Trump is a winner, he's a businessman/developer and if you want to get a sense of what he accomplished try reading "The Art of the Deal." It comes through clearly. He pretty consistently came in on time and under budget in an arena where nobody else did.This is just hard to imagine. Maybe if sufficient votes are committed by virtue of the primaries.Where do you get that? And where do you get that his father had NY political connections? His father was a fairly moderatly successful contractor, a guy who was out there on the jobs, a workaholic as I make out. Donald went out on the jobs with him as a youngster some. What he did in the real estate market in NY was pretty much done on his own. He started with close to nothing. He certainly didn't make it in NY real estate by parlaying millions of dollars he got from his dad. Read "The Art of the Deal."
"Moderately successful" is a relative description and depends on the eye of the beholder. Here's the bio-clip from Wiki:
"Trump is a son of
Fred Trump, a New York City real estate developer.
[10] Donald Trump worked for his father's firm, Elizabeth Trump & Son, while attending the
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and, in 1968, officially joined the company.
[11] He was given control of the company in 1971, renaming it
The Trump Organization.
[12][13] Trump remains a major figure in the real estate industry in the United States and a media celebrity."
"Up from slavery!" "Self-made man!" Pulled himself up from his bootstraps!" Goll-eee-- Gee!
So a year older than I am, he's handed the company or "given control" at the age of ~ 24. The road is long, the way is hard, slogging our way to lifetime achievement!!
And you're citing Trump's own book, "The Art of the Deal," as a proper perspective on this?
Of course he started from nothing! He says so!
Donald's supporters fall way short -- for not having the slightest idea of personality disorders, character, or any remembrance of how those qualities rise or fall with American presidents since the turn of the last century.
They're lost!! Like a boat with its sail flapping in the wind, looking for momentum and guidance.
"Illegal immigration -- #1 priority." Who do you think you're kidding? It's a big problem, and needs solving. But it hasn't been a problem for a half century.
Somebody gave us this list:
the economy
wars
education
the diminishing middle class
corporate welfare
the constant invasion of citizen's privacy
the climate
medical and health issues
the homeless and hungry
I'll address that list, but why don't we add another one?
Good government
There's a long-standing myth, you know, that business success and net-worth are good indicators of potential presidential success. I spit on that myth! Because -- that's what it is!
If you want to suggest examples of how those things may apply, look at the two defense secretaries for Ike and JFK.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Erwin_Wilson
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_McNamara
I suggest you ask yourself why these men were tapped for the position. What did the auto industry have in common with defense (or defense-contracting)? But if you look at McNamara, he was failing over Vietnam, because he was getting bad intelligence and locked into a stance of "no way out." So -- he quit. But he gave us seatbelts. And the way he gave us seatbelts had less to do with his "Ford experience" and more to do with his education and wartime government experience -- working with Curtis Lemay.
And you can now ask yourself why it was necessary earlier in Obama's presidency to bail out GM. Or look back to the mid-70s to see why Senator John Tower thought it imperative to bail out Lockheed Corporation.
Back to the "list."
What would happen to the economy if energy were free? A corollary question: What single thing or similar group of things is necessary for anything to move, for anyone to get to work, to wage war -- in this economy? So -- there's the economy.
What would happen to the "economy" of red-states along the Gulf Coast, with another Deep Horizon blowout? Where do you get your shrimp these days?
Wars. We had three presidents -- one Dem and one GOP -- from a single state since 1960. They gave us four wars. With some suspicion about the earliest one (mineral deposits in the South China Sea), what "thing" seemed to be associated with each and every one -- if only the remaining three?
Corporate welfare. If you look at just two big states which gave us 5 out of 9 presidencies between 1964 and the end of the 2004 presidential term, they have two big things in common. There's plenty of examples of corporate welfare, but those two industries either influence foreign policy behind closed doors, or seek a continuous infusion of cash through government contracts. "Strategic Minerals" gets special tax breaks.
Climate. That's all a matter of future cost, but we've seen costs in the present, although the deniers don't see or won't see the connection. The photo-chemistry is well-understood, the data is voluminous and goes back many decades, it can be demonstrated in a laboratory. Now -- about those future costs.
medical and health issues. In my cornpone s***a** local newspaper, the halfwits are constantly complaining about environmental regulation. Maybe the halfwits weren't around in 1968: I could stand on the edge of my UC campus, open my mouth and taste something like sour milk. I could not see the time on the clock of the campus carillon tower. We still have the worst air in the US, but compared to then? Crystal clear.
And back to an item under "health." How do you feel about shrimp with cancerous growths in your seafood linguini?
At least one of those industries or two components -- coal and oil -- do NOT want their product to be made obsolete for transportation, electricity, or heating homes. They've invested piles of excess profits into a vertically integrated refinement infrastructure that has a known lifespan and depreciation schedule. But they needn't worry too much about the investment: any new technological paradigm will phase in slowly. However, they're addicted to their short-term revenues like the world is addicted to their product. And businesses don't think so much about the long-term.
Good Government: The corruption of the Minerals Management SErvice. The appointment of a Horse-show organizer to FEMA. A crazy ditz turned congresswoman who worked at IRS in the 90s. Billions of dollars in fraudulent charges to DOD from Halliburton. Shall I go on with this?
Consider that all of this "magical black stuff" wonderfulness comes from the rot of 200-milliion-years ago -- a one-time fluke of prehistoric Nature.
That's the big, big long-term problem.
But the chuckleheads are worried about the Mez-kins in the Home-Depot parking lot. They're worried about illegals taking jobs that most Americans wouldn't take anyway (I did -- in high-school. Y'all should try it 10 hours a day, 6 days a week in the So-Cal summer sun.) I'm worried about the social security database with people acquiring phony IDs. So -- sure -- fix it.
But how hard do you think it is to do that? Something's wrong, because nobody has been able to do it. Obama pursued a record-high level of deportations, but the Cornpones still blame HIM for the problem!!
J'Accuse'! J'Accuse'! We have met the Enemy, and He be Us! Or -- he be AMONG us!