few times, and he is a current cast member. But an even better surprise was that Tina Fey showed up on SNL to reprise her Sarah Palin impression.

Of course, the opening was there to make fun of Palin's recent endorsement of Trump. Fey showed up in sparkly attire, and, though she was ostensibly there to speak about Trump, the jokes were mostly about how Palin isn't really doing anything right now. She started by saying she needed to "take a break from my full-time career of writing stuff on Facebook." Ouch. The rest of the sketch mostly had Palin spouting nonsense, sometimes even in rhyme, that basically had no bearing on anything. But it was still a pleasure to listen to, because Fey still has that Wasilla accent down.


Pinky and the brain!!! Trump and Palin. Republicans are desperate.Michael Bloomberg is back in training. Rudolph Guliani has to much baggage.The public is feeling the ," Make America GreatAgain", theme!!!! In God we Trust.I!! I'm glad Caitlyn Jenner, wasn't called as a candidate for the Presidency!!!
 
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QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
I'm becoming convinced, more and more everyday, that it is people like Sarah Palin and Donald Trump that are making this country, so ungreat. And, the number of their followers tells me just how ungreat Americans have become.
 

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USA: 'Heil Trumpler!' Protesters attack Trump, one with TOMATOES, in Iowa

Angry protesters heckled the speech of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump during a campaign rally at the University of Iowa in Iowa City on Wednesday, with at least two tomatoes being thrown at Trump. At least three protesters expressed their opposition to Trump and his policies, all of whom were removed from the event by security officials.

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EXCLUSIVE: Queens veterans ask Donald Trump for donation, receive bumper sticker one year later
BYLISA L. COLANGELO
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Saturday, January 30, 2016, 4:00 AM

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DAVID WEXLER/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Rodney Moore (l.) and Larry Robertson hold up Trump bumper stickers which they received in the mail at their headquarters.
They asked Donald Trump for a donation to help homeless veterans — but all they got was a lousy bumper sticker.

Members of one Queens veterans organization said they reached out to the borough’s native son last year before he made a bid for the White House.

But they didn’t receive a response until last week when Veterans-in-Command got a letter from Trump’s campaign.

DONALD TRUMP-LESS FOX DEBATE SECOND LOWEST-WATCHED OF SEASON — BUT STILL GOT MORE VIEWERS THAN BILLIONAIRE'S RALLY

“Unfortunately we are unable to make donations from the campaign,” read the handwritten note signed “Team Trump.”

“Mr. Trump is very passionate about giving veterans the best life possible!” added the note, which arrived with Trump campaign bumper stickers.

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JOHN MINCHILLO/AP
Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop in Nashua, N.H., on Friday.
Since then, the group has been receiving emails from the campaign looking for support.

Veterans-in-Command President Larry Robertson said he found the response frustrating and puzzling.

“We never wrote to his campaign,” said the 67-year-old Robertson. “Now they want us to get out there and campaign and be on his team? Without the veterans, he wouldn’t be where he is today.”

And the news Friday that Trump had donated $6 million to veterans groups, including $1 million of his own money, left the group — which struggles to run three facilities in Jamaica — disheartened.

The nonprofit was hoping to catch the attention of Trump, who grew up in nearby Jamaica Estates.


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DAVID WEXLER/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
“Mr. Trump is very passionate about giving veterans the best life possible!” added the note, which arrived with Trump campaign bumper stickers.
“It just doesn’t make any sense. He’s campaigning for donations for veterans,” said Rodney Moore, a retired U.S. Coast Guard petty officer who works with the nonprofit. “We were a little deflated.”

Trump raised the funds Thursday night, along with another $640,000 online as of Friday, at an Iowa event he decided to hold after announcing he was boycotting Fox News’ GOP debate.

The website donaldtrumpforvets.com claims that “100% of your donations will go directly to veterans needs.”

Trump has vowed to give the money raised to 22 veterans groups, his campaign said in an online posting.

Veterans-in-Command was not on that list.
 

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Donald Trump lauds historic myth about shooting Muslims with pig's blood-dipped bullets in South Carolina speech
BYDENIS SLATTERY
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Updated: Saturday, February 20, 2016, 3:07 AM


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Donald Trump's tough talk on terrorism took a bizarre and bloodthirsty turn Friday as he gleefully retold a stomach-turning tall tale about Muslim extremists being killed with bullets that had been dipped in pig’s blood.

