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  1. submissively speaking

    submissively speaking Sassochist

    Joined:
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    Messages:
    33,317
    Donald Trump has used the phrase infested six times on twitter.

    Every single time it has been employed to describe places where a large concentration of people of colour live.

    First.jpg
    Second.jpg
    Third.jpg
    Fourth.jpg
    Fifth.jpg
    Sixth.jpg
    Seventh.jpg

    Do you see a pattern?

    I see a pattern.
     
    1. shootersa
      So, the president using the term "infested" 6 times in reference to places that minorities live means a pattern, and that he's a racist.
      And by the way, the state of California is one of your examples??

      What a reach.
      Reason and logic are nonexistent in this countries political discourse.
       
      Last edited: Jul 31, 2019
      shootersa, Jul 31, 2019
    2. submissively speaking
      It’s not a reach. It is invariably consistent.

      Willful blindness is also a thing.
       
      thinskin likes this.
  2. submissively speaking

    submissively speaking Sassochist

    Joined:
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    Interesting to note, here's a lost of America's worst rat-infested cities, as noted by Orkin Pest Control, for 2018.

    25. Columbus, OH
    24. Portland, OR
    23. Houston, TX
    22. Charlotte, NC
    21. Milwaukee, WI
    20. Cincinnati, OH
    19. Pittsburgh, PA
    18. Hartford, CT
    17. Miami-Ft. Lauderdale, Fl
    16. Indianapolis, IN
    15. Atlanta, GA
    14. Seattle, WA
    13. Boston, MA
    12. Dallas-Ft. Worth, TX
    11. Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN
    10. Denver, CO
    9. Baltimore, MD
    8. Cleveland, OH
    7. Philadelphia, PA
    6. Detroit, MI
    5. San Francisco, CA
    4. Washington, DC
    3. New York, NY
    2. Los Angeles, CA
    1. Chicago, IL

    Huh. Both DC and NYC have a worse rat problem than Baltimore. Imagine that.
     
    1. aesopstails
      Are you drunk? I can’t imagine why else you might expect factual information from someone who knows more about fake tans than about geography or the actual circumstances and experiences of the average American and our cities. *raises glass to join you*
       
      aesopstails, Jul 31, 2019
    2. Sanity_is_Relative
      Do not forget to add the city of Conroe Texas to that list, they lump it in with Houston but it is its own city and even in the areas near the resorts rodents are very common in any structure that is not occupied full time or is left empty for more than a week.
       
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
      stumbler likes this.
  3. conroe4

    conroe4 Lake Lover In XNXX Heaven

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    Aren't NYC and DC larger than Baltimore? And by default, have more rats? Trump's right. Baltimore is fucked up.
     
    • Agree Agree x 1
    1. Sanity_is_Relative
      If Baltimore is so bad why is it that tRump does not call out the slum lords that cause the issues?
      TRUMP’S RACIST RANT OMITS KUSHNER’S VERMIN-FILLED PROPERTIES
       
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
      stumbler likes this.
    2. conroe4
      He did, and the black guy squaked...RACIST!!!!
       
      conroe4, Jul 31, 2019
    3. Sanity_is_Relative
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
      stumbler likes this.
  4. submissively speaking

    submissively speaking Sassochist

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    Nah man. That's not based on geographic area and numbers. That's per capita.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    1. View previous comments...
    2. conroe4
      For Pete's Sake, the lake is 22,000 acres, and I truly doubt you have a family friend. Now I invite you to go attempt the impossible self-coital act.
       
      conroe4, Jul 31, 2019
    3. shootersa
      Attaboy! Sanity
       
      Last edited: Jul 31, 2019
      shootersa, Jul 31, 2019
      conroe4 likes this.
    4. Sanity_is_Relative
      Dippie boy just as it just rained on you a few minutes ago I have friends and family in the Conroe area,in fact all over Montgomery county.
       
