The Trump Files

That guy is an template typical Trump surrogate. Either they are:
  • A shyster.
  • A pathalogical liar.
  • A sexual predator.
  • A money-grubber.
  • Racist KKK types.
  • Jesus and/or gun fanatics branding huge crosses on their dress.
  • I am waiting for serial killer <= Can't be far behind.
Their usual defense is that Clinton is just as bad, so its ok that they are gum on the bottom of my shoe.
Truthfully, I would have expected better from you. Dissapointed out.
 
Maybe I am wrong:

What you learn when you listen to Trump voters

Houston Chronicle
Richard Morgan, Special to The Washington Post5 days ago

They operate heavy machinery. They Uber. They gush over the Olympics. Their friends are Bernie Sanders supporters. They're on the local baseball team. Yes, they want to make America great again, but Donald Trump's supporters contain multitudes. They are not, on the whole, the white-devil, frothing Confederate fanatics baffled columnists have made them out to be. So who is Team Trump, really? We met up with locals waiting in line to attend a Trump rally in Altoona, Pennsylvania, where the population is 93.8 percent white (as opposed to the national proportion of 77.1 percent), and discussed the colony at Jamestown, non-theoretical nuclear war and George Washington's personal Koran. Here's what we found.

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© John Carl D'Annibale Mobile homes at Shady Grove East mobile home park in Selkirk Wednesday morning March 16, 2011. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)
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BRIDGET RAE, 20, college student, Hollidaysburg

CHRIS SMITH, 28, sales, Altoona

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© Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Chris Smith, 28, sales, Altoona "It's a shame that we as a society came to this. I feel like the parties really messed up. Both parties, there's no excuse." Must credit: Washington Post photo by Linda Davidson
CURTIS DIEHL, 46, oil truck driver, Altoona

JACKIE SYKTICH, 54, president of DuBois Business College, DuBois

JOHNNY BALLIET, 29, doormaker, Altoona

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© Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Jackie Syktich, 54, president of DuBois Business College, DuBois "It's always a struggle when you're from a family-owned business, and he speaks to that. He speaks to the common person who makes a…
MARY CAMPBELL, 73, countertop maker, Hollidaysburg

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© Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Mary Campbell, 73, countertop-maker, Hollidaysburg "There are a lot of times that people are able to work but don't want to work. Just simply, we have an element of that in our country." Must credit…
MARY EMERY, 54, hospital hospice pastor, Duncannon

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© Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Preston Shoemaker, 16, high school junior, Altoona "To be able to see him here in our little small town, it's really neat. He kind of made it personal for Altoona." Must credit: Washington Post photo by Linda…
PRESTON SHOEMAKER, 16, high school junior, Altoona

SUSAN HARRY, 56, Huntingdon County treasurer

HOWARD R. HUGHES III, 60, writer, Mifflintown

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© Brynn Anderson, STF Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump shows off a gift given to him by a supporter during a campaign rally on Saturday in Orlando.
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© Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Bridget Rae, 20, college student, Hollidaysburg "If you can't fit it on a bumper sticker, nobody wants to hear about it. I think that's ridiculous. That's why you go to these rallies." Must credit: Washington Post…
They're skeptical

Rae: It's kind of like, whoa, is this person even real? So I'm going to find the real person, hopefully.

Smith: He's playing this very strategic game, and he's kinda doing it in an unorthodox way, and I was pretty game until I read something that he said about "why don't we use our nukes?" He asked someone three times, you know? And I have a daughter that's 6 months old. And it's like, you said that out loud? You actually said that out loud? And so now I think, do I want to enable something like that? If you've got a problem: hellfire missile, whatever. But a nuke?

Shoemaker: Personally, I could've heard more from him on the point of maybe environmental stuff.

Rae: I go to a small liberal arts college, so that's a very concentrated area of Democrats. I thought it was interesting that the Republicans on campus were, kind of ironically, not treated in a way that you would think that liberal people would treat people.

