Jump to content

Question for the Liberals/Progressives on the Forum


Foxx

Recommended Posts

11 hours ago, leh-nerd skin-erd said:

What’s always been sort of fascinating about DJT to me is that with as brash as he is, with as many people as he dealt with, you would think former employees would be lined up for miles willing to talk about what a horrible human being he is having cheated/lied/screwed them while they worked for him.  The fact is that absent a few outliers who certainly might just be part of a money grab, a surreptitious recording of some vulgar language, that’s never really been an issue for him.  
 

 

Non Disclosure agreements are why former employees don't speak out.  C'mon Lenny!!  I am sure the over 3500 lawsuits he is involved in are all money grabs too?

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/everyone-signed-one-trump-is-aggressive-in-his-use-of-nondisclosure-agreements-even-in-government/2018/08/13/9d0315ba-9f15-11e8-93e3-24d1703d2a7a_story.html

 

From the article

Dozens of White House aides have signed NDAs in exchange for working for Trump, who has long relied on such agreements in his business career, according to current and former administration employees. But NDAs have not been widely used by past administrations outside the transition time between presidents, in part because most legal experts believe such agreements are not legally enforceable for public employees.

Copies of Trump NDAs obtained by The Washington Post or described by current and former aides lay out breathtakingly broad prohibitions on behavior and appear to be drawn heavily from similar contracts used in the past by the Trump Organization, the president’s family firm.

Under one agreement from the 2016 campaign, signers promised not to “demean or disparage publicly” Trump, his company or any member of his family — and also not to assist any other politician exploring a federal or state office.

An agreement circulated in the White House last year barred signers from sharing any information they had learned in the building, according to several aides who signed the document.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So, a White House and administration chock full of Obamaites who proved they wanted to subvert everything Trump was doing were required to sign NDA's? WTF wouldn't require that? Thinking must be hard when you have so many different choices of strains for breakfast.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, transplantbillsfan said:

 

I'm sorry I just can't even get past this part to read the rest of your post without you actually addressing it:

 

Trump is a self-made man?

 

The guy admitted himself that he got his start thanks to a $1 million loan from his father nearly half a century ago.

 

That's the number Trump, a consistent liar, has repeated himself he was given to start his business empire.

 

There's a high end report that he was actually given over $60 million at the time.

 

Self-made man?

 

C'mon man...

 

And once you dispense with that premise and realize that Trump is just ultimately "Old Money," how the hell do you NOT see that he's ABSOLUTELY part of that elite class that thinks he's above us?

In October of 2018 the NY Times did an extensive investigated piece on Fred Trump, his wealth, and how he transferred it to his heirs, in many cases avoiding taxes.  In today's dollars the total to Donald Trump came to over $400 million.  The NY times article is a pay for article but this free video summarizes

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DxJE5H0hwk

Edited by Bob in Mich
Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, leh-nerd skin-erd said:

What’s always been sort of fascinating about DJT to me is that with as brash as he is, with as many people as he dealt with, you would think former employees would be lined up for miles willing to talk about what a horrible human being he is having cheated/lied/screwed them while they worked for him.  The fact is that absent a few outliers who certainly might just be part of a money grab, a surreptitious recording of some vulgar language, that’s never really been an issue for him.  
 

As for being a self-made man, well, considering the totality of his life, I’m hard-pressed to not consider him self-made. He’s worth some variation of billions with a b, has survived and thrived in the commercial real estate market in NYC and beyond, had a successful television show and, oh yeah, defeated some of the most powerful people/political cabals on the planet to become THE most powerful person on the planet through sheer force of will.  A quick google search indicates that there have been an estimated 545,000,000 people living during the period of time commencing in 1776, and 44 men have served as President (as of today, no women have been elected but one was really, really popular). 
 

Amazing. 

 

If you live in the NYC Metro area you will hear a lot of horror stories about Trump. The two most common being his exploitation of Polish Immigrants (most of whom were illegal) and stiffing contractors. I knew personally two of my friends growing up dads who worked for construction companies that went bankrupt due to Trump not paying them out on a deal in the 1980's.

 

You also have the numerous sexual harassment complaints (although to be fair that is common for executives in that era) but yeah in NYC, Long Island, and New Jersey almost everyone knows him from his corrupt and shady business dealings as opposed to being a reality TV star. You don't have to go far to find a story of someone getting stiffed or screwed by Trump and these stories have been around the area well before Trump went Fox News conservative.

