Duped again

Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
It’s amazing how much hosting the apprentice helped him win in 2016. It sort of made him look good. Like a boss. Reality tv is ruining America. Next Kim kardashian will be president.
nobody forces anyone to watch reality TV.....
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
People were asked why they voted for the degenerate
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Same old shit.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.

Each one of those men (including Bill Gates) made a ton of money for their companies and saw them grow to multi-national entities.
Please point out for me one company that Trump made, started, or ran that you can hold up as a success story.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
People were asked why they voted for the degenerate
I can't answer because I voted for Trump.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Bill Gates has been sued hundreds of times and lost.
I guess BG must be a failure.
Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.
How many times for Gates Cook Obama Hillary ???
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation


HOW EASY AMERICANS WERE DUPED, INDEED



On January 2020 we had a thriving economy.

But in February 2020 individuals determined to remove the President from office by any means necessary concocted the covid19 HOAX

They believed that if they tanked the economy, cause 40 millions Americans to be unemployed , numerous business to go bankrupt and force the states to use mail in ballots that the voters would take out their anger on President Trump. By Forcing the states to use mail in ballots the powers that be could MANUFACTURE as many ballots as necessary to overcome President's Trump's gargantuan lead

The scam failed because they totally miscalculated the extent of President's Trump's Landslide. So several corrupt states stopped counting around 10 PM so they could MANUFACTURE enough ballots to overcome President Trump's gargantuan lead.

The group masterminding the ELECTORAL FRAUD has caused so much poverty and inconvenience in order to cease power,

For Shame

.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
People were asked why they voted for the degenerate
but thats not what i asked you....you said.....COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people.....i asked you......how do you know that?...
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
People were asked why they voted for the degenerate

Which degenerate?

Clinton?

Biden?

LBJ?
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Bill Gates has been sued hundreds of times and lost.
I guess BG must be a failure.
Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.
How many times for Gates Cook Obama Hillary ???
Gates was forced out of MS.
Now do some research for how many times famous billionaires have had any of their companies file for bankruptcy.

What's your profession because you're coming across as rather ignorant.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
The Trump debacle demonstrated that politics is a profession best left to professionals – that an inexperienced neophyte such as Trump is incapable of sound, responsible governance; one can’t simply walk in off the street and into the Oval Office and expect to be successful, Trump’s failure is proof of that.

The Trump debacle also demonstrated that government can’t be ‘run like a business,’ that those with experience solely in the private sector make for poor presidents, and that there’s much more to responsible governance and public policy than fiscal considerations, Trump’s failed response to the pandemic is likewise proof of that.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
People were asked why they voted for the degenerate
but thats not what i asked you....you said.....COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people.....i asked you......how do you know that?...
Because IF they did it would be public knowledge spewed out by Republicans Can trump borrow a dime from an American bank ?? NO , Why do you as a smart guy think that is ?? Because they trust the swine?? Can Gates Can Cook Can Obama ?
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation


HOW EASY AMERICANS WERE DUPED, INDEED



On January 2020 we had a thriving economy.

But in February 2020 individuals determined to remove the President from office by any means necessary concocted the covid19 HOAX

They believed that if they tanked the economy, cause 40 millions Americans to be unemployed , numerous business to go bankrupt and force the states to use mail in ballots that the voters would take out their anger on President Trump. By Forcing the states to use mail in ballots the powers that be could MANUFACTURE as many ballots as necessary to overcome President's Trump

The scam failed because they totally miscalculated the extent of President's Trump's Landslide. So several corrupt states stopped counting around 10 PM so they could MANUFACTURE enough ballots to overcome President Trump's gargantuan lead.

The group masterminding the ELECTORAL FRAUD has caused so much poverty and inconvenience in order to cease power,

For Shame

.

How many times we going to go over these lies? Because of legal action file in these states by Republicans, the mail in ballots were not allowed to be counted until the close of polls and until all the election day ballots were tallied. You and everyone else in this country were warned of the red and blue "mirages" you would see. Rule of thumb was the people who voted on election day went for Trump, early and mail-in ballots went for Biden. Ergo, Trump led during the night, Biden took over once the mail-in ballots were counted. Pretty easy to explain. And all your screams of fraud won't change the fact there was no widespread fraud, all the fraud lawsuits and legal actions are being dismissed almost out of hand, December 14th is fast approaching, and Joe Biden won. Move on.
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Bill Gates has been sued hundreds of times and lost.
I guess BG must be a failure.
Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.
How many times for Gates Cook Obama Hillary ???
Gates was forced out of MS.
Now do some research for how many times famous billionaires have had any of their companies file for bankruptcy.

