@costareports
Woodward statement: âI stand by my reporting.â
1:28 PM - 4 Sep 2018
@costareports
Woodward statement: âI stand by my reporting.â
1:28 PM - 4 Sep 2018
GWB spokesperson Ari Fleischer
@maggieNYT
Itâs worse than it seems and it already seems quite out of hand, in the new Woodward book âFear,â which Woodward colleagues @PhilipRucker and @costareports break down in detail
@kylegriffin1
Kyle Griffin Retweeted CBS Evening News
CBS News reports that the last line in Woodwardâs book is this: âTrump had one overriding problem that Dowd knew, but could not bring himself to say to the president, âYouâre an effing liar.ââ
One gets the feeling that Woodwardâs methodology is pretty bullet proof - he tapes interviews, fleshes out a complete picture with multiple sources.
At this juncture, we are spilling over in âcrazytownâ WH news - or as @matt likes to put it - the âshock and aweâ of everyday Trumplandia
A WTF compendiumâŚperhaps.
NYTimes: In âFear,â Bob Woodward Pulls Back the Curtain on President Trumpâs âCrazytownâ
More of this character busting portrait of the prez, in case you had any doubt!
WASHINGTON â As President Trump tries to refute the portrayal in the latest attention-grabbing book, he has not only denied saying the things attributed to him, he has denied that he has ever said anything like them. The problem for Mr. Trump is that, in some cases at least, the record shows that he has.
âThe Woodward book is a scam,â Mr. Trump wrote on Twitter on Friday morning about âFear: Trump in the White House,â the new volume to be published by Bob Woodward next week. âI donât talk the way I am quoted. If I did I would not have been elected President. These quotes were made up.â
In particular, Mr. Trump has denied that he called Attorney General Jeff Sessions âmentally retardedâ or a âdumb Southerner,â as the book reports. âI said NEITHER, never used those terms on anyone, including Jeff, and being a southerner is a GREAT thing,â the president wrote earlier this week.
But, in fact, Mr. Trump has used the phrase âmentally retardedâ on recorded radio shows that have been unearthed this week. And in a previously unreported incident, a journalist who used to interact with Mr. Trump during his days as a real estate developer in New York said this week that he even used the phrase âdumb southernerâ to describe his own in-laws.
Ms. MacIntosh had called Mr. Trump one day in May 1997 to ask him about a tip she had received that his second wife, Marla Maples, had purchased two gold Lexus cars and that he had made her return them.
âHe said, âI have something better for you,â â Ms. MacIntosh recalled in an interview on Wednesday. If she dropped that story, he said, he would give her bigger news â that he planned to divorce Ms. Maples. When Ms. MacIntosh pressed him on why, he âessentially blamed her family,â she said, referring to Ms. Maplesâs Georgia-based relatives.
âAre you old enough to remember the show âThe Beverly Hillbillies?â â he asked Ms. MacIntosh.
She replied yes, and Mr. Trump laughed and said, âThatâs exactly her family, except they came to New York City instead of Beverly Hills.â Ms. MacIntosh added,
âI said, âWhat do you mean?â And he said she was constantly surrounded âby an entourage of dumb Southerners.ââ He even adopted a fake southern accent to mimic Ms Maples.
Barbara Ras is a former employee of T.
Ordering an underling to do something that was impossible gave Trump the opportunity to castigate a subordinate and also blame him for anything that âwent wrongâ in connection with the unperformed order later. A Trump-style win-win.
Trump did this with outrageous or just plain stupid ideas, both legal and illegal. Sometimes those lines were blurred.
When he asked me to do something that could not be done, I often fought back, but always at a cost. Sometimes, I just did what he asked, planning for the necessary fix or damage control later.
But many times, I played along with him and then didnât carry out his order.
So when I saw the snippets of Bob Woodwardâs book and the anonymous Op-Ed piece, I wasnât surprised. To an extent, Trump has always relied on people not to follow his most ridiculous orders.
Trump is really not all that different now, but the stakes are higher. And there arenât many order refusers anymore either. Off the record, staffers tell reporters that Trump is out of control.
Tâs former lawyer, Jay Goldberg probably most famous for defending T during his two divorces from Ivana and Marla Maples has written a book on T. T has been dismissive of both Goldberg and shuts down Mr. Goldbergâs criticisms. The relationship now is very fraught and some of Goldbergâs comments needing to be walked back.
He also said that Mr. Trump sustained attacks from political foes and the press have left the president âpunch-drunk,â causing him to lash out without âappropriate restraint.â
Mr. Goldberg said he has been dismayed by some of Mr. Trumpâs comments, including recent assertions about a strong administration response to Hurricane Maria, which killed 3,000 people in Puerto Rico.
âThereâs so much pounding against him from all different directions, he says things that if he had chance to reflect he wouldnât say,â Mr. Goldberg said.
