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So this has come up before here, usually when one of the Trump guys is trying to claim that Trump is a billionaire and a successful businessman, and a master negotiator - all the usual insane nonsense.

But anyway, for those not in the know, Trump was always dumb as a box of rocks, and in the 80's, liked to pretend that he was some high-tier shrewd businessman instead of a trust fund chump drowning in debt that he'd accumulated blowing through a loan from his father. So he would call all sorts of business and finance journalists, and pretend to be "John Barron", someone in the Trump organization, and try and lie to them and claim that Trump was worth a ton of money, instead of drowning in failed business ventures. He even bribed journalists, as well.

This was a well-known practice among New York media. He used to always call Liz Smith at the Post as Barron and lie about various celebrities Trump had slept with.

Anyway, the tapes have finally been released. It's amazing how truly dumb and empty and petty this guy truly is. Truly incredible.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/t...m=.947214092179

Posing as ‘John Barron,’ he claimed he owned most of his father’s real estate empire.

By Jonathan Greenberg April 20 at 5:30 AM
Jonathan Greenberg is an investigative journalist, author and new-media innovator.

(Doug Chayka/For The Washington Post)
In May 1984, an official from the Trump Organization called to tell me how rich Donald J. Trump was. I was reporting for the Forbes 400, the magazine’s annual ranking of America’s richest people, for the third year. In the previous edition, we’d valued Trump’s holdings at $200 million, only one-fifth of what he claimed to own in our interviews. This time, his aide urged me on the phone, I needed to understand just how loaded Trump really was.

The official was John Barron — a name we now know as an alter ego of Trump himself. When I recently rediscovered and listened, for first time since that year, to the tapes I made of this and other phone calls, I was amazed that I didn’t see through the ruse: Although Trump altered some cadences and affected a slightly stronger New York accent, it was clearly him. “Barron” told me that Trump had taken possession of the business he ran with his father, Fred. “Most of the assets have been consolidated to Mr. Trump,” he said. “You have down Fred Trump [as half owner] . . . but I think you can really use Donald Trump now.” Trump, through this sockpuppet, was telling me he owned “in excess of 90 percent” of his family’s business. With all the home runs Trump was hitting in real estate, Barron told me, he should be called a billionaire.

At the time, I suspected that some of this was untrue. I ran Trump’s assertions to the ground, and for many years I was proud of the fact that Forbes had called him on his distortions and based his net worth on what I thought was solid research.

But it took decades to unwind the elaborate farce Trump had enacted to project an image as one of the richest people in America. Nearly every assertion supporting that claim was untrue. Trump wasn’t just poorer than he said he was. Over time, I have learned that he should not have been on the first three Forbes 400 lists at all. In our first-ever list, in 1982, we included him at $100 million, but Trump was actually worth roughly $5 million — a paltry sum by the standards of his super-monied peers — as a spate of government reports and books showed only much later.

1:55
Audio from May 17, 1984, phone conversation
Phone conversation between Jonathan Greenberg and John Barron (Donald Trump) on May 17, 1984. (Jonathan Greenberg)

The White House declined to comment for this story. The Trump Organization did not respond to a request for comment.

I was a determined 25-year-old reporter, and I thought that, by reeling Trump back from some of his more outrageous claims, I’d done a public service and exposed the truth. But his confident deceptions were so big that they had an unexpected effect: Instead of believing that they were outright fabrications, my Forbes colleagues and I saw them simply as vain embellishments on the truth. We were so wrong.


This was a model Trump would use for the rest of his career, telling a lie so cosmic that people believed that some kernel of it had to be real. The tactic landed him a place he hadn’t earned on the Forbes list — and led to future accolades, press coverage and deals. It eventually paved a path toward the presidency.

*** *** *** ***

Malcolm Forbes came up with the idea of the Forbes 400 in 1981 and assigned me to spend a year traveling around the country and interviewing wealthy people and those who worked with them about one another. The most challenging sector was private real estate wealth. My grandfather had been an accountant to a number of major New York developers, so I had the advantage of knowing many of the players there. But the reporting was opaque, because so few of the relevant financial documents were public; we relied disproportionately on what people told us. As the project progressed, other experienced reporters and editors joined what would become the most successful annual special issue in Forbes history.

From the beginning, Trump was obsessed. The project could offer a clear, supposedly authoritative declaration of his status as a player, and while many of the super-rich wanted to keep their names off the ranking, Trump was desperate to scale it.


[I sold Trump $100,000 worth of pianos. Then he stiffed me.]