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But they relate to him

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© Linda Davidson/The Washington Post Susan Harry, 56, Huntingdon County treasurer "My husband and I had to go without health insurance because it skyrocketed under the Obamacare." Must credit: Washington Post photo by Linda Davidson
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© Hero Images, Getty Images Empty elementary school classroom
Syktich: I grew up in a family-owned trucking business. And my husband owns an appliance store. It's always a struggle when you're from a family-owned business, and he speaks to that. He speaks to the common person who makes a living. His kids seem to have grown up a little bit the way I did, with a family-run business; everybody participated, and everybody had to work...

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/what-you-learn-when-you-listen-to-trump-voters/ar-AAicYEs
 
https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-surrogate-apologizes-overstating-credentials-151115085.html

Trump surrogate apologizes for overstating credentials
AFPSeptember 3, 2016

Washington (AFP) - A black televangelist who has been a campaign surrogate for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has admitted he "overstated" his accomplishments in a biography posted on his church's website.

Mark Burns walked off the set of a CNN interview that aired Saturday after being confronted with questions about claims made on the website about his educational background and military service.

The website page has since been pulled down.

Burns issued a statement Friday declaring he was being attacked "because I am a black man supporting Donald Trump for president."

He admitted, however, that "as a young man starting my church in Greenville, South Carolina, I overstated several details of my biography because I was worried I wouldn't be taken seriously as a new pastor."

In the CNN interview, Burns acknowledged he had not graduated from North Greenville University as stated on the church website page nor was he admitted to a historically black fraternity, Kappa Alpha Psi, as claimed.

Other discrepancies raised in the CNN interview were that Burns served in the South Carolina National Guard, not in the army reserves as the website said, and that he had enrolled but never advanced in a master's program at Anderson Theological Seminary.

Burns spoke at the Republican National Convention in July on behalf of Trump, and has since made appearances as a surrogate for the New York billionaire, who is currently on a charm offensive to win over black voters.

Burns had to apologize last week after posting a cartoon of Trump's Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, in blackface, offending African American voters.

Con Men stick together.

 


You've already posted this pic on this site before.
Reverting to old habits which previously got you banned? Do you have some kind of subconscience desire to be punished for all the naughty little things you do in your private life?
 
Trump pays IRS a penalty for his foundation violating rules with gift to aid Florida attorney general

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Donald Trump is greeted by Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi at a March 14 campaign event in Tampa. (Gerald Herbert/AP)

Donald Trump paid the IRS a $2,500 penalty this year, an official at Trump's company said, after it was revealed that Trump's charitable foundation had violated tax laws by giving a political contribution to a campaign group connected to Florida's attorney general.

The improper donation, a $25,000 gift from the Donald J. Trump Foundation, was made in 2013. At the time, Attorney General Pam Bondi was considering whether to investigate fraud allegations against Trump University. She decided not to pursue the case.

Earlier this year, The Washington Post and a liberal watchdog group raised new questions about the three-year-old gift. The watchdog group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, filed a complaint with the IRS — noting that, as a registered nonprofit, the Trump Foundation was not allowed to make political donations.

The Post reported another error, which had the effect of obscuring the political gift from the IRS.

In that year's tax filings, The Post reported, the Trump Foundation did not notify the IRS of this political donation. Instead, Trump's foundation listed a donation — also for $25,000 — to a Kansas charity with a name similar to that of Bondi's political group. In fact, Trump's foundation had not given the Kansas group any money.

The prohibited gift was, in effect, replaced with an innocent-sounding but nonexistent donation.

Trump's business said it was unaware of any of these mistakes until March, when it heard from the watchdog group and The Post.

On Thursday, Jeffrey McConney — senior vice president and controller at the Trump Organization — said that after being notified, Trump filed paperwork informing the IRS of the political gift and paid an excise tax equal to 10 percent of its value.

McConney said that Trump had also personally reimbursed the Trump Foundation for $25,000, covering the full value of the improper gift. McConney blamed a series of mistakes, all of them unintentional. McConney said there had been no attempt to deceive.

"It was just an honest mistake," McConney said. He added: "It wasn’t done intentionally to hide a political donation, it was just an error."...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-rules-with-gift-to-florida-attorney-general/
 
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