• The Big Cheat: How Donald Trump Fleeced America and Enriched Himself an

    From " @1:229/2 to All on Tuesday, November 30, 2021 21:13:09
    XPost: alt.guitar.amps
    From: BiteMe@Bitch.org

    The Big Cheat: How Donald Trump Fleeced America and Enriched Himself and
    His Family.



    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/e2c52165291405c4fde3b41d15651b5920e09916dba08692aeb412dbd72a287f.jpg


    In the book, Johnston calculated that $1.7 billion in revenue flowed
    through Trump and his organizations during his four years as commander-in-chief.

    Jason Johnson asked Johnston whether those who are still giving money
    to Trump should be considered "victims" or "volunteers."

    "I figure at this point, if you're getting fleeced by Donald Trump,
    there's but so many times somebody can send you an email that says: 'I'm
    a prince in a foreign country. Please send me 20,000.' If you fall for
    it three times, don't you almost deserve it?" the MSNBC host asked.

    Johnston responded with a specific example.

    "There certainly are people I describe in the book who are victims, like
    a dying man who sent $500, half of his income for the month, and then
    the Trump campaign tapped his bank account until they drained it, and
    they did this to many, many, many people," Johnston said.

    He added that many of Trump's supporters "have simply come to hate
    America" and are "very unhappy," pointing to the fact that the bottom 90 percent of Americans had a smaller income in 2019 than in 1973.

    "So a lot of people are really unhappy about the conditions in America,
    and they see Donald as their savior, even though he has no capacity to
    do that," Johnston said. "He's really out just to line his pockets, his family's pockets, and in his administration, encourage others, including
    two cabinet secretaries I write about, to use the government to enrich themselves and their families, rather than serving the public in a
    position of trust."

    Johnston said the goal of the book is tying together "loose threads" of
    news reports from Trump's presidency to "create a tapestry" that allows
    people to see "how they were doing this, what they were doing, why it's inimical to your interests, and most importantly ... there are actually solutions to this that I lay out."

    "Since Donald Trump left office, it's very clear that what he's doing is
    he's become America's beggar in chief," Johnston added. "That's how he
    makes his living, and he's going to need a lot of it once he's indicted
    to pay criminal defense lawyers."

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    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)