When I first contacted him for the inaugural issue, Trump pulled out all the stops to convince me that he was the wealthiest real estate developer in New York. At an afternoon-long meeting in his cavernous Fifth Avenue office, he argued that his family was worth more than $900 million and deserved to be higher on our list than any of the far more accomplished developers (with names like Rose and Rudin) who had spent generations building top-tier housing in the golden borough of Manhattan. His father, Fred Trump, was well known for building nearly all the apartments that the Trump Organization owned before Donald even joined the company, so it amazed me when Donald claimed that he, and not his father, possessed 80 percent of the 23,000 apartments he said they had in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten Island. He added that these were almost debt free and worth $40,000 each.

I questioned his valuation. Trump shrugged and said, “Okay, then $20,000 each.” That would mean his family was worth some $500 million, still atop our list for New York real estate tycoons.


But that figure seemed high. I estimated the apartments to be worth about $9,000 each: They could not easily be converted to lucrative co-ops, and Trump had falsely described the location of the Queens buildings. He’d claimed they were in Forest Hills when, in fact, they were in the far less valuable Jamaica Estates neighborhood a few miles away. Since Donald’s new projects were still in development or unproven, the outer-borough apartments formed the basis of a Trump family net worth estimate of $200 million.

Six weeks after my initial interview, I received a call at my desk from Trump’s secretary and gatekeeper, Norma Foerderer . She said she wanted my work address so Trump could send me an invitation to a company party. Then she abruptly added: “Oh, Donald was just passing by! He said that he wanted to have a few words with you.”

0:56
Audio from July 15, 1982, phone conversation
Phone conversation between Jonathan Greenberg and Donald Trump on July 15, 1982. (Jonathan Greenberg)

I switched on my audio recorder — my normal practice — as Trump expressed his concern for what he called “your little article.” He invited me for a follow-up interview with him because, he said, he was richer than the rest. “I don’t think that you have your facts 100 percent correct” about his standing vis-a-vis other New York developers. I was contemplating a too-low appraisal of his net worth, he said: “You had us down in a certain category, and then you mentioned other names, and there’s no contest, you know. I mean, there’s no contest. So I just wanted to mention that.”

Trump knew I had doubts about his assertions, so he had his lawyer, Roy Cohn, call me. Cohn spent most of his time threatening lawsuits, schmoozing with mobster clients and badgering reporters with off-the-record utterances that made his clients look good and their enemies look bad. Cohn surprised me at my Forbes desk that summer: “Jon Greenberg,” a scrappy voice bellowed, before I could connect my tape recorder. I took notes by hand. “This is Roy. Roy Cohn! You can’t quote me! But Donny tells me you’re putting together this list of rich people. He says you’ve got him down for just $200 million! That’s way too low, way too low! Listen, I’m Donny’s personal lawyer, but he said I could talk to you about this. I am sitting here looking at his current bank statement. It shows he’s got more than $500 million in liquid assets, just cash. That’s just Donald, nothing to do with Fred, and it’s just cash.” He concluded: “He’s worth more than any of those other guys in this town!”

I offered to have a messenger pick up the bank statement at his office. Cohn protested that the document was confidential. “Just trust me,” he said. I told him I wouldn’t take his word without seeing the paperwork. “It’s confidential!” Cohn yelled.

[I study liars. I’ve never seen one like President Trump.]

My Forbes editors and I spent many hours deliberating about where to place Trump. Based on what little we knew — his claims; a 1976 New York Times profile that said the Trump Organization owned 22,000 apartments; and Fred’s reputation for housing a generation of working-class New Yorkers in Brooklyn and Queens — we ranked Donald and Fred in the bottom tier among major real-estate developers, each with half of a $200 million apartment empire.

Even though I learned later that this was far more money than Donald possessed, it did not satisfy him for the following year’s edition. During his 1983 interview, Trump claimed that there were actually 25,000 apartments and that his net worth had ballooned because of the success of his new projects, Trump Tower and the Grand Hyatt Hotel on East 42nd Street, as well as a pending casino deal in Atlantic City.

Then Cohn called again, this time to say Trump was worth more than $700 million. I recorded our chat. He opened with an outrageous claim that Trump had personally received $250 million from the recent sale of a 50 percent interest in his new project to build a Harrah’s casino in Atlantic City. “A certain amount was cleared, say, around a hundred million,” Cohn said. “. . . But the balance was used by him to liquidate certain other things, which made his overall position very impregnable. Trump Tower has been going like a house afire, and the profits on that are much higher than had been anticipated, and the same is true with Grand Hyatt. On top of which he’s been in a series of private transactions, and he files with banks for between $700 to $750 million, as well as with Equitable” — Equitable Life Assurance, the company that financed Trump Tower — “which backs him in all of his deals.”

