Donald Trump

Discussion in 'Politics' started by dealmaker, Feb 24, 2016.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Ex-Mexican President Fox: Donald Trump reminds me of Hitler
    http://www.cnn.com/2016/02/26/politics/vicente-fox-donald-trump-hitler/index.html

    Former Mexican President Vicente Fox on Friday kept up his withering criticism of Donald Trump, saying the GOP front-runner reminds him of Adolf Hitler.

    "Today, he's going to take that nation (U.S.) back to the old days of conflict, war and everything. I mean, he reminds me of Hitler. That's the way he started speaking," Fox told CNN's Anderson Cooper in a phone interview on "Anderson Cooper 360."


    (More at above url)

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    Last edited: Feb 26, 2016
    #41     Feb 26, 2016
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    No. Trump exploit his own people.



    The now-defunct Trump University, the subject of one of Marco Rubio’s attacks on Donald J. Trump at the Republican presidential debate Thursday night, was not a real university at all but a series of seminars held in hotels across the country that promised to share Mr. Trump’s real estate investing acumen with students. It is still embroiled in lawsuits accusing it of misrepresentation.

    Those who ultimately purchased premium packages paid as much as $35,000 for the privilege of additional training, called mentorships and apprenticeships.

    “Seventy-six percent of the world’s millionaires made their fortunes in real estate,” Mr. Trump said in an email marketing blast sent to tens of thousands of potential customers. “Now it’s your turn. My father did it, I did it, and now I’m ready to teach you how to do it.”

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    As many as 7,000 people across the country bought the sales pitch, spending an estimated $40 million. Both the State of New York and many of the students are now suing Mr. Trump for misrepresentation. Three cases are pending: one in New York brought by the attorney general and two in California, certified as class actions.

    Defending the venture at the debate, Mr. Trump said, “They actually did a very good job, and I’ve won most of the lawsuits.” The remark came after Mr. Rubio accused Trump University of being a fake school.

    “There are people that borrowed $36,000 to go to Trump University, and they’re suing him now,” Mr. Rubio said. “And you know what they got? They got to take a picture with a cardboard cutout of Donald Trump.”

    In fact, the cases against Mr. Trump have not been resolved. One of those that remains pending was filed in 2013 by the New York State attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman. Itaccuses Trump University of running a “bait and switch” scheme and said widely distributed advertisements for the program were replete with false claims.

    One ad published at least 170 times across the country in 2009, according to Mr. Schneiderman’s office, promised that students would “learn from Donald Trump’s handpicked instructors, and that participants would have access to Trump’s real estate ‘secrets.’ ”

    But an investigation by Mr. Schneiderman’s office found that Mr. Trump had little to do with picking instructors at the seminars or developing the curriculums for the seminars, which were run largely by people with motivational speaking backgrounds who were compensated based on how many people they persuaded to buy additional seminars. One of them was a manager at Buffalo Wild Wings.

    The inquiry also found that the curriculums were developed largely by a private company that makes materials for seminar companies and motivational speakers, including companies that sell time shares.

    Trump University was founded in 2004, beginning as an online operation, after a Rye, N.Y., businessman, Michael Sexton, approached Mr. Trump with the idea. After an initial investment by Mr. Trump of about $2 million, the business was based in the Trump Building, at 40 Wall Street in Manhattan. According to the attorney general’s office, the day-to-day operations were directly managed by the Trump Organization and its affiliates.

    As early as 2005, the New York State Department of Education warned Trump University that it was operating an unlicensed educational institution in violation of state law, according to the inquiry. In 2010, after several years of back-and-forth with the department, Trump University’s name was changed to the Trump Entrepreneur Initiative.

    The marketing plan remained the same, however, beginning with a pitch to attend what was called a free 90-minute seminar to learn how to make money in real estate. In reality, the 90-minute seminar was a sales pitch to attend a three-day seminar costing $1,495, the investigation found.