His supporters rabidly cheered him on as the GOP presidential front-runner turned myth into his own reality, telling them at a rally in North Charleston, S.C., about U.S. Gen. John Pershing supposedly executing dozens of Muslims held prisoner in the Philippines.

POPE FRANCIS: 'NOT CHRISTIAN' COMMENT NOT ATTACK ON TRUMP

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JIM WATSON/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
Donald Trump's foreign policy suggests may include dipping bullets in pig's blood and bringing back waterboarding, a banned interrogation tactic.
“He took 50 bullets and he dipped them in pig’s blood,” Trump said. “And he had his men load his rifles and he lined up the 50 people, and they shot 49 of those people. And the 50th person, he said, ‘You go back to your people and you tell them what happened.’ And for 25 years there wasn’t a problem.”

The yarn that Trump rehashed on the eve of the South Carolina primary stems from a hoax spread via email, according to rumor tracker Snopes.com.





VIEW GALLERYNew York Daily News front pages on the presidential election

JOSEPH TECCE: TRUMP'S BODY LANGUAGE IS A GIVEAWAY

There’s no evidence it occurred. But the blowhard billionaire seemed to find fresh inspiration in the story.

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KEYSTONE/GETTY IMAGES
There's no evidence that the tall tale Donald Trump told — that General John Pershing brought about peace in the Philippines by executing dozens of prisoners — actually happened.
“We better start getting tough, and we better start getting vigilant, and we better start using our heads or we’re not gonna have a country, folks,” Trump said to enthusiastic cheers.

Trump also hinted that waterboarding, a banned interrogation tactic he has pledged to bring back against suspected terrorists, would be the least of his enemies’ worries.

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MATT ROURKE/AP
Donald Trump has a double-digit lead in South Carolina, according to some polls.
HATERS IN CHIEF: FIND YOUR CANDIDATE BY WHAT THEY HATE

“Is it torture or not? It’s so borderline,” he said. “It’s like minimal, minimal, minimal torture.”

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MATT ROURKE/AP
Donald Trump has made posturing on military issues and racist rants against Muslims keystones of his campaign.
The over-the-top former reality TV star, who famously dodged the Vietnam War with student deferments and a bum foot, has made posturing on military issues and racist rants against Muslims, terrorists or not, keystones of his campaign.

HATE GROUPS INCREASED IN 2015, REPORT SAYS BLAME TRUMP

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JONATHAN ERNST/REUTERS
Donald Trump — who dodged the Vietnam War with student deferments and a bum foot — has never actually fought in battle.
Trump went on to boast how fears of terrorism have boosted him politically, including in the Palmetto State, where he leads most polls by double-digit margins, according to MSNBC.

“When Paris happened, everyone started saying, ‘We want Trump!’” he said. “The polls came in, 60 percent, 70 percent, 72 percent. This is 72 percent with 17 people running. Now we’re down to 6, we got rid of all these people. It’s so great. It’s so great.”
 

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Leaked Tape Catches Trump Begging Mika: Don’t Ask Me “Anything Too Hard” (AUDIO)
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By Colin Taylor
Posted on February 22, 2016
Email
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Newly leaked audio confirms common accusations that the mainstream media is deliberately pandering to and colluding with Donald Trump in their incessant quest for ratings. While it’s been obvious for quite a while now that conservative blowhard Joe Scarborough and his compliant partner, Mika Brzezinski are very fond of Trump and constantly have him on their show to answer softball questions, these new revelations show Trump asking them specifically to “take it easy on him” before last week’s “town hall,” where he was faced with questions about his poll numbers and “why he wants to be President,” instead of any questions about his absurd policy proposals or inability to give substantial details about any of his ideas.

“Do you not want me to do, the um, the ones with, um, deportation?” asks Mika, “We really do have to go to some questions,” adds Joe. “That’s right. Nothing too hard, Mika” responded Trump – to which Mika agrees. No questions about his proposed mass deportations were asked. The audio also reveals this telling exchange:

TRUMP: “I watched your show this morning. You have me almost as a legendary figure, I like that. You, you get great ratings and a raise. Me, I get nothing. This will make us all look good.”

SCARBOROUGH: “Exactly.”

It is absolutely shameful how the mainstream media has abandoned any pretense at journalism in their rush to cover the carnival of Trump. He’s been given so much free airtime that he doesn’t need to purchase any airtime, giving him a powerful advantage against his equally reprehensible rivals. In case you needed any proof, here’s a very telling tweet from Nick Confessore, a New York Times political reporter:

 

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Ezra Klein
February 20 at 8:20pm ·

Donald Trump's run for president has been so wild, so strange, so entertaining, that we've stopped noticing — or maybe just grown tired of pointing out — what a dangerous force he is in American politics. And for awhile, that seemed fine — everyone knew Trump couldn't win, he didn't have a chance, this was all just a big joke.