1:07
Audio from June 21, 1983, phone conversation
Phone conversation between Jonathan Greenberg and Donald Trump's lawyer, Roy Cohn on June 21, 1983. (Jonathan Greenberg)

Again, Cohn refused to show me a statement, but armed with misinformation about Trump’s casino payout and claims about cash flow at other properties, I inflated his (and his father’s) net worth to $200 million each. In retrospect, Fred Trump was probably worth half that amount, and Donald, once again, should not have been on the list at all.

The next year I received two calls from “John Barron,” the fictitious Trump executive who told me that Donald had taken “in excess of 90 percent” ownership from Fred. He also suggested that Trump was on track to earn a $50 million profit every year from his first Atlantic City casino. And so, in 1984, we increased Donald’s net worth estimate to $400 million and left Fred in, for his last year on the Forbes 400, at $200 million. (Barron also bad-mouthed the competition, saying that developer George Klein had struck a “bad deal” to redevelop Times Square — a bid Trump had lost — and was “going to go down the tubes.”)

[Trump is calling Comey a liar because to Trump, all criticism is a lie.]

Although Trump, posing as Barron, asked Forbes to conduct the conversation off the record, I am publishing it here. I believe an intent to deceive — both with the made-up persona and the content of the call — released me from my good-faith pledge. In a 1990 court case, Trump testified that he had used false names in phone calls to reporters. In 2016, when The Washington Post published a similar recording, Trump denied it was him.

Fred Trump turned down my attempts to interview him for the Forbes 400. He allowed Donald to say whatever he wanted about the family’s business. In the only major interview he gave after Donald seized the limelight, Fred told the New York Times in 1983 that “Donald has a competitive spirit and I don’t want to compete with him. . . . He amazes me. He’s gone way beyond me, absolutely.”

*** *** *** ***

Eventually, nearly every one of Trump’s pronouncements about his wealth unraveled.

The number of apartments was the first problem. The commonly cited figure — that his family owned 25,000 units — began with the mention of 22,000 apartments in that fawning 1976 New York Times profile. In 1988, after I left Forbes, I counted the units and found fewer than 8,000. (I was working briefly on a documentary about Trump that was never completed.) Another Forbes reporter that year, John Anderson, found the same thing. He called the Trump residential management organization, he told me then, and asked an executive named Harry Green how many apartments the company owned. “About 10,000,” Green told him, meaning that our 1982 family valuation of $200 million should have been just $90 million (below the cutoff at that time for inclusion on the list). A few minutes later, Green called Anderson back and corrected himself: Now there were 25,000 again.

Another brazen claim was that Trump, not his father, owned the company’s outer-borough apartments, which his father built beginning in the 1930s. Based on what Trump said during our 1982 and 1983 interviews, I’d assumed that Donald and Fred each owned half, resisting the son’s insistence that he had purchased 80 percent of the units or consolidated the holdings himself. Still, this comment went into the Forbes 400 records, and in 1985, after I left the project, Trump was estimated to be worth $600 million, and his father was off the list.

[Can a president who disregards the truth uphold his oath of office?]

It would be decades before I learned that Forbes had been conned: In the early 1980s, Trump had zero equity in his father’s company. According to Fred’s will (portions of which appeared in a lawsuit), the father retained legal ownership of his residential empire until his death in 1999, at which point he left it to be divided between his four surviving children and some of his grandchildren. That explains why, after Trump’s companies went bankrupt in the early 1990s, he borrowed $30 million from his siblings, secured by an estimated $35 million share of his future inheritance, according to three sources in Tim O’Brien’s 2005 biography, “TrumpNation.” He could have used his own assets as collateral if he’d had any worth that amount, but he didn’t.