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
    5. conroe4
      I'm done with your insanity. But yes, we had a nice frog choker. Washed away all the spilt beer from our BBQ.
      Sun is shining creating a sauna. Pretty nice here right now. Since you didn't understand my last missive, I'll put in
      language you can understand. Go fuck yourself. :dickhead:
       
      conroe4, Jul 31, 2019
    6. Sanity_is_Relative
      Been there done that.
       
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
  5. submissively speaking

    submissively speaking Sassochist

    Joined:
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    Look, the point is not whether or not a city has rats. Lots of them do. You might as well judge cities for having bedbugs, or kids for having lice. It's just a fact for urban centers, you deal with it.

    It's the dehumanizing associations and the patterns in which they are used in his language that are the problem.

    I mean, sweet fancy crackers, guys. These are the homes and neighbourhoods of Americans he's talking about.
     
    • Agree Agree x 1
    1. View previous comments...
    2. shootersa
      And where have you been, declaring that deplorables around here are being mean and rude all the time but ignoring despicables around here continually attacking anyone who doesn't toe the line.

      See, cuts both ways.

      Now, do you want to get back on point or did you think playing pigeon chess will serve your need?

      Cause you should know by now, Shooter doesn't play chess with pigeons.
       
      shootersa, Jul 31, 2019
    3. submissively speaking
      I asked you a question. How do you get there? How do you get to defending at all costs, knowing the man's a poor leader, misogynist, racist, xenophobe? I mean, even by your own admission you wish he'd shut the fuck up. I imagine that's because it's highly inconvenient, trying to defend such buffoonery.

      Inconvenience aside, I wanna know why. Why is it important to defend? Because of the office? Because of the ideal? Because of the man? Which is it?

      Because if the man defiles the ideals and the office ~ which I would of course assert that he does ~ then I would think that would be enough for you to step back and think about what you're doing, and what you're perceived to be doing.

      So that leaves me with the wealth - which you're entitled to, of course - or that you actually do support his principles.

      What else is there?
       
      thinskin likes this.
    4. shootersa
      One last time.
      Shooter, and a few Million other Americans voted against Clinton.
      We hoped that the only alternative (Trump) wouldn't screw up to bad.
      We just hoped he would hold the office until 2020, you know, when we could have another election.

      But surprise, Trump actually started doing what he said he would.
      And he's got butt hurt despicables biting their tails.

      So, see, there is no reason to "defend" Trump.
      He's doing better than expected.
      And especially there is no reason to defend him against made up propaganda from the left.

      Like most of what you spewed out in this conversation.
       
      shootersa, Jul 31, 2019
  6. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Attaboy!
     
  7. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Trump’s story about almost dying in a helicopter crash is a lie: Former Trump Org exec

    https://www.rawstory.com/2019/07/tr...icopter-crash-is-a-lie-former-trump-org-exec/
     
  8. Sanity_is_Relative

    Sanity_is_Relative Porn Star

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    Donald Trump was a nightmare landlord in the 1980s
    by Jose Pagliery @Jose_PaglieryMarch 28, 2016: 11:25 AM ET


    There's an episode in Donald Trump's past that shows just how far this billionaire businessman will go to get his way.

    It began in 1981. Trump bought a 14-story building on prime real estate facing New York City's Central Park.


    His plan was to tear down the building and replace it with luxury condos. But first he needed a small band of rent-stabilized tenants out of there.

    To succeed, Trump played rough, according to lawsuits filed by the tenants. Renters said he cut heat and hot water, and he imposed tough building rules. Trump even proposed sheltering homeless people in the building.

    It went on for five years as Trump fought tenants, real estate lawyers, New York state regulators and city officials.


    CNNMoney reviewed 2,895 court documents -- most of them now only available on microfiche at New York state courts -- that detail a fight that's now largely forgotten.

    Leaks, rats and bitter cold


    By 1981, Trump was already the epitome of American business bravado. At 35 years old, he had cut historic multi-million dollar land deals, saved a blighted midtown Manhattan subway hub, and was in the process of erecting the black-framed glass behemoth of Trump Tower.

    The next move in his real life game of Monopoly came in July 1981, when he bought a hotel and its neighbor, a rent-stabilized building at 100 Central Park South.