Later, Mr. Goldberg said through the spokeswoman that he didnât mean that Mr. Trump was punch-drunk. Rather, he said that he would be punch-drunk if he had to endure the attacks that Mr. Trump has seen as president
It goes on to describe some of what drives T - his âdevil-may-care attitudeâ
Mr. Goldberg said he believes that no hush payments should have been made.
âI never would do that because I never do anything which cannot stand the light of day,â he said.
He added: âNever give a person anything to hold over our head.â
Mr. Trumpâs representatives have denied that he had affairs with either Ms. McDougal or Ms. Clifford, known professionally as Stormy Daniels.
For his part, Mr. Goldberg said he believes the affairs likely took place.
âHeâs a devil-may-care guy,â Mr. Goldberg said of the president.
Mr. Goldberg recalls Mr. Trump as a disciplined client who heeded legal advice.
âHe wanted to sue this person, he wanted to sue that person,â he said. âHe felt very strongly about it. I would reject it; he would listen.â
Here are some choice words from John Kerry, who is doing a book tour but was on Bill Maher last night. The book is call âEvery Day Is Extra,â
Kerry said of Trump: âHe really is the rare combination â Heâs got the maturity of an eight-year-old boy with the insecurity of a teenage girl. Thatâs just who he is.â
Some tax evasion uncovered when Trump inherited his fatherâs fortune.
This has to be very damaging news.
Much of this money came to Mr. Trump because he helped his parents dodge taxes. He and his siblings set up a sham corporation to disguise millions of dollars in gifts from their parents, records and interviews show. Records indicate that Mr. Trump helped his father take improper tax deductions worth millions more. He also helped formulate a strategy to undervalue his parentsâ real estate holdings by hundreds of millions of dollars on tax returns, sharply reducing the tax bill when those properties were transferred to him and his siblings.
These maneuvers met with little resistance from the Internal Revenue Service, The Times found. The presidentâs parents, Fred and Mary Trump, transferred well over $1 billion in wealth to their children, which could have produced a tax bill of at least $550 million under the 55 percent tax rate then imposed on gifts and inheritances.
The Trumps paid a total of $52.2 million, or about 5 percent, tax records show.
According to tax experts, it is unlikely that Mr. Trump would be vulnerable to criminal prosecution for helping his parents evade taxes, because the acts happened too long ago and are past the statute of limitations. There is no time limit, however, on civil fines for tax fraud.
âThe theme I see here through all of this is valuations: They play around with valuations in extreme ways,â said Lee-Ford Tritt, a University of Florida law professor and a leading expert in gift and estate tax law. âThere are dramatic fluctuations depending on their purpose.â
Always a suspect number, his personal wealthâŚhas diminished mostly becauseâ Some wealthy patrons are steering clear of Trump properties, saying the country club experience is now ruined "by metal detectors and bomb-sniffing dogs."
The presidency has been bad for Donald Trumpâs finances, with his personal net worth falling from $4.5 billion to $3.1 billion over the past two years, according to the latest Forbes billionaires list.
Trump dropped 138 spots to 259 on the Forbes 400, an annual measure of the richest people in the U.S. During that same period, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos rose to the top spot, with an estimated fortune 52 times greater than that of the president, at $160 billion.
Forbes attributed the decline of Trumpâs fortune to three main factors: e-commerce eating into the value of Trumpâs real estate holdings, the intrusion of heightened security at Trumpâs resorts, and Trumpâs own over-reporting of the size of his penthouse.
This bit of insight from Trevor Noah of The Daily Show about how Trump wields victimhood for his own benefit. I couldnât find a written transcript online, so hereâs a bit from the start of the video that I transcribed myself:
I donât know if you saw that rally that he hosted where he came out and he mocked Dr. Ford. I donât know if you saw the little press conference-y moment that he gave outside the White House where he talked about men and he said âitâs a really scary time to be a man right now⌠really scary time for men. Worst time ever to be a man.â And then someone asked⌠he said âYou can be accused of something you didnât do and your life is over - Thatâs it, your life is over.â And then they asked him later âwhat about women, what is it for them?â and he said âItâs great, women are doing great.â
And you know what I realized in that moment, just looking at the sentiment and message that Trump was conveying. Itâs a really powerful thing that I think people take for granted, and that is, for me personally, I find Trumpâs most powerful tool is that he knows how to wield victimhood. He knows how to offer victimhood to people who have the least claim to it, which is a really, really powerful tool.
Cause you realize what heâs doing in that moment is heâs saying âThe real victims of the #MeToo movement are men. Theyâre the real victims.â
I agreeâŚhereâs another take similar sounding. Stay grieving over some kind of victimization. This along with anger is their magic combo.
I found an interesting study tidbit on twitter that may explain why 45 is so self-centered & callous: studies suggest that power degrades the brainâs ability to empathise:
Just readâŚ
^^^^ this is an amazing piece
I know, right?! WTF?!
All about opticsâŚ
Checking CHris Hayes MSNBC who just interviewed OliviaâŚand she talked about it feeling staged for better optics.
Good Grief!