 

As far as how successful he actually is in business? I don't know, I think he was very good at building a brand but his actual real estate and casino dealings don't seem to be successful as even his dad had to buy millions of dollars of chips and not cash them to help float that operation.

Edited by billsfan89
  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 minutes ago, billsfan89 said:

 

If you live in the NYC Metro area you will hear a lot of horror stories about Trump. The two most common being his exploitation of Polish Immigrants (most of whom were illegal) and stiffing contractors. I knew personally two of my friends growing up dads who worked for construction companies that went bankrupt due to Trump not paying them out on a deal in the 1980's.

 

You also have the numerous sexual harassment complaints (although to be fair that is common for executives in that era) but yeah in NYC, Long Island, and New Jersey almost everyone knows him from his corrupt and shady business dealings as opposed to being a reality TV star. You don't have to go far to find a story of someone getting stiffed or screwed by Trump and these stories have been around the area well before Trump went Fox News conservative.

 

None of this is news to anyone who was paying attention in the 80s.  He's always, at best, been nothing more than a carnival barker.  "President Trump" used to be the punchline of jokes.

 

13 minutes ago, billsfan89 said:

As far as how successful he actually is in business? I don't know, I think he was very good at building a brand but his actual real estate and casino dealings don't seem to be successful as even his dad had to buy millions of dollars of chips and not cash them to help float that operation.

 

Most of his fortune comes from selling his name - lots of "Trump" properties aren't owned by him, the developers just paid him a licensing fee to put his name on them. 

 

His business sense otherwise is...well, he went bankrupt running casinos, and that industry is a license to print money.  He's a marketing genius - as evidenced by him trading on his last name to make several billion dollars and to win a presidential election with people knowing he was a clown.  But otherwise, he's pretty pathetic.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Perhaps this whole Trump success illusion is tied to those that watched Trump on the Apprentice.  If one formed their impressions of Trump from that tv show, they appear to think he is a brilliant American success story.  I saw that show once but I suppose they didn't address how and why he kept going bankrupt in real life.

 

If one knew of him before the Apprentice show and formed their impressions based on years of NY reporting on multiple bankruptcies, lawsuits, scams, divorces, and affairs, they are less likely to believe he is suddenly a squeaky clean president being repeatedly wrongly accused.  I think I read that Trump, in the 2016 election won approximately 18% of the NY City votes.  They have known the guy for a long time there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i subscribed to Spy Magazine from 1988 to when it closed up shop

 

Trump was one of a dozen NYC socialites they took endless pot shots at

 

all very amusing

 

never saw the TV show, have not watched more than 20 minutes combined in 20 years of "reality based" TV

 

don't spend too much worrying about Trump supporters, Bob, they couldn't care less about you

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, Bob in Mich said:

Perhaps this whole Trump success illusion is tied to those that watched Trump on the Apprentice.  If one formed their impressions of Trump from that tv show, they appear to think he is a brilliant American success story.  I saw that show once but I suppose they didn't address how and why he kept going bankrupt in real life.

 

If one knew of him before the Apprentice show and formed their impressions based on years of NY reporting on multiple bankruptcies, lawsuits, scams, divorces, and affairs, they are less likely to believe he is suddenly a squeaky clean president being repeatedly wrongly accused.  I think I read that Trump, in the 2016 election won approximately 18% of the NY City votes.  They have known the guy for a long time there.

How does that 18% compare to McCain in 2008 or Romney in 2012? My guess is that they are all pretty close because the election in NYC was not about the person bur about party affiliation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Bob in Mich said:

In October of 2018 the NY Times did an extensive investigated piece on Fred Trump, his wealth, and how he transferred it to his heirs, in many cases avoiding taxes.  In today's dollars the total to Donald Trump came to over $400 million.  The NY times article is a pay for article but this free video summarizes

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0DxJE5H0hwk

 

Yep.

 

$1 million is just the very low end number that consistent liar Donald Trump has admitted he was given.

 

The actual number given to Trump in 1975 was reported by the Times as the $60+ million I brought up($1 million back then is indeed worth about $4 million today. Combination of a couple hours of yard work, some beers and mixing some triangulate research together at the end of a long day is a bad idea. My mistake)

 

The laugh that Trump is somehow a rags to riches story stands.

 

Daddy's money got him a loooOOnnnggg way over the years, not just in 1975.

Edited by transplantbillsfan
  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ummm if I can turn a $1M "gift" into $1B (or $4B or $5B) my only question is ... where do I sign up?