    Two months later, he applied for a demolition permit to blow it up. Trump fired the building manager and replaced him with Citadel Management. In his book, The Art of the Deal, Trump himself said he chose a company that "specialized in relocating tenants."

    Just a few months later, on New Year's Eve, several tenants received identical "lease violation" warning letters. The previous building owner had given renters permission to knock down walls and renovate their apartment units. But Trump was reversing that exception, and renters had only 12 days to rebuild the walls -- or face eviction.

    The renters hired a real estate lawyer known in New York City for being particularly aggressive. They sued Trump and his company, Park South Associates. CNNMoney identified at least two instances in which New York state judges stepped in to put Trump's lease violation notices on hold.


    In their 1982 lawsuits, the tenants said Trump had cut off their hot water and heat during New York's freezing winters and stopped all building repairs. One claimed he allowed "a rodent infestation of the premises." Another said he imposed burdensome new rules in an attempt to force them out.

    For example, Trump's new building manager claimed there was a burglary in the building. Dentists with apartment offices were ordered to send patients to the garbage-filled service elevator, according to building management documents and a dentist's lawsuit that tried to fight it.

    Dr. Michael Richman refused to comply with the new rule, complaining in court documents that Trump "mounted a campaign of harassment."

    "Mr. Trump is willing to resort to any device or tactic to drive out the tenants from the building," he said.

    Trump's lawyers fought back, questioning whether the dentist's office even qualified for rent control.

    Back then, many of the building's tenants were retirees or older professionals and have since died. All that remains of their tale is detailed in sworn affidavits and court testimony.

    One time, Trump sued a tenant for not paying rent -- even though the guy, Anderson Clipper, actually did. New York City Judge Jay Stuart Dankberg eventually blasted Trump for the "spurious and unnecessary" lawsuit, according to The New York Times. The judge dismissed the lawsuit, said Trump was trying to "harass" Clipper, and forced the developer to refund 5% of Clipper's rent.

    "To most landlords happiness is having tenants who pay the rent each month without prodding or litigation," Dankberg wrote. "However, [Trump] is apparently searching for double happiness."

    Clipper died this past October. His 72-year-old estranged wife, Nancy Clipper, didn't live with him at the Trump-controlled apartment building. But she remembers all he endured with Trump as his landlord: the lawsuits and the refusal to fix things.

    "It was really a horrible experience," she recently told CNNMoney. "He was insensitive, rude, and just a generally nasty man. I would never have considered him presidential."

    Trump tells a very different story in his book, The Art of the Deal. He described the renters as privileged, rich "yuppies" who benefited unfairly from rent-control. The rent Trump collected barely covered expenses. That's why he installed cheaper light bulbs and cut back, he wrote.

    "If there's one thing I've learned about the rich, it's that they have a very low threshold for even the mildest discomfort," Trump wrote.

    To be fair, these people had an unbelievably sweet deal: low-rent homes a short stroll away from Broadway theaters and Carnegie Hall. Dr. Richman paid $700 a month for Apartment 5C. Fashion designer Arnold Scaasi paid $985 for his mind-blowing, six-bedroom with killer views of the park.

    In New York City, this is the stuff of legend. But the law protected them. Yet Trump kept up the pressure.

    The building's superintendent, Anthony Ramirez, swore in court that Trump's building managers gave him explicit instructions.

    "They didn't want any repairs done. No cleaning. No accepting of packages," Ramirez said, according to transcripts of a court hearing.

    As a result, Scaasi's luxurious apartment was plagued by water leaks -- one that put at peril his art collection, which included a 1926 Picasso painting and works of art by Claude Monet and others.

    A 10-month water pipe leak in Apartment 14B got so nasty that two brothers who grew up in there saw brown-and-white mushrooms sprouting from their bedroom carpet, according to court documents and recent CNNMoney interviews.

    "It felt like we were under attack," one of the brothers, now 57 and living north of the city, told CNNMoney recently. "Trump did his best not to repair anything."

    Then it got really dirty.