The most revelatory document describing Trump’s true net worth in the early ’80s was a 1981 report from the New Jersey Casino Control Commission. O’Brien obtained a copy for his book. Trump had applied for an Atlantic City casino license, and regulators were able to review his tax returns and personal and corporate debt, giving them the most accurate picture of his finances. They found that he had an income of about $100,000 a year, while his 1979 tax returns showed a $3.4 million taxable loss. Trump’s personal assets consisted of a $1 million trust fund that Fred Trump provided to each of his children and grandchildren, a few checking accounts with about $400,000 in them and a 1977 Mercedes 450SL. Nowhere did the report list an ownership stake in the Trump Organization’s residential apartments. Trump also possessed a few parcels of valuable but highly leveraged real estate, financed with $22.5 million in debt, all of it secured by his father’s assets. He did not own a safe deposit box or stocks in publicly traded companies. In sum, Trump was worth less than $5 million, not the $100 million that I reported in the first Forbes 400.

During our first interview in 1982, Trump informed me that he had bought the Barbizon Plaza Hotel and the adjoining 110 Central Park West for just $13 million, a steal. While I was in Trump’s office, a broker supposedly called to offer him $100 million for the property. Trump refused the offer while looking me in the eye; he pointed out that his net worth should include an equity boost of $87 million profit. I believed then that he used a staffer to stage the call, and I resisted the fictitious valuation. But the $13 million price tag for a valuable parcel was recorded in Forbes 400 files, and it soon showed up in other publications, such as New York magazine . It remains on Wikipedia today. Yet tucked away on Page 63 of the Casino Commission report was a section describing Trump’s purchase of the property for $65 million, facilitated by a $50 million loan to Trump by Chase Manhattan Bank. As with many of his buildings, Trump’s debt was far higher, and his true equity far lower, than he claimed.

Roy Cohn had told me that Trump received $250 million from Holiday Inn for its half-interest in the Atlantic City casino. But according to O’Brien, Trump’s actual income from the deal was a construction and management fee (not profit) of about $24 million, while Holiday Inn financed the construction of the $220 million casino.

[How do you write political satire when politics are a farce?]

Later attempts by Trump to paint himself as fantastically wealthy were also duplicitous. In 1989, Trump sent Forbes journalist Harry Seneker a statement of his $3.7 billion net worth. I have obtained the letter. It indicated $900 million in liquid assets. “I am more liquid than any major developer in the United States,” Trump wrote, inducing the magazine to increase Trump’s listing from $1 billion in 1988 to $1.7 billion in 1989.

But according to the New Jersey Casino Commission, which issued another report in 1991, by the end of 1990, Trump’s entire cash position — in both his business and personal accounts — was just $19 million. The amount was insufficient to pay the debt on his over-leveraged casino and real estate holdings while still covering his personal expenses of $1 million per month. His net worth, the commission estimated, was $205 million — less than 6 percent of what he’d told Forbes. In 1990, the magazine dropped Trump from the list and kept him off it for five years.

Forbes declined to comment for this article, but its top editor, Randall Lane, interviewed then-candidate Trump for the Forbes 400 in 2015 and wrote about the magazine’s long struggle to accurately assess his net worth in an article titled “Inside The Epic Fantasy That’s Driven Donald Trump For 33 Years .” Of the 1,538 tycoons who had been on the “Rich List” through the years, Lane wrote, “not one has been more fixated with his or her net worth estimate on a year-in, year-out basis than Donald J. Trump.”

*** *** *** ***

I was a leading New York real estate reporter through the 1980s. I left the Forbes staff in 1983 but continued to freelance for the magazine while writing major investigative features as a contributing editor for the new Manhattan, Inc. magazine, as well as New York, Avenue and New York City Business. I knew all the key players. I thought I had a handle on this material.

But Trump was so competent in conning me that, until 35 years later, I did not know I’d been conned. Instead, I have gone through my career in national media with a misinformed sense of satisfaction that, as a perceptive young journalist, I called Trump on his lies and gave Forbes readers who used the Rich List as a barometer of private wealth a more accurate picture of his finances than the one he was selling.

The joke was on me — and everyone else. Trump’s fabrications provided the basis for a vastly inflated wealth assessment for the Forbes 400 that would give him cachet for decades as a triumphant businessman.

In truth, almost nobody had a clear picture of Trump’s books. In 1990, Trump brought in Steve Bollenbach as a new chief financial officer to respond to lender concerns about his crippling debt. “When Bollenbach began delving into the organization’s finances, he got a surprise,” The Washington Post’s Michael Kranish and Marc Fisher write in “Trump Revealed,” their comprehensive 2016 biography. “The small staff on the twenty-sixth floor of Trump Tower included three accountants. Each knew about pieces of the fraying empire — the casinos, for instance, or the condos. But no one knew the overall picture; there were no consolidated financial reports.”