    The instructors tried to persuade students to purchase the three-day seminar with unrealistic predictions of their success, the attorney general says. In some seminars, students were told that if they signed up for the three-day seminar, they could earn six-figure incomes within a year working five to seven hours a week. The speaker repeatedly implied that Mr. Trump would show up for the three-day seminar, saying he “often drops by” and “might show up” and “you never know when he might show up.”

    At the three-day program, students were told they could go to the next level by signing up for the Elite mentorship and apprenticeship programs for additional costs of up to $35,000.

    One woman from Schoharie, N.Y., who was caring for a son with Down syndrome said she had attended the three-day program at a hotel in Malta, N.Y. The woman, Kathleen Meese, said she had been pulled aside and told she would make money faster if she signed up for the Gold Elite program, a mentorship, for $25,000.

    When Ms. Meese said she had a credit card with a $30,000 limit but could not spend it on the program, she recounted, she was told by a Trump University trainer that “I had to find the resources to invest in my future.” She was promised that she would make the money back within 60 days, she said.

    But the mentorship involved visiting a few rental properties.

    “I was unable to get my refund and am still paying off debts from my Trump tuition,” Ms. Meese wrote in an affidavit in the attorney general’s suit.

    During the three-day seminar, she said, participants were told they would have their photos taken with Mr. Trump.

    “It ended up being a cardboard cutout of Mr. Trump,” she wrote.
     
    #42     Feb 26, 2016
  3. Snarkhund

    Snarkhund

    Honey I don't care if he lynched a negro every morning in the lobby of Trump Tower before breakfast.

    The man is likely going to be you're next President and he seems to have an eidetic memory about being attacked. The notion of democrats and republicans is going to take a break for 8 years starting next January.

    Think Ronald Reagan. Think Andrew Jackson. Combine the two, add $10B and hang on to your knickers.

    It is the revenge of the working man and its going to look like a tsunami.
     
    Last edited: Feb 27, 2016
    #43     Feb 27, 2016
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    What?
     
    #44     Feb 27, 2016
  5. Last edited: Feb 27, 2016
    #45     Feb 27, 2016
  6. In your wet dreams. If he gets nominated, which certainly looks possible, his real CV will emerge in such detail and clarity that it will likely even give the Trump zombies pause. And a Trump nomination virtually guarantees the Republicans the Outhouse.
     
    Last edited: Feb 27, 2016
    #46     Feb 27, 2016
  7. Perhaps one of the states, preferably that has the highest support in primary, would provide him a 6 months acting governorship to see what would happen for and to the people/supporters in that state! :)
     
    #47     Feb 27, 2016
  8. You mean something like, say, an apprenticeship? Yes, that would be interesting. Evidently, Kansas would be a good candidate for some self-sabotage. They've already elected Brownback, who strip mined the state's treasury, and their Republicans showed favor for guys like Santorum and Huckabee in the past. And at the moment Trump is leading in the Republican polls by double digits in Kansas.

    Indeed, an idea whose time has come.
     
    Last edited: Feb 27, 2016
    #48     Feb 27, 2016
  9. Is it possible (or too much) that a candidate for presidency should require at least one year of public CEO experience, a state or large city?
     
    #49     Feb 27, 2016
  10. In Iowa, students chant 'Trump! Trump!' after basketball loss to more racially diverse high school

    The last name of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump apparently has been turned into a racial insult for some people.

    High school students in Des Moines, Iowa, this week chanted "Trump! Trump!" after a boys' basketball game. The chanters were from Dallas Center-Grimes High, which has a largely white population. Their school's team had just lost to Perry High School, which has a more diverse student population.

    Trump has made derogatory comments about illegal immigrants and has pledged to build a wall along the entire U.S.-Mexico border if he is elected.

    Perry student Kevin Lopez noted in a letter to the Perry Chief newspaper that the billionaire's name has been chanted at the team three other times this season.

    “It is a chant said to intimidate and discriminate our Latino/Hispanic students and it is a chant that is fueled by racism,” Lopez wrote.
     
    Last edited: Feb 27, 2016
    #50     Feb 27, 2016