    Trump put out newspaper advertisements in 1982 and 1983 offering to shelter homeless people in the apartment building. The move was seen by tenants as a ruthless attempt to drive them out.

    Trump denied that, telling The New York Times: "Some people think I'm just doing a number on the people in the building. That's not true. I just want to help with the homeless problem. It'll take two or three years to get everybody out, and in the meantime I'll have more and more vacant apartments for the indigent."

    He even offered to pay for nurses and medical supplies to treat the homeless.

    But a top city official, Human Resources Administration deputy administrator Robert Trobe, told the Times that Trump's offer did "not seem appropriate."

    There was alleged spying too. Trump's building manager told Ramirez, the superintendent, to monitor "the personal habits of the tenants" and "keep a list on the tenants' activities," according to his repeated sworn testimony in several transcripts.

    Ramirez resisted.

    "Sir, I have too many things on my conscience at this late stage in life, and I don't need anymore headaches. I'm here to do my job and to do repairs to the building," Ramirez recalled telling a building management representative.

    "What are you, Born Again Christian?" the manager replied.

    In a sworn affidavit signed April 18, 1985, Trump denied these complaints. First, Trump claimed he didn't directly run the building owner, Park South Associates (even though corporate documents show he owned 60% of the company and was the only listed officer). Then he swore he kept the building in tip-top shape. Plus, a previous year's inspection by New York state's housing agency backed him up, finding that "all public areas were clean."

    But in 1985, that same state agency went after Trump too. New York state's Division of Homes and Community Renewal sued, charging him with harassing tenants. Months later, the city of New York filed a similar suit.

    There was a brief glimmer of peace that year. According to court documents, Trump and the leader of the tenants' association discussed a potential deal: The renters would team up and buy the building for $15 million -- and free themselves from their landlord.

    But Trump used that opportunity to accuse the renters of shady behavior: using lawsuits of harassment to cover up their real mission.

    Tenants were "waging a ceaseless guerrilla-type war... to coerce a bargain sale of the building," Trump's attorneys claimed in court documents. He sued them for $150 million.

    It only escalated the legal battle. By 1986, Trump had spent more than $1 million fighting the tenants, according to his attorneys at the time. By comparison, he'd spent $160,000 in repairs over four years, according to statements filed by his legal team.

    Trump finally settled with the tenants' association in 1986. He cut their attorneys a $550,000 check and agreed to let the housing agency monitor repairs for five years.



    Filling a cancer patient's apartment with dust


    But the alleged harassment dragged on with one elderly couple, Alvin and Catalina Meyer. The elderly woman was dying of cancer and plagued with emphysema -- so it was a particularly rude awakening when Trump's construction workers woke her up at 7 a.m. by drilling holes in the ceiling above her bed.

    The construction crew had also set up a workstation in the apartment next door, and Mrs. Meyer complained of the dust in the air.

    "I am a very sick woman battling for my life," she said in court papers. "I have begged for reasonableness. The landlord will not be reasonable."

    After nearly a decade of nonstop fighting, tenants started turning on one another. Trump said he couldn't fix the building's heating system, because Meyer didn't give construction workers access to her apartment. Fellow tenants told Meyer to back down. Meyer's lawsuit fizzled out when her own attorney left her.

    The fighting died down in the 1990s -- then popped up again in 2000 when 72-year-old Carmel Reingold in Apartment 2A sued Trump in New York State court when he overcharged her $40,000 in rent over four years. He paid that money back.

    CNNMoney reached out with questions to Trump's 2016 presidential campaign several times over the past week, but has received no reply.

    In the end, no judge ever ruled that the tenants were being harassed. After all, he did settle. But Trump didn't get his way either. The building remains in place today. Trump's company owns 18 units, according to city records. Trump's son, Eric, owns a flat on the top floor. At least two renters actually bought their apartments. Most moved away.

    But it remains a defining moment that shows his character, said Wayne Barrett, an investigative journalist in New York who documented the businessman's empire in the book Trump: The Deals and the Downfall.