How many of you have received a gift of $1000 and turned that money into $1M? Did you consider that doing it "on your own"? Or, by virtue of receiving a thousand dollars, did that success in turning it into a million dollars rest solely with the gifter? And, if you have not managed to multiply that $1000 gift by 1000 to turn it into a $1M via investments, hard work, and/or corporate opportunities, why not?

  • Like (+1) 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Bob in Mich said:

 

Non Disclosure agreements are why former employees don't speak out.  C'mon Lenny!!  I am sure the over 3500 lawsuits he is involved in are all money grabs too?

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/everyone-signed-one-trump-is-aggressive-in-his-use-of-nondisclosure-agreements-even-in-government/2018/08/13/9d0315ba-9f15-11e8-93e3-24d1703d2a7a_story.html

 

From the article

Dozens of White House aides have signed NDAs in exchange for working for Trump, who has long relied on such agreements in his business career, according to current and former administration employees. But NDAs have not been widely used by past administrations outside the transition time between presidents, in part because most le NDAs have not been widely used by past administrations outside the transition time between presidents, in part because most legal experts believe such agreements are not legally enforceable for public employees.gal experts believe such agreements are not legally enforceable for public employees.

Copies of Trump NDAs obtained by The Washington Post or described by current and former aides lay out breathtakingly broad prohibitions on behavior and appear to be drawn heavily from similar contracts used in the past by the Trump Organization, the president’s family firm.

Under one agreement from the 2016 campaign, signers promised not to “demean or disparage publicly” Trump, his company or any member of his family — and also not to assist any other politician exploring a federal or state office.

An agreement circulated in the White House last year barred signers from sharing any information they had learned in the building, according to several aides who signed the document.

Oh for goodness sake Bob! 

 

He was 72 when elected, worked let's say 50 years give or take in a variety of professions, including hotel and property management, and you're link-a-dink-a-doiing an article about White House insiders?  

 

Side note about the article.  Inflammatory language like "breathtakingly broad" means literally nothing to me, the average guy on the street.  It means even less when used in context with this tidbit: 

 

But NDAs have not been widely used by past administrations outside the transition time between presidents, in part because most le NDAs have not been widely used by past administrations outside the transition time between presidents....

 

 

Do you think the journalist thought it unimportant to frame this better? NDAs are used during transition periods (though apparently unenforceable) , but some past administrations have used them?  Which ones, I wonder? 

 

 

Lawsuits are a part of life, my man. Maybe not in the Big Sky country of Michigan, but they happen. 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, billsfan89 said:

 

If you live in the NYC Metro area you will hear a lot of horror stories about Trump. The two most common being his exploitation of Polish Immigrants (most of whom were illegal) and stiffing contractors. I knew personally two of my friends growing up dads who worked for construction companies that went bankrupt due to Trump not paying them out on a deal in the 1980's.

 

You also have the numerous sexual harassment complaints (although to be fair that is common for executives in that era) but yeah in NYC, Long Island, and New Jersey almost everyone knows him from his corrupt and shady business dealings as opposed to being a reality TV star. You don't have to go far to find a story of someone getting stiffed or screwed by Trump and these stories have been around the area well before Trump went Fox News conservative.

 

As far as how successful he actually is in business? I don't know, I think he was very good at building a brand but his actual real estate and casino dealings don't seem to be successful as even his dad had to buy millions of dollars of chips and not cash them to help float that operation.

Thanks for the feedback. I work in and around some small to medium contractors and developers in my area, and understand that sort of behavior is part of the process.   In fact I have heard that one of the more difficult entities to deal with is the State of NY. Notorious late player, hurry up and wait and "we'll get you your money  (maybe) when we get to it. 

 

I'm not under any illusion he's a saint, but imo none of the people that run for office are anywhere close to that standard. As for his accomplishments, again, he's The President.  The. 

 

Appreciate the response though! 

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

57 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:

Ummm if I can turn a $1M "gift" into $1B (or $4B or $5B) my only question is ... where do I sign up?

How many of you have received a gift of $1000 and turned that money into $1M? Did you consider that doing it "on your own"? Or, by virtue of receiving a thousand dollars, did that success in turning it into a million dollars rest solely with the gifter? And, if you have not managed to multiply that $1000 gift by 1000 to turn it into a $1M via investments, hard work, and/or corporate opportunities, why not?

 

Except that $1 million was reportedly actually $60.7 million.

 

And over the span of the rest of his life, Trump's father gave his son over $400 million through various means.

 

Plus, the inflation rate in 1975 was 9.13%.  If you just invest that $1 million back then, you would have been a very, VERY rich woman... like part of the top 1% rich easily.