In the absence of a functioning balance sheet, the list didn’t just make Trump feel like a winner, according to O’Brien; it may have provided some of the documentation he needed to borrow reckless sums of money — vast loans that he used, for years, to actually make him a winner. “The more often Forbes mentioned him, the more credible Donald’s claim to vast wealth became,” O’Brien said, arguing that Trump and the list were “mutually reinforcing”: “The more credible his claim to vast wealth became, the easier it was for him to get on the Forbes 400 — which became the standard that other media, and apparently some of the country’s biggest banks, used when judging Donald’s riches.”

Trump returned to the Rich List in 1996 with a reported net worth of $450 million and an editor’s note that he claimed to be worth $2 billion. He never fell off it again. In his book, O’Brien criticized Forbes for rewarding Trump’s fabrications, citing interviews with “three people with direct knowledge of Donald’s finances” who estimated his true net worth after debts to be “somewhere between $150 million and $250 million.” Trump, who had told O’Brien he was worth $6 billion, sued for libel — and lost. When he lost his appeal in 2011, a New Jersey appellate judge wrote, “The largest portion of Mr. Trump’s fortune, according to three people who had had direct knowledge of his holdings, apparently comes from his lucrative inheritance. These people estimated that Mr. Trump’s wealth, presuming that it is not encumbered by heavy debt, may amount to about $200 million to $300 million. That is an enviably large sum of money by most people’s standards but far short of the billionaires club.”

The opacity persists. In 2016, Trump’s presidential campaign put out a statement saying the candidate had a net worth “in excess of TEN BILLION DOLLARS.” But he has never released his tax returns, and he has said that the core Trump Organization asset is the ownership of his brand — an ineffable marketing claim that is impossible to substantiate or refute.

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A guy willing to go through all that just for a reputation is most certainly willing to collude with a foreign power to gain more fame.


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That's not even a question at this point. The question is, how much debt is he in to them, and do they have any compromising information.

This was actually a contested/debated issue here once. One of the Trump guys - I want to say willitevachange, but could be wrong so apologies if not - kept trying to claim that Trump is a billionaire and some kind of smart businessman or some nonsense, and kept citing Forbes lists as proof of his worth. I explained that Trump was obsessed with Forbes and dedicated all of his time to trying to lie and bribe his way into them listing him at inflated worth and it was all "LIES" and "FAKE" and "JUST HATING".

The false notion that Trump is some intelligent businessman with incredible wealth earned off smart deals is pretty much the fulcrum of their whole fantasy. Without that fairy tale, there's nothing to Trump but the cranky racism.

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He owns, what, the tower, a few golf courses, and what else?

Now, I understand that with real estate guys, their worth is strongly tied into how much their properties are worth.

But it’s odd that a billionaire would have so much trouble getting financing from domestic banks, as well as overseas banks.

I recently watched a documentary on the disaster which was trump in Atlantic City. And I also watched how the majority of his current income had came from licensing and obviously the apprentice.

But he has a LOT of other failures.

Also, when trump jr made the comment about recieving a ton of Money flowing in from the Russians, I don’t understand why that wasn’t a huge red flag to most people.


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He owns Trump Tower, some hotels and a few golf courses.

The Trump guys get mad when I call him a "game show host", and stammer on some myth about him being a successful real estate guy, but he never was. "The Apprentice" was probably his most notable accomplishment before the election.

Basically, he borrowed millions from his Dad and completely blew it by overspending. He took out loans and bought the Tower (he way overpaid for it and tried to stiff all of his construction and contractors), and then blew through more loans and his inheritance on a series of absolutely insane ventures - USFL, airlines, etc.) He had to borrow from his siblings' inheritance until they cut him off, and then he absolutely cratered himself with Atlantic City.

He never really recovered from that. Once every bank in the world cut him off, he fell back into branding deals and pennyante cons, becoming a game show host. He's always been a trust fund dullard cosplaying as a businessman.


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Originally Posted By: PDF
He owns Trump Tower, some hotels and a few golf courses.


FWIW, apparently 17 golf courses. If that's a 'few', so be it.

http://www.golf-monthly.co.uk/courses/golf-courses-donald-trump-owns-118175

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Originally Posted By: archbolddawg
Originally Posted By: PDF
He owns Trump Tower, some hotels and a few golf courses.


FWIW, apparently 17 golf courses. If that's a 'few', so be it.

http://www.golf-monthly.co.uk/courses/golf-courses-donald-trump-owns-118175


When you're massively in debt and the courses routinely lose money, yes, it's a few in the grand scheme of things.

