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« on: March 02, 2016, 07:02:38 PM » |
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________________________________________ The Patriot Post - Alexander's Column 2-29-2016 From The Federalist Patriot Free Email Subscription ________________________________________
Trump's Most Taxing Questions Super Tuesday — Caveat Emptor
By Mark Alexander
Feb. 29, 2016
“It is natural to man to indulge in the illusions of hope. We are apt to shut our eyes against a painful truth, and listen to the song of that siren till she transforms us into beasts.” —Patrick Henry (1775)
Last Friday, after being pummeled in the 10th GOP primary debate1, Donald Trump demonstrated once again that he is the undisputed media master. As the mainstream media (MSM) prepared to devote the day’s news to the beating Trump took from Marco Rubio2 and Ted Cruz3 (both of whom defeat Trump head-to-head4), the most “establishment” of establishment candidates stepped up to endorse Trump.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, whose own campaign fell flat, joined Trump at a rally and threw his weight behind the pro-promoter5, effectively diverting attention from the previous night’s debate.
Christie, in an opportunistic bid for an attorney general appointment, declared, “Always beware of the candidate for public office who has the quick and easy answer to a complicated problem. … I just don’t think that [Trump] is suited to be president of the United States. … We do not need reality TV in the Oval Office right now. [The presidency] is not a place for an entertainer. … Showtime is over. We are not electing an entertainer-in-chief. … [If you vote for Trump] we could wind up turning over the White House to Hillary Clinton for four more years.”
Wait, that’s what Christie said before he endorsed Trump. Now he insists, “The best person to beat Hillary Clinton in November … is undoubtedly Donald Trump.”
“Undoubtedly”? Reputable polls consistently show Trump to be the only remaining Republican candidate who loses to Hillary in a head-to-head matchup. And recall that Trump previously endorsed Hillary Clinton6, saying she would be a “great president or vice-president.” When asked who was the best president of the last two decades, Trump responded, “Bill Clinton.”
Trump knows how to work the media as well as he does a crowd. But as I wrote in “The Trump Freight Train7,” Caveat Emptor: “Virtually none of his adoring media has devoted any bandwidth challenging Trump’s long list of prevarications8 — at least not yet. And the list keeps growing9. If Trump sews up the Republican nomination, the mainstream media will stop appeasing and start tearing him apart ahead of the general election — they will eviscerate him. And there is so much to hang around Trump’s neck that the barrage will be relentless until the last general election vote is cast.”
Mark my words: There’s a bottomless pit of Trump material that hasn’t YET been aired, and Democrat opposition research teams will hand it all over to their MSM enablers as soon as Trump wraps up the Republican nomination.
Over the last eight months, I have devoted a few columns to the Trump phenomenon and the danger he poses to something far more important than the Republican Party — Liberty10. I have assessed the Trump attraction11, his “New York values12,” his inexcusable diversionary tactics of playing the “9/11 Card13” and the “Veterans Card14,” and have asked, “If Trump is the answer, what is the question15?”
But beyond that critical analysis, there is the deadly serious issue of Trump’s tax returns — which he has perennially resisted releasing. Every Trump supporter should be asking one question: What is my preferred candidate trying to hide?
Trump has refused for years to release any verifiable tax information, particularly anything that might reveal his actual net worth or the organizations he supports. He has implied that it’s just too complex and too long for us rubes, or blamed lawsuits, ad infinitum…
In the most recent debate, Trump claimed, “I want to release my tax returns but I can’t release it while I’m under an audit.” He added (with a straight face, no less) that he’s being audited “because of the fact that I’m a strong Christian.” Both of those assertions are false.
It’s worth noting that he and other candidates did file some information with the Federal Election Commission last July, but that information is so broad as to be meaningless and does not begin to provide insights into who and what Trump has supported in recent years. Notably, over the weekend, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio released profile tax returns16 for the last five years, which provide much more detail than the FEC filings. They challenged Trump to do the same.
Last week, the pressure to stop evading the tax return requests17 made news again, when former presidential candidate Mitt Romney18 pushed for the release of Trump’s tax records from recent years because voters “have a right to know if there’s a problem in those taxes before they decide.”
Romney, who reluctantly released his own records in 2012, insists that the billionaire’s failure to disclose tax returns suggests he’s hiding something.
“I think we have good reason to believe that there’s a bombshell in Donald Trump’s taxes,” declared Romney. “I think there’s something there. Either he’s not anywhere near as wealthy as he says he is or he hasn’t been paying the kind of taxes we would expect him to pay or perhaps he hasn’t been giving money to the vets or the disabled like he’s been telling us he’s been doing. And the reason I think there is a bombshell in there is because every time he’s asked about his taxes, he dodges and delays and says, ‘Well we’re working on it.’”
Trump responded with his standard scorched-earth rhetoric: “Mitt Romney, who was one of the dumbest and worst candidates in the history of Republican politics, is now pushing me on tax returns. Dope! I’m going to do what Mitt Romney was totally unable to do — WIN!” For the record, Trump endorse Romney in 2012.
The question of Trump’s net worth may account for some of his evasion because he has crafted his entire persona around his billionaire image. He’s based his campaign on two central claims: He’s rich and he’s a populist. The polls prove the latter, but he is very defensive about any encroachment on the veracity of the former.
Trump is so sensitive about his billionaire image that in 2011 he launched a $5 BILLION libel lawsuit against a New York Times reporter who dared suggest that Trump may not be worth as much as he insists he is.
That reporter, Tim O'Brien, wrote in his book, “TrumpNation: The Art of Being The Donald,” that “three people with direct knowledge of Donald’s finances, people who had worked closely with him for years, told me that they thought his net worth was somewhere between $150 million and $250 million. By anyone’s standards this still qualified Donald as comfortably wealthy, but none of these people thought he was remotely close to being a billionaire.”
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