8 hours ago, 3rdnlng said:

1 million dollars in 1975 would be worth about $4.84 million in 2019. Where did you get the figure from (60 million) that you are quoting?

 

https://www.dollartimes.com/inflation/inflation.php?amount=1000000&year=1975

 

You are talking about things that you have no knowledge of at all. Borrowing money and using leverage is partially how fortunes are made. Other favorable attributes such as hard work and good ideas along with good timing are necessary too. While bankruptcy has bad connotations with the general public, there's much more to it than you obviously know. You are in way over your head and would be better served learning rather than trying to teach others what you don't know. Your TDS is strong but your ignorance is giving it a run for its money. I shudder to think that you actually teach our children.

 

Conceded my mistake.

 

That's what you do when you make one.

 

Still waiting for you to concede yours from earlier in this thread in the spillover from our previous discussion.

 

I'm thinking with the sheer volume of personal attacks you dish out, your life must just suck.

 

For that, I'm truly, truly sorry.

 

Aloha!  :)

5 hours ago, snafu said:

 

$1,000,000 in 1976 isn’t $60,000,000 today. Not close.

There are surely a multitude of people who get a loan or an inheritance and squander it, no?  And there are surely a multitude of people who get a loan or an inheritance and buy perhaps one or two buildings with it and never do more to grow their holdings.

 

I’ll give you arrogant and self-centered. I even understand you “birthright” point.  But I think what trump did with a kickstart is a heluva lot more than sitting in a room and eating bon bons.  You going to rip on Roosevelt and Kennedy for coming from money, too? 

 

 

 

As you'll see above, I made a mistake on those numbers and I apologize.

 

But go back to the crux of the discussion, which started with a post by @Foxx and I followed with a question.

 

The point wasn't that Trump is a bad person because he came from money.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On ‎10‎/‎20‎/‎2019 at 1:37 PM, ExiledInIllinois said:

Fear.

 

It's because people grow old and scared.  Death approaches... They aren't young,  infallible.  They grow conservative.

 

Conservative = safe.

 

I just figured that when you are young you believe their BS, then as you grow older you see that everything they promise is a lie and/or a set up to promise you something else, nothing gets any better and they just get more and more power and money.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, transplantbillsfan said:

 

Except that $1 million was reportedly actually $60.7 million.

 

And over the span of the rest of his life, Trump's father gave his son over $400 million through various means.

 

Plus, the inflation rate in 1975 was 9.13%.  If you just invest that $1 million back then, you would have been a very, VERY rich woman... like part of the top 1% rich easily.


:blink: That is a lot of moving the goalposts. The original "story" is $1M from his father which he used to earn a fortune. He was wealthier than his father when his dad passed away.

If you want to use an inflation calculator to base what $1M is worth today (which makes NO sense as the money was "gifted" in 1975), click here. Even going by the illogical supposition that $1M gifted in 1975 is somehow equal to $60M (I REALLY hope you do not teach math), here is the value in today's dollars: $1,000,000 in 1975 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $4,772,472.12 in 2019, a difference of $3,772,472.12 over 44 years

Why is this a non sequitur?  President Trump was worth $3B in 1985 according to Forbes (BTW, with the scrubbing and rewriting going on online to make him seem to have inherited his wealth, this wasn't easy to find). That means sometime within the those 10 years he took $1M and made it into $3B.

 



editing to add... I see you responded and recognized your mistake on the $1M in today's dollars. We crossed in the posting. ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:


:blink: That is a lot of moving the goalposts. The original "story" is $1M from his father which he used to earn a fortune. He was wealthier than his father when his dad passed away.

If you want to use an inflation calculator to base what $1M is worth today (which makes NO sense as the money was "gifted" in 1975), click here. Even going by the illogical supposition that $1M gifted in 1975 is somehow equal to $60M (I REALLY hope you do not teach math), here is the value in today's dollars: $1,000,000 in 1975 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $4,772,472.12 in 2019, a difference of $3,772,472.12 over 44 years

Why is this a non sequitur?  President Trump was worth $3B in 1985 according to Forbes (BTW, with the scrubbing and rewriting going on online to make him seem to have inherited his wealth, this wasn't easy to find). That means sometime within the those 10 years he took $1M and made it into $3B.

 



editing to add... I see you responded and recognized your mistake on the $1M in today's dollars. We crossed in the posting. ?

 

 

for transplant, just make it up, he doesn't care what you are saying on here

 

yeah.... the green cheese subsidy from his father, all imported from the moon, was worth 3 magic beans back in 1973.