If a guy owned a dozen Arby's restaurants, half of them bleeding, and he had no liquidity and a mountain of debt, calling them a few restaurants would be an apt description.

41% of his assets are his courses, and most of them lose money. His course in Scotland is in the hole like $200 million, and all of his courses only brought in like $175 million.

That's small potatoes for a guy so deeply in debt.

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I think many people voted for him thinking he is a great business man.
If he released his taxes before the election I dont think he would have won. It should be mandatory that candidates release their tax records or dont get put on the ballot.



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Originally Posted By: BADdog
I think many people voted for him thinking he is a great business man.
If he released his taxes before the election I dont think he would have won. It should be mandatory that candidates release their tax records or dont get put on the ballot.


He may still have won, as Hillary was the worst possible candidate, but I agree that the reveal that he's always been a trust fund failure masquerading as a shrewd businessman would have popped the balloon on the whole "I'm a really smart businessman, OK" thing.

I remember when the whole tax record release thing was happening and there was all sorts of chatter about what it could be, when it was always obvious that he just didn't want to be embarrassed by the reveal that he's a broke fraud who subsists on pennyante cons.

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Well, I mean.... he's still being audited.


Intoducing for The Cleveland Browns, Quarterback Deshawn "The Predator" Watson. He will also be the one to choose your next head coach.

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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Well, I mean.... he's still being audited.


My favorite was when the IRS - who almost never comments publicly - was like "go ahead, Don, release them".

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Just curious Pit ... what do u expect to learn from his tax returns ... DETAILS PLEASE ...

Do u expect to find out how much money he has in loans from different countries banks throughout the world? ... what EXACTLY is this treasure trove of info ya’all expect to garner from his tax returns ...





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My favorite was when at one of the debates he said he’d RELEASE THEM AGAINST HIS ATTORNEYS ADVICE when hillary released her 33,000 yoga, wedding planning e-mails ... rofl

That was soooooo good .... one of my favorite debate moments ... thumbsup




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Originally Posted By: PDF
Originally Posted By: BADdog
I think many people voted for him thinking he is a great business man.
If he released his taxes before the election I dont think he would have won. It should be mandatory that candidates release their tax records or dont get put on the ballot.


He may still have won, as Hillary was the worst possible candidate, but I agree that the reveal that he's always been a trust fund failure masquerading as a shrewd businessman would have popped the balloon on the whole "I'm a really smart businessman, OK" thing.

I remember when the whole tax record release thing was happening and there was all sorts of chatter about what it could be, when it was always obvious that he just didn't want to be embarrassed by the reveal that he's a broke fraud who subsists on pennyante cons.


Hillary is a moron. I'm not sure why she didn't challenge Donny's business acumen more. He self-destructed the XFL, bankrupted his airline and was involved in tons of Casino losses. All of this is public knowledge and could've been commented on at anytime. Then again, she expected a coronation instead of an election.

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Ya .... attacking a man who turned 1 or 2 million into at least 3 or 4 billion on his business acumen is an absolute BRILLIANT MOVE and would have made Hillary much smarter ... rofl

That wouldn’t have opened a really bad can of worms for Hillary ... not at all ... rolleyes ..

And u guys wonder why u lost ... that idea sounds like it came right from her campaign ... u know the ones that didnt think going to Wisconsin was a good idea ... oh wait, that was RUSSIA ... rofl ...




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turned that trust fund into the red rofl


Where is this billion of dollars coming from? The Apprentice doesn't pay that much.


Also, invest 1 million dollars into any index fund when Trump "made" his first business deals, would have made you over 5 billion dollars by now.

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If it was that easy there’d be a lot more billionaires ... wink

Trump made his money by working his ass off (same way he won the election ... he had as many campaign rallies on the last day as your girl did in the last month ... rofl ... ) ... he worked his ass off and had way more successes than failures ... he is and was a master ass marketer ... he created a brand ... u know how hard that is to do ... dumb ass question Diam, obviously u have no idea how hard it is ... *L* ...

If u really think that would have been a good idea ... may god or whoever it is your higher power is bless u ...

U also need to get a better grasp on the opening “a can of worms” concept ... thumbsup




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Originally Posted By: DiamDawg
If it was that easy there’d be a lot more billionaires ... wink

Trump made his money by working his ass off (same way he won the election ... he had as many campaign rallies on the last day as your girl did in the last month ... rofl ... ) ... he worked his ass off and had way more successes than failures ... he is and was a master ass marketer ... he created a brand ... u know how hard that is to do ... dumb ass question Diam, obviously u have no idea how hard it is ... *L* ...