What's your profession because you're coming across as rather ignorant.
I'm retired now Was in my own business for 50 or so years Also into RE
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.
COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people the way this coward in the WH has Those 2 are real businessmen Trump is just a lying stealing cheater
how do you know that eddie?....
People were asked why they voted for the degenerate
but thats not what i asked you....you said.....COOK or GATES never went out of their way to screw people.....i asked you......how do you know that?...
Because IF they did it would be public knowledge spewed out by Republicans Can trump borrow a dime from an American bank ?? NO , Why do you as a smart guy think that is ?? Because they trust the swine?? Can Gates Can Cook Can Obama ?
eddie those guys are billionaires ...you dont think they fucked people over in the business they are in to get were they are?....i have read lots of negative things about gates and his wife about some of the things they have done or want to do....
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
It’s amazing how much hosting the apprentice helped him win in 2016. It sort of made him look good. Like a boss. Reality tv is ruining America. Next Kim kardashian will be president.
nobody forces anyone to watch reality TV.....
The more years he spent the more downhill his ratings went Same is happening with his presidency The worst president ever
 
Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
Apple has been sued hundreds of times and occasionally lost.
I guess Steve Jobs must have been a failure.
I guess Tim Cook must be a failure.

Each one of those men (including Bill Gates) made a ton of money for their companies and saw them grow to multi-national entities.
Please point out for me one company that Trump made, started, or ran that you can hold up as a success story.
You are a rtue idiot if you don't know what Trump's successes were:

Trump_Tower_Main.jpg


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Many people who voted for Donald Trump in the 2016 Election said they did so because he was a successful businessman.

They were half right.

He was a businessman alright, but if you’d been paying attention, there were plenty of better fitting adjectives to go around: unscrupulous, irresponsible, incompetent, crooked—and failed.

In 1990 Trump launched the Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic City, which cost over a billion dollars to construct. He called it the “eighth wonder of the world,” and as he opened its doors he made the kind of wild, grandiose, pie-in-the-sky, too good to be true promises that became commonplace during the Presidential campaign and are now status quo in his presidency.

Hey may as well have stood there and said he was going to Make Atlantic City Great Again.

The casino closed in 2016.

He ended up bankrupting it, not once, but twice.

Trump has actually filled for bankruptcy several times.

Nearly a half a dozen times, he’s run a billion-dollar endeavor into the ground, leaving in his wake thousands of devastated employees and unpaid creditors and jumping ship without personal accountability of any kind. With each implosion, he’s shielded himself and his family, leaving everyone else to clean up his mess.

A Fortune.com story recounted that despite the Taj Mahal’s abject financial failure, Trump personally profited during its demise, by doing things like selling Trump-branded water—making himself over eighty million dollars as the casino slowly collapsed, its vendors going unremunerated, and its workers unceremonially discarded.

You might call all that being a successful businessman—or you might call it being a soulless parasite who feeds off things that were thriving, until those things are dead, and then moving on. And really, your definition is irrelevant, as regardless of the semantics, the bottom line remains unchanged: he is and has never been about making money for or lifting up anyone else. He didn’t give a damn about anyone associated with the Taj Mahal—and he doesn’t give a damn about you.

And this is the terrible history repeating itself right now. Donald Trump has neither the capacity nor the intelligence nor the aspiration to lead this nation, to honor its Constitution, to represent its citizens. He is not the least bit interested in people’s healthcare or their educations or their golden years. He couldn’t care less about morality or virtue or Christianity. He doesn’t lose sleep over disabled veterans or coal miners or single mother or suicidal teenagers. He has no interest in dignity or decency or nobility befitting the Office—not because, as his supporters say he is a “straight shooting Washington outsider”—but because America is nothing but another host to him.

As always, he is here solely to slap his name on something and to suck it all dry—and if your eyes are open you can see that he is doing that right now.

That’s the sick irony here: a guy who couldn’t run a casino in Atlantic City is now running the country. Unable to handle the complex responsibilities and manage the finances and solve the problems and do the work of overseeing a few hotels, he is now using this nation as a similar and doomed to fail vanity project; a way to build his brand and sell his chachkies and line his nest egg without caring how he does it.

I’m really sad how many Americans did so little research, how uninterested they were in his actual resume, and how easily they were duped (and still seemed to be) but his spit-shined snake oil sales pitch, which peddles only fool’s gold that will prove worthless.

Donald Trump will soon do to America what he did to the Taj Mahal. He’ll leave the former like he did the latter: bankrupt and crumbling, without giving a damn about the people whose lives he ruined or the suffering left in his wake.

I’m not okay with that—not at all.

I don’t think this country should wait until it simply becomes another hopelessly failed and beyond rescue business venture of a man who’s only allegiance is to himself.

We should fire him while we’re still able to recover.

We shouldn’t let him financially or morally bankrupt this nation
It’s amazing how much hosting the apprentice helped him win in 2016. It sort of made him look good. Like a boss. Reality tv is ruining America. Next Kim kardashian will be president.
nobody forces anyone to watch reality TV.....
The more years he spent the more downhill his ratings went Same is happening with his presidency The worst president ever
That generally happens with most television shows, moron.
 

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