    "This was a concrete choice he made, knowing he would disrupt the lives of many middle income, elderly people," Barrett said. "He has absolutely no excuse."



    CNNMoney (New York)First published March 28, 2016: 9:35 AM ET
     
    • Like Like x 2
    1. conroe4
      really? show of hands as to who read this. not me.
       
      conroe4, Jul 31, 2019
    2. Sanity_is_Relative
      I did. If you wanted the truth about das fuehrer you would read it as well but you prefer to be blinded from reality so that you can continue to believe the lies that you are being fed.
       
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
    3. conroe4
      Nope, I don't bother to read leftest drivel. That shit ain't the truth, as you blather.
       
      conroe4, Jul 31, 2019
    4. Sanity_is_Relative
      That article was published by Money Magazine, a financial publication that tRump praised for their incite in the past. It is not leftist as you claim, it is pure truth that does not support your vision of what the dear leader claims.
       
      Sanity_is_Relative, Jul 31, 2019
  9. Sanity_is_Relative

    Sanity_is_Relative Porn Star

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    • Like Like x 1
  10. Sanity_is_Relative

    Sanity_is_Relative Porn Star

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    Trump 'rodent' tweets ring true at Kushner-owned apartments
    [​IMG] REGINA GARCIA CANO and BERNARD CONDON,Associated Press 7 hours ago

    [​IMG]
    In this Monday, July 29, 2019, photo, townhouses stand at The Commons at White Marsh, owned by the Kushner Cos., in Middle River, Md. Jared Kushner’s family real estate firm owns thousands of apartments and townhomes in the Baltimore area, and some have been criticized for the same kind of disrepair and neglect that the president has accused local leaders of failing to address. (AP Photo/Steve Ruark)
    BALTIMORE (AP) — Davon Jones doesn't have to look far to see the irony in President Donald Trump's tweets that Baltimore is a "rat and rodent infested mess." His apartment owned by the president's son-in-law has been invaded by mice since he moved in a year ago.

    "I don't know how they come in," Jones says. "Every time I catch them, they come right back."

    Jared Kushner's family real estate firm owns thousands of apartments and townhomes in the Baltimore area, and some have been criticized for the same kind of disrepair and neglect that the president has accused local leaders of failing to address. Residents have complained about mold, bedbugs, leaks and, yes, mice — plenty of mice. And they say management appears in no hurry to fix the problems.

    "They don't care," says Dezmond James, who says he has spotted as many as three mice a week since he moved in to the Commons at White Marsh in suburban Middle River four years ago.

    James says he sees a massive contradiction in Trump's much-publicized tweets laying the blame for Baltimore's poverty, crime and rodent problems on frequent antagonist Maryland Rep. Elijah Cummings. Trump, he said, should look more at what he — and specifically Kushner — could do about it.

    "His son-in-law owns all of this — then he can fix it. I'm pretty sure he has a lot of money," says James, who is studying to be a medical assistant. "That's kind of weird that you want to talk trash. ... If you want to make improvements, you can make improvements."

    Conditions got so bad two years ago that the Baltimore County government issued a release showing the Kushner Cos. had violated housing codes more than 200 times in just 10 months and only moved to fix the problems after being threatened with fines.

    "I had black mold in my cabinets. I called them, I called them, I called them. And they never did anything," says Simone Ryer who moved out Whispering Woods in Middle River two years ago. "That was more than enough for me to leave."

    In a statement, the Kushner Cos. said it was proud of its Baltimore-area apartments and has worked to maintain a "high quality residential experience for our tenants" by investing "substantial amounts" in upkeep.

    A website for the Commons at White Marsh boasts of "amenities that amaze," but many of the 181 comments posted by residents at the review site apartmentratings.comcomplain of rats, mold, bedbugs, roaches and leaks. The reviews say management is generally unresponsive.

    A 2017 report by the New York Times and ProPublica about residents at Kushner-owned developments echoed many of those online complaints, with one woman saying she found a mouse on her 12-year-old child's bed. The Kushner Cos. told the Times at the time that it is had spent $10 million on its properties, but their age means issues can still arise.