If u really think that would have been a good idea ... may god or whoever it is your higher power is bless u ...

U also need to get a better grasp on the opening “a can of worms” concept ... thumbsup
I actually agree with everything you just said

Which is basically he worked his ass off, and being the great marketer he is , he was able to con a lot of very stupid people


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The measure of a man is determined by his wealth?

Interesting...




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Originally Posted By: mac
The measure of a man is determined by his wealth?

Interesting...


This is America. Success is define by how many people you screwed over to get to the top. Which is why trump is so popular with his base. A totalitarian attitude mixed with not paying contractors = a great leader, apparently.

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Originally Posted By: mac
The measure of a man is determined by his wealth?

Interesting...


Ya ... thats what i said ... rolleyes

What a crock of crap ... literally ... u should be suspended for making that leap ... its LYING is what it is ...

U just did exactly what u hate trump for ...

What u just did isn’t just taking something out f context its FLAT OUT LYING ...

And of course now all the minions will chime in and turn your lie into the truth ... job well done mac ...




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Originally Posted By: DiamDawg
Just curious Pit ... what do u expect to learn from his tax returns ... DETAILS PLEASE ...

Do u expect to find out how much money he has in loans from different countries banks throughout the world? ... what EXACTLY is this treasure trove of info ya’all expect to garner from his tax returns ...



He's broke.

He's not a billionaire and never was. It's pretty obvious.

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There was definetly some conning of both stupid and smart people ... no doubt ...

There was also a lot of good quality work done ... say what u want ... the mans one hell of a builder ... one hell of a businessman and negotiator ... he built such a good reputation he now sells his name because it stands for QUALITY ... he didn’t build that rep SWINDLING PEOPLE ... he has his warts ... a few awfully big ones ... but to think hes made billions simply swindling people is simply your TDS shining through ...

Your HATE won’t change that ... just like the fact i support him doesnt mean i approve of or condone all his business practices or a lot of other things hes done ...




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Ya .... attacking a man who turned 1 or 2 million into at least 3 or 4 billion on his business acumen


You actually believe this, don't you?

I can't stop laughing. The truth stares them in the face and they still parrot the guy.

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Quote:
say what u want ... the mans one hell of a builder ... one hell of a businessman and negotiator ... he built such a good reputation he now sells his name because it stands for QUALITY ... he didn’t build that rep SWINDLING PEOPLE ...


Once again, absolutely none of this is true.

Trump took about $9 million in loans from his father and blew it by overspending on property because he can't negotiate. He then had to have his father co-sign a $70 million dollar loan from Manufacturers Hanover, and promptly blew through it by wildly overspending on terribly negotiated land purchases. He then burned through his inheritance trying to keep the Atlantic City monster afloat. Once his siblings finally cut him off, he began borrowing from any bank that would take him, until he was so far in debt that and his name was such mud they all cut him off, which is when he started taking money from shady mob/oligarch types and settled into his pennyante cons and game show host career.

He never had any business acumen outside of branding license agreements (he's admittedly decent at that) and it's absolutely laughable to try and claim he turned "1 or 2" million into billions. He never had billions.

"One hell of a businessman and negotiator"? Seriously?

It was an open secret in Manhattan for decades - just double the price and compliment his tie, and he'll pay because he's an easily swayed moron. Saudi Arabia certainly took notice of this last year.

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*Trump, broke and bored, spends 8 years calling into TV shows in his bathrobe to ramble on and on about the amazing things discovered by his fake investigation team he pretended to send to Hawaii to prove Obama was born in Kenya, his restricted allowance coming from his job as a game show host*

DIAM: Got to hand it to him, great negotiator, very skilled businessman

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I actually forgot about that tidbit -

Trump's lived a big chunk of his adult life on bank-imposed allowances, because he owed them so much money and kept getting swindled in bad acquisition after bad acquisition that they had to put him on monitored allowances.

Then, he kept blowing through his monthly allotments on like the 1st or 2nd, getting suckered into some deal, so the bank literally forced him to sign over first refusal to them on any agreement he entered into financially.

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Originally Posted By: DiamDawg
Just curious Pit ... what do u expect to learn from his tax returns ... DETAILS PLEASE ...

Do u expect to find out how much money he has in loans from different countries banks throughout the world? ... what EXACTLY is this treasure trove of info ya’all expect to garner from his tax returns ...