But it isn't a joke. He won huge in New Hampshire. He won huge in South Carolina. This is the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination. And he's a dangerous personality perched atop an ugly ideology. It's time to stop laughing.
 

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U.S.
Gerald Herbert / AP
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Small businesses for Trump: ‘Just get somebody different in there’
Company owners and executives top donors to Republican billionaire
February 25, 2016 3:00AM ET

by John Dunbar @johndunbar14 & Cady Zuvich @cadyzuvich
Some of the most generous donors to Donald Trump’s campaign thus far — other than the candidate himself — are people with job titles a lot like his. They just don’t make quite as much money.

Excluding retirees, the most identifiable contributions to the billionaire businessman have come from owners, presidents and CEOs, in that order, according to a Center for Public Integrity review of Federal Election Commission data through January.

But they’re hardly corporate titans. They’re owners and operators of mostly small to mid-sized businesses. And while the companies themselves vary, the proprietors share a common trait.

They are fed up with politicians.

“Just get somebody in there who’s different,” said Anthony Forlini, whose Ocean Park, New Jersey, firm disposes of contaminated dirt. “I don’t even care anymore.”

Forlini, who donated $207 to Trump's campaign last year, speaks for many.

Hugh Joyce of Richmond, Virginia, owns James River Heating Air Conditioning Co. and gave Trump’s campaign $2,700, the legal maximum.

“I don’t agree with everything [Trump] does, but what I do like about him, he’s not being bought by anybody else,” Joyce said. “When I see establishment people petrified, I’m interested.”

Plenty of establishment people are petrified — particularly Republican establishment people. And despite constant predictions of a flame-out, prompted by a steady stream of outrageous comments from the candidate, Trump is winning. On Saturday, for example, he obliterated his South Carolina primary competition, capturing every one of the state’s 50 delegates.

And at the Nevada caucuses on Tuesday night, he repeated his success, capturing 46 percent of the vote on his way to victory.

The Center for Public Integrity identified about 500 business owners and/or operators who gave an average of around $660 apiece to Trump. The businesses ranged from heating and air conditioning contracting companies to exterminators to restaurants. There were auto dealerships, real estate offices, retail outlets and small manufacturers.

The Center for Public Integrity then contacted a cross-section of them to learn why they pulled out their checkbooks and sent their hard-earned cash to the billionaire/reality television star.

The message was clear. They are ready for an alternative to any establishment conservative, regardless of how bombastic he is. And many of the candidate’s talking points on immigration, taxes, jobs, education and the economy seem to resonate — even if the backers aren’t clear on the details.

“I like that he’s not on the inside. Washington’s broken. If we send another insider there, we are going to get the same garbage,” said Burl Hiles, owner of Burl’s Termite and Pest Control in Estill Springs, Tennessee, who gave Trump $2,700.

Most campaigns rely on funds from contributors.

But through January, about 70 percent of the $26 million Trump’s campaign has raised comes from Trump himself, almost all of it loans. Another 22 percent comes from small-dollar donors, who have given $200 or less.

But a relatively small portion, roughly $1.9 million, has come from donors who have given more than $200 and are thus required to be named in FEC reports. Of that amount, at least $336,000 has come from business owners and top executives.

Lower taxes for all
One position Trump has taken that pretty much every business owner can get behind is the slashing of the corporate income tax rate from a high of 35 percent to 15 percent.

“No business of any size, from a Fortune 500 to a mom and pop shop to a freelancer living job to job, will pay more than 15 percent of their business income in taxes,” reads Trump’s policy paper on the issue.

Heather Nally, owner of the Micro Diner in Pittsburgh, could use a break on taxes. She’s been running her 29-seat restaurant for almost four years and pays her employees better than the $7.25 minimum wage.

“If I didn’t pay so much money on taxes I might be able to give these people more money,” Nally said.

She contributed $230 to Trump in January.

Trump’s reasoning for the tax cut, in part, is aimed at larger businesses. He wants to prevent corporate “inversions.” That’s the practice of companies reincorporating overseas to take advantage of lower tax rates. This would, in theory anyway, help manufacturing by keeping companies and jobs in this country.

