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Post by Trades on Jan 3, 2017 11:25:32 GMT -5
Clinton Foundation - bad. Eric Trump Jr (aka The Human Fund) Foundation and $500k to go hunting with Uday and Qusay - good $1,000,000 to meet President Trump after inauguration - good $75,000 for coffee with Ivanka - good Beauregard Sessions- worst prosecutorial misconduct ever seen by a judge, and skipped over the part on his appointee form where it asks have you ever been rejected for any federal posts - Good Tom Price- insider trading on medical stocks while in Congress- Good Michael Flynn partnering with seller of biomedical secrets to former KGB agent - good Pressuring Kuwait to cancel their event registration at the Four Seasons and rebook at Trump P.O. hotel- which they did - good Saddam Husseins daughter complimenting Trump s political sensibilities - excellent ]Donald Trump wishing he could date his daughter Ivanka and talking about Tuffany's breasts when she was an infant - priceless Charging guests $575 to attend new year's party- no problem His country club charged them, not his foundation or his campaign. There is a difference.
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 4, 2017 9:09:11 GMT -5
Not a problem! At all!
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 4, 2017 13:32:08 GMT -5
Not a problem! At all!
Finally, he has found a way to get out of that mountain of nearly a billion dollars in debt. 'Billionaire' sure, has to charge people to get into his New year's eve party
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Post by bxjetfan on Jan 4, 2017 14:56:15 GMT -5
So you suspect a crime was committed and Democrats did nothing about it? Exactly how many people did Obama prosecute in the banking/mortgage industry after the housing collapse?
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Post by The Tax Returns Are in Kenya on Jan 5, 2017 22:28:46 GMT -5
Not a problem! He underreported his debt by at least a factor of six . That's not lying or anything.
An analysis by the Wall Street Journal published Thursday found that the incoming president owes at least $1.85 billion in debt to as many as 150 Wall Street firms and other financial institutions.
According to the examination of legal and property documents, “Hundreds of millions of dollars of debt attached to Mr. Trump’s properties, some of them backed by Mr. Trump’s personal guarantee, were packaged into securities and sold to investors over the past five years,” thus “broadening the tangle of interests that pose potential conflicts for the incoming president’s administration.”
In May, Trump filed documents with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) that disclosed $315 million owed to 10 companies—but that only included debts for companies that Trump completely controls, “excluding more than $1.5 billion lent to partnerships that are 30 percent owned by him,” WSJ reported.
“As a result,” wrote WSJ reporters Jean Eaglesham and Lisa Schwartz, “a broader array of financial institutions now are in a potentially powerful position over the incoming president. Put more directly, as Think Progress‘s Judd Legum did: “As president, Trump will be responsible for regulating entities that he also owes money to.”
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