No it is not. It is business as usual for all NY real estate developers. That is exactly how you remain competitive. It is not pretty but it works. Yet he built the best properties everywhere because he discovered the magic of selling the best better than anyone else.
He also attempted many other businesses. It turns out he does not have the passion to be a really good start up artist and that he can also be sold a bill of goods. There he cut his losses and folded up shop. This always leaves customers and partners in the lurch but at least he tried. His passion is real estate even when it stops working as in Atlantic city and he is forced out. Most of the time though he wins and he wins often enough to support willing banks as well.
You do not turn over the greatest enterprise on Earth to an individual who has never been well tested in business or other types of human conflict. In Trump we have the most tested candidate since Eisenhower..
Trump’s history of corruption is mind-boggling. So why is Clinton supposedly the corrupt one?
By Paul Waldman September 5
By Paul Waldman September 5
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2016/09/05/trumps-history-of-corruption-is-mind-boggling-so-why-is-clinton-supposedly-the-corrupt-one/
What Donald Trump is doing on the campaign trail
The GOP presidential nominee is out on the trail ahead of the general election in November.
In the heat of a presidential campaign, you’d think that a story about one party’s nominee giving a large contribution to a state attorney general who promptly shut down an inquiry into that nominee’s scam “university” would be enormous news. But we continue to hear almost nothing about what happened between Donald Trump and Florida attorney general Pam Bondi.
I raised this issue last week, but it’s worth an update as well as some contextualization. The story re-emerged last week when The Post’s David A. Fahrenthold reported that Trump paid a penalty to the IRS after his foundation made an illegal contribution to Bondi’s PAC. While the Trump organization characterizes that as a bureaucratic oversight, the basic facts are that Bondi’s office had received multiple complaints from Floridians who said they were cheated by Trump University; while they were looking into it and considering whether to join a lawsuit over Trump University filed by the attorney general of New York State, Bondi called Trump and asked him for a $25,000 donation; shortly after getting the check, Bondi’s office dropped the inquiry.
The GOP presidential nominee is out on the trail ahead of the general election in November.
In the heat of a presidential campaign, you’d think that a story about one party’s nominee giving a large contribution to a state attorney general who promptly shut down an inquiry into that nominee’s scam “university” would be enormous news. But we continue to hear almost nothing about what happened between Donald Trump and Florida attorney general Pam Bondi.
I raised this issue last week, but it’s worth an update as well as some contextualization. The story re-emerged last week when The Post’s David A. Fahrenthold reported that Trump paid a penalty to the IRS after his foundation made an illegal contribution to Bondi’s PAC. While the Trump organization characterizes that as a bureaucratic oversight, the basic facts are that Bondi’s office had received multiple complaints from Floridians who said they were cheated by Trump University; while they were looking into it and considering whether to join a lawsuit over Trump University filed by the attorney general of New York State, Bondi called Trump and asked him for a $25,000 donation; shortly after getting the check, Bondi’s office dropped the inquiry.
At this point we
should note that everything here may be completely innocent. Perhaps
Bondi didn’t realize her office was looking into Trump University.
Perhaps the fact that Trump’s foundation made the contribution (which,
to repeat, is illegal) was just a mix-up. Perhaps when Trump reimbursed
the foundation from his personal account, he didn’t realize that’s not
how the law works (the foundation would have to get its money back from
Bondi’s PAC; he could then make a personal donation if he wanted).
Perhaps Bondi’s decision not to pursue the case against Trump was
perfectly reasonable.
But here’s the thing: We don’t know the answers to those questions, because almost nobody seems to be pursuing them.
For
instance, there was only one mention of this story on any of the five
Sunday shows, when John Dickerson asked Chris Christie about it on “Face the Nation“
(Christie took great umbrage: “I can’t believe, John, that anyone would
insult Pam Bondi that way”). And the comparison with stories about
Hillary Clinton’s emails or the Clinton Foundation is extremely
instructive. Whenever we get some new development in any of those
Clinton stories, you see blanket coverage — every cable network, every
network news program, every newspaper investigates it at length. And
even when the new information serves to exonerate
Clinton rather than implicate her in wrongdoing, the coverage still
emphasizes that the whole thing just “raises questions” about her
integrity.