Trump would also lower the personal income tax rate for everyone, but especially the wealthy, according to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, which analyzed his plan. The largest benefits, according to the study, “would go to the highest-income households.” It would provide an average $1.3 million tax cut for the top 0.1 percent of earners, the study found.

It’s safe to say Trump would fall into that category.

As for the impact of his policy on the debt, well, that’s a bit troublesome, according to the Tax Policy Center. It would cost the government $9.5 trillion over 10 years and could cause the national debt to soar, according to the analysis.

Experience wanted
Trump’s business experience inspires a lot of his small business supporters, particularly around job creation.

Trump, in a video on his website, says with characteristic understatement, “I will be the greatest jobs-producing president that God ever created.”

Says Joyce, the donor from Richmond: “The most important thing we can create for America is jobs. I have a great amount of interest and respect to anyone that can grow a business with that many people — a wild amount of respect.”

Joyce says the regulatory environment in the country is “so unbearable — so impossible. We are having so few new businesses start because of the environment. Are we working through it? Yes. Is our business viable? Yes. But it’s terrible when you look at the dollars lost. It’s terrible and nobody cares.”

Forlini, the donor from New Jersey, agrees Trump is best suited to bring in jobs.

“He’s at least the best suited to get that under control just because he’s a businessman,” Forlini said. “Just because he understands whatever comes in he had to work to get that. If we get another liberal in there, I’m out of here.”

Forlini is a Democrat, and he believes “you’re going to see a lot of Democrats moving over to Trump.”

At least one poll says he may be on to something.

Civis Analytics, a data analytics consulting company, interviewed more than 11,000 Republican-leaning individuals and came to the conclusion that Trump’s best voters are “self-identified Republicans who nonetheless are registered as Democrats.”

Education and Obamacare
Trump donor Richard Edwards, of Stevens, Pennsylvania, is president of Edwards Electric & Telecom. He’s frustrated with the nation’s lousy educational system and sees it in his job candidates.

“As a business owner, I get to see the young men who apply to work here and I see the junk in the market,” he said. “Schools are horrible.”

Trump — whom Edwards supported with a $2,700 contribution — has been a bit vague on his education plan, but did release a video blasting one initiative that’s taken a lot of flak from conservatives.

“I’m a tremendous believer in education, but education has to be at a local level. We cannot have the bureaucrats in Washington telling you how to manage your child’s education,” Trump said. “So Common Core is a total disaster. We can’t let it continue.”

The Common Core State Standards Initiative’s goal is to lay out what students, from kindergarten through high school, should be proficient in when it comes to math and English as they complete each grade.

Edwards is also especially upset with Obamacare — a common refrain among Trump donors contacted by the Center for Public Integrity.

“I watched Obama take small business owners and use them to fund all of his garbage,” he said. “Obamacare has taken a great health system and turned it into garbage. My insurance rates have tripled.”

Fairness or xenophobia?
Among Trump’s more radical ideas is the desire to deport the roughly 11 million people who have entered the United States illegally. He also wants to build a wall along the Southern border of the nation and make Mexico pay for it.

Even his staunchest supporters are a little skeptical of the wall idea.

“He’s a little far stretched on that and he couldn’t do it anyways,” said Nally of the Micro Diner. “I don’t think he means that either. I think it’s the way he talks.”

However, she supports legal immigration and a more limited deportation plan. “Look, if they committed crimes or never paid any taxes, send them back,” she said of immigrants living in the United States illegally.

“What’s wrong with doing it the right way?” she asked. “Illegal immigration wasn’t how we built this country, legal immigration was. That’s how distorted reality’s become — is it fair to the ones that are doing it the right way?”

Many of Trump’s supporters weren’t terribly concerned with the details of his proposals. They just want change and they want it now — especially folks in the three top donor states for business owners and top executives: Texas ($41,800), Florida ($37,785) and California ($30,200).

Wendell Reeder, owner of Clarksville Oil & Gas in Clarksville, Texas, and nearby ranches is one of those people.

“He tells it like it his,” Reeder said of Trump, to whom he gave $1,000 last year. “He’s telling the truth — from illegal aliens to taxes. Everything he talks about; it's really the way it is. I hope that we can get someone up there would do what’s best for America and not just what is politically correct.”

Ben Wieder and Michael Beckel contributed to this report.

This story is from the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit, nonpartisan investigative media organization in Washington, D.C. Read more of its investigations on the influence of money in politics or follow it on Twitter.
 
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