    A Baltimore Sun story the same year found the Kushner Cos. used the courts to arrest tenants late on rent more than any other landlord in the state.

    And a lawsuit seeking class-action status for residents alleges Westminster Management, the Kushner subsidiary that oversees rental properties in Maryland and other states, often charges tenants illegal and excessive fees that keeps them in constant fear of eviction and guessing what they owe. Westminster has said it has broken no laws and denies the charges.

    Jared Kushner took in $3.1 million from Westminster in the past two years, according to financial disclosure reports he filed with the federal government. He stepped down as CEO of parent company Kushner Cos. when he and his wife, Ivanka Trump, joined the White House as senior advisers to the president, but he still retains a financial interest and draws money from many of its operations.

    At the Kushners' Dutch Village community in Baltimore, Ronald Newson says his 86-year-old mother, Carrie, has been asking maintenance staff for nearly a year to patch a hole in her ceiling from a leak on the second floor, and that someone has to come to kill all the mice she's been living with.

    As a stopgap measure, she jammed the leg of a chair against a hole in the corner of her living room, but they kept coming out anyway. They also come from behind her stove.

    "It takes them a long time to get repairs done," the son said. He suggested that Trump, instead of blaming Cummings for the city's problems, should look to landlords like Kushner, too.

    "He talks about everyone but his son-in-law."
     
  11. Sanity_is_Relative

    Sanity_is_Relative Porn Star

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  12. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    meth.png
    Donald Trump Has Made More Than 12,000 False or Misleading Claims Since Becoming President: WaPo

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/donal...claims-since-becoming-president-wapo?ref=home
     
  13. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Trump just outed himself lying about China paying for the tariffs: MSNBC hosts Velshi and Ruhle

    https://www.rawstory.com/2019/08/tr...for-the-tariffs-msnbc-hosts-velshi-and-ruhle/
     
  14. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    It does not matter how often it is exposed as a lie. Trump wants it to be true and that's all that matters. Even if he is trying to lie to veterans.

    Trump gets ruthlessly mocked after he’s caught repeating the same lie for the 80th time

    https://www.rawstory.com/2019/08/tr...ght-repeating-the-same-lie-for-the-80th-time/
     
  15. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    I'd say out of all the fact checkers I like Daniel Dale the most. For one thing he's a Canadian that writes for the Toronto Star. So he has a slightly different perspective on things. And damn is he good. He can expose Trump's lies in tweets just about as fast as Trump can tell them.But I think its more than just fact checking Trump. Its become a fascination for him. A phenomenon that he wants to study as something he's never really seen before. So he goes word tracking and lie tracking to see where it takes him. And it is fascinating.

    CNN fact checker tracks down the potential origin of one of Trump’s most baffling lies

    https://www.rawstory.com/2019/08/cn...l-origin-of-one-of-trumps-most-baffling-lies/
     
  16. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    ‘Not true at all’: CNN’s fact-checker says even the professor Trump cited on Google election fraud says president is lying

    https://www.rawstory.com/2019/08/no...oogle-election-fraud-says-president-is-lying/
     
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  17. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    One way we can tell its literal and clinical mental illness is as Dr Lance Dodes said normal people lie to gain some kind of advantage. But Trump's lies are dangerous and destructive to him, But he can't stop. And that is how we know we are dealing with psychosis.

    And we can see that right here. Not just the lie but how ignorant and pathetic it is. Trump tries to make himself the hero by telling a lie that if it were true they'd close those hospitals down. Leaving them no fucking choice but to go public to deny it.

    Hospitals Say Trump Lied About Doctors ‘Coming Out of the Operating Rooms’ to Greet Him in El Paso and Dayton

    https://www.mediaite.com/news/hospi...ing-rooms-to-greet-him-in-el-paso-and-dayton/
     
  18. gammaXray

    gammaXray Porn Star

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    69484449_1167202266800203_1742125137114693632_n.jpg
     
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  19. Distant Lover

    Distant Lover Master of Facts

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    Anyone who believes Trump about anything is delusional.