The
big difference is that there are an enormous number of reporters who
get assigned to write stories about those issues regarding Clinton. The
story of something like the Clinton Foundation gets stretched out over
months and months with repeated tellings, always with the insistence
that questions are being raised and the implication that shady things
are going on, even if there isn’t any evidence at a particular moment to
support that idea.
When
it comes to Trump, on the other hand, we’ve seen a very different
pattern. Here’s what happens: A story about some kind of corrupt dealing
emerges, usually from the dogged efforts of one or a few journalists;
it gets discussed for a couple of days; and then it disappears. Someone
might mention it now and again, but the news organizations don’t assign a
squad of reporters to look into every aspect of it, so no new facts are
brought to light and no new stories get written.
The
end result of this process is that because of all that repeated
examination of Clinton’s affairs, people become convinced that she must
be corrupt to the core. It’s not that there isn’t plenty of negative
coverage of Trump, because of course there is, but it’s focused mostly
on the crazy things he says on any given day.
But
the truth is that you’d have to work incredibly hard to find a
politician who has the kind of history of corruption, double-dealing,
and fraud that Donald Trump has. The number of stories which could
potentially deserve hundreds and hundreds of articles is absolutely
staggering. Here’s a partial list:
- Trump’s casino bankruptcies, which left investors holding the bag while he skedaddled with their money
- Trump’s habit of refusing to pay contractors who had done work for him, many of whom are struggling small businesses
- Trump University, which includes not only the people who got scammed and the Florida investigation, but also a similar story from Texas where the investigation into Trump U was quashed.
- The Trump Institute, another get-rich-quick scheme in which Trump allowed a couple of grifters to use his name to bilk people out of their money
- The Trump Network, a multi-level marketing venture (a.k.a. pyramid scheme) that involved customers mailing in a urine sample which would be analyzed to produce for them a specially formulated package of multivitamins
- Trump Model Management, which reportedly had foreign models lie to customs officials and work in the U.S. illegally, and kept them in squalid conditions while they earned almost nothing for the work they did
- Trump’s employment of foreign guest workers at his resorts, which involves a claim that he can’t find Americans to do the work
- Trump’s use of hundreds of undocumented workers from Poland in the 1980s, who were paid a pittance for their illegal work
- Trump’s history of being charged with housing discrimination
- Trump’s connections to mafia figures involved in New York construction
- The time Trump paid the Federal Trade Commission $750,000 over charges that he violated anti-trust laws when trying to take over a rival casino company
- The fact that Trump is now being advised by Roger Ailes, who was forced out as Fox News chief when dozens of women came forward
to charge him with sexual harassment. According to the allegations,
Ailes’s behavior was positively monstrous; as just one indicator, his
abusive and predatory actions toward women were so well-known and so
loathsome that in 1968 the morally upstanding folks in the Nixon
administration refused to allow him to work there despite his key role
in getting Nixon elected.
And that last one is happening right now. To repeat, the point is not that these stories have never
been covered, because they have. The point is that they get covered
briefly, then everyone in the media moves on. If any of these kinds of
stories involved Clinton, news organizations would rush to assign
multiple reporters to them, those reporters would start asking
questions, and we’d learn more about all of them.
That’s
important, because we may have reached a point where the frames around
the candidates are locked in: Trump is supposedly the crazy/bigoted one,
and Clinton is supposedly the corrupt one. Once we decide that those
are the appropriate lenses through which the two candidates are to be
viewed, it shapes the decisions the media make every day about which
stories are important to pursue.
And
it means that to a great extent, for all the controversy he has caused
and all the unflattering stories in the press about him, Trump is still
being let off the hook.
2 comments:
Regardless of which candidate is best (or should I say worse), the claim that Trump gets a pass by the media whereas Hillary is constantly the subject of a critical media defies reality. Hillary is the clear choice of the establishment elite: she alone receives massive campaign contributions from the big corporate world, from wall street bankers, the military industrial complex - that is, from those who own the major media. I can look at the New York Times, the Washington Post, any of the major TV networks and see non-stop hit pieces against Trump and very little on Clinton. These people, who so ardently prefer Hillary, are not going to let their wholly owned media thwart her campaign. Nor is there any question but that major media figures are almost uniformly left-wing democrats. The point is, between the two, it is Trump who is victimized by a biased media.
If what this blurb say is true, then wouldn't Hillary's campaign be all over it? This world is sick and morally vile but still we expect the person who runs for president to be squeaky clean.
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