 

 

  • Haha (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:


:blink: That is a lot of moving the goalposts. The original "story" is $1M from his father which he used to earn a fortune. He was wealthier than his father when his dad passed away.

If you want to use an inflation calculator to base what $1M is worth today (which makes NO sense as the money was "gifted" in 1975), click here. Even going by the illogical supposition that $1M gifted in 1975 is somehow equal to $60M (I REALLY hope you do not teach math), here is the value in today's dollars: $1,000,000 in 1975 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $4,772,472.12 in 2019, a difference of $3,772,472.12 over 44 years. 

Why is this a non sequitur?  President Trump was worth $3B in 1985 according to Forbes (BTW, with the scrubbing and rewriting going on online to make him seem to have inherited his wealth, this wasn't easy to find). That means sometime within the those 10 years he took $1M and made it into $3B.

 



editing to add... I see you responded and recognized your mistake on the $1M in today's dollars. We crossed in the posting. ?

 

That was Trump's original self-proclaimed number, but reports are that over the span of his life and after his death, Fred Trump gave his son nearly half a billion dollars through various means, along with the correction I made of his initial gift being over $60 million rather than the $1 million he consistently claims he was given.

 

Bravo to the Donald for not pissing it all away!  :thumbsup:

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Bob in Mich said:

Perhaps this whole Trump success illusion is tied to those that watched Trump on the Apprentice.  If one formed their impressions of Trump from that tv show, they appear to think he is a brilliant American success story.  I saw that show once but I suppose they didn't address how and why he kept going bankrupt in real life.

 

If one knew of him before the Apprentice show and formed their impressions based on years of NY reporting on multiple bankruptcies, lawsuits, scams, divorces, and affairs, they are less likely to believe he is suddenly a squeaky clean president being repeatedly wrongly accused.  I think I read that Trump, in the 2016 election won approximately 18% of the NY City votes.  They have known the guy for a long time there.

The thing Trump understood throughout his bankruptcies is that if banks loans you an enormous amount of money it's they who are on the hook when you go broke.  That's why he was willing to take such huge risks.  Trump is good at marketing, reading/catering to a room (or a base of people in this case), and self promotion.  He's deficient in many other areas but those qualities are why he's the president.

On 10/20/2019 at 10:33 AM, westside2 said:

I've voted Democrat my whole life, except for this past election. I couldn't vote for Hillary after doing a bunch of research on her and her past. I'm happy so far with the job he's doing despite the witch hunt. 

This is definitely not the democratic party that I supported all my life. I don't think I'll vote for a Democrat again as long as the current "leaders" of the party are still in charge.

My first instinct when someone online says I voted Democrat my whole life is to assume they've voted Republican their whole life.  Yes, because the party was so much better off under Bill Clinton and Tom Foley.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, Doc Brown said:

The thing Trump understood throughout his bankruptcies is that if banks loans you an enormous amount of money it's they who are on the hook when you go broke.  That's why he was willing to take such huge risks.  Trump is good at marketing, reading/catering to a room (or a base of people in this case), and self promotion.  He's deficient in many other areas but those qualities are why he's the president.

 

Commercial type real estate loans either have a personal guarantee or no personal guarantee. Usually if the loans are given to a corporation or a limited partnership they will have no personal guarantee if the collateral is sufficient to secure the loan. This allows a developer to do projects that might be a little more risky than they might otherwise do. For example, Trump needed a loan to do a 100 million dollar condo project. Projections were good that he could get a return of 20% but union strikes and a jump in steel prices caused the project costs to go up and he was over budget. He had put up a 5 million dollar building as extra collateral for the project. Because of the extra costs he needed an extra 20 million to do the project. The lender was already 100 million into an unfinished project and had only a 5 million dollar building and an unfinished project to fall back on. Trump has the lender by the balls. He then proposes that the lender gives him 20 million more but reduces the interest rate on the entire 120 million by 2%. This gets the lender back mostly whole, Trump with as good of a deal as he initially planned and people in the business bitching about how Trump's project would have failed if the lender hadn't bailed him out.

 

Trump had a reputation for getting projects done on time and on or under budget. Some projects do get screwed up and are just part of being in the development business. When that happened he knew how to use leverage to get lenders to bend to his will. There's another thing that's been thrown around by the TDS people and that is bankruptcy. If they can't state what kind of bankruptcy it is then they don't knowshit about the actual specifics that they are trying to disparage Trump on.

  • Like (+1) 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

×
×
  • Create New...