I'm not sure what we will learn. The reason I think he should release them is to actually live up to the level of other presidents.... for a change.

Every presidential candidate for decades now have released them and I'm just tired of people making excuses why he's so special he should have some privilege not to conform to accepted norms.


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The question isn't "what do you guys expect to find?", but "why is he so terrified of releasing them", and the answer is obvious -

He has nowhere near the money he claims to (as has always been the case), is massively in debt, and he owes a lot of money to potentially compromising people.

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U mean other than the fact his LAWYERS ADVISED HIM NOT TO .. as do all lawyers when their clients are under audit ...

Ya’all always forget these little details ... just the minor ones though ... rofl ...

Go on back to your hating pit .. u wear it well ... thumbsup




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Originally Posted By: DiamDawg
U mean other than the fact his LAWYERS ADVISED HIM NOT TO .. as do all lawyers when their clients are under audit ...

Ya’all always forget these little details ... just the minor ones though ... rofl ...

Go on back to your hating pit .. u wear it well ... thumbsup


This is also completely false.

The IRS had cleared him, and - in a rare public commentary - stated that there was no legal concern or ramification for releasing them. They more or less gave him immunity if he chose to release, so he moved on to the next flimsy excuse.

The "under audit" thing was like the 3rd or 4th of a dozen excuses he made not to release them, because he's deathly afraid of how broke and in debt he's been going public.

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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Originally Posted By: DiamDawg
Just curious Pit ... what do u expect to learn from his tax returns ... DETAILS PLEASE ...

Do u expect to find out how much money he has in loans from different countries banks throughout the world? ... what EXACTLY is this treasure trove of info ya’all expect to garner from his tax returns ...


I'm not sure what we will learn. The reason I think he should release them is to actually live up to the level of other presidents.... for a change.

Every presidential candidate for decades now have released them and I'm just tired of people making excuses why he's so special he should have some privilege not to conform to accepted norms.


I imagine 90% of the people who want to see Trumps's tax return would have absolutely no idea what they were looking at...and many of them probably can't even do their OWN tax return.

I'm a lot more interested in Obama's college transcripts than Trump's tax return. What is BO hiding? Why won't he release his transcripts?

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Yeah, he's been under audit since 2016. I believe innocent people should act innocent. Why would lawyers not want you to reveal your tax returns? Hmmmmm.

You're too smart to buy all of this BS. At least I thought you were.


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See... All the excuses why Trump shouldn't be held to the same standards of others. The party of personal responsibility? Maybe at one time but not anymore.


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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Yeah, he's been under audit since 2016. I believe innocent people should act innocent. Why would lawyers not want you to reveal your tax returns? Hmmmmm.

You're too smart to buy all of this BS. At least I thought you were.


You won't learn a darned thing by seeing his tax return. Talk about being smart enough to know better. notallthere

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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
See... All the excuses why Trump shouldn't be held to the same standards of others. The party of personal responsibility? Maybe at one time but not anymore.


Like BO's college transcripts?

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Why would his attorneys want him yo conceal his tax returns? Why don't you expect Trump do do what every other presidential candidate has done for decades now?


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Originally Posted By: WSU Willie
Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Yeah, he's been under audit since 2016. I believe innocent people should act innocent. Why would lawyers not want you to reveal your tax returns? Hmmmmm.

You're too smart to buy all of this BS. At least I thought you were.


You won't learn a darned thing by seeing his tax return. Talk about being smart enough to know better. notallthere


It would be learned that he's deeply in debt and probably worth about maybe $250 million, and underwater.

Trump's whole sell is that he's a savvy businessman who is worth billions. His return wouldn't paint the whole picture of him being a trust fund kid who squandered his money foolishly and washed out trying to play act and a businessman, but it would burst the bubble of how Trump wishes to be viewed (which is the most important thing to him).

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Originally Posted By: WSU Willie
Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Yeah, he's been under audit since 2016. I believe innocent people should act innocent. Why would lawyers not want you to reveal your tax returns? Hmmmmm.

You're too smart to buy all of this BS. At least I thought you were.


You won't learn a darned thing by seeing his tax return. Talk about being smart enough to know better. notallthere
The old " theres nothing to see here, move along now"

That is a pretty weak excuse to not release his tax returns

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Originally Posted By: PitDAWG
Why would his attorneys want him yo conceal his tax returns? Why don't you expect Trump do do what every other presidential candidate has done for decades now?


I expected him from the start to be different than the Presidents of the last decade.

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