TRUMP: Best President ever Topic

4/4/2020 7:09 PM
"There will be death"

Happy Easter!!!!
4/5/2020 2:05 AM
“So much death. Much more death than the Democrats. My numbers are great with death. Highest death totals for a President in a long time. I really understand death. I mean, I really get this stuff. Maybe I should have been the Grim Reaper instead of running for President. I’ve been responsible for our death totals to be the best yet. Stick with Trump if you want a part of all this death.”
4/5/2020 5:56 AM
More enjoying of the pandemic by twisted Dems. Where's the idiot who claimed they didn't do that? Some very sick and/or naive people on this site.
4/5/2020 9:31 AM
We could use the sure, steady leadership of President Obama!

Spanky Trump is giving himself a "10" calling Governors names and arguing with reporters for asking "nasty"(lol) questions.
4/5/2020 10:00 AM
He’s the BEST at killing citizens. Trust him!
4/5/2020 10:29 AM
Wasn't Obama the one who taxed MEDICAL EQUIPMENT? So the manufacture went overseas because we don't make it anymore?

THANKS OBAMA! And thanks for doubling my deductible and the cost of healthcare. LIAR!

And way to sit on your *** for six months while H1N1 ravaged the nation. Do us a favor and self-contain.
4/5/2020 10:31 AM

"As of Friday, 17 of Trump’s 24 clubs and hotels around the world were closed. The latest to close was Trump’s hotel in Vancouver, Canada — which announced its closure Thursday."


"All told, the closed properties generated an average of $650,000 in revenue for Trump per day, according to Trump’s past financial disclosures." - Marketwatch April 4, 2020 at 9:17 a.m. ET

No wonder Don the Con targeted Easter, disregarding health experts

4/5/2020 11:04 AM
Revenue is not profit...but the point is not meritless. I'm hoping for Memorial Day as a target date for the area I live in (Missouri.)
4/5/2020 12:04 PM
Posted by bronxcheer on 4/5/2020 11:04:00 AM (view original):

"As of Friday, 17 of Trump’s 24 clubs and hotels around the world were closed. The latest to close was Trump’s hotel in Vancouver, Canada — which announced its closure Thursday."


"All told, the closed properties generated an average of $650,000 in revenue for Trump per day, according to Trump’s past financial disclosures." - Marketwatch April 4, 2020 at 9:17 a.m. ET

No wonder Don the Con targeted Easter, disregarding health experts


Ethics: As Democrats demonize Wall Street CEOs as the "greedy" fiends of the financial crisis, they've lined their own pockets — both before and after the crisis. Nancy Pelosi's just the latest example.

The House speaker allegedly gamed financial reforms to boost her personal stock portfolio. The brewing scandal is complicated, but here's the Reader's Digest version:

After a Pelosi staffer left to lobby on behalf of credit-card giant Visa, Pelosi delayed bringing to the House floor a bill to end lucrative "swipe fees" for Visa and other credit providers.

The bill couldn't have come at a worse time for Visa. It planned to launch an $18 billion public stock offering, so stalling Hill action became a priority. The San Francisco-based company curried favor with Pelosi by pumping cash into her re-election efforts, earning its CEO a rare one-on-one meeting with the speaker.

At the same time, Visa offered her husband a VIP cut of the IPO. Paul Pelosi jumped at the offer, buying 5,000 shares at the $44 initial price. In a couple of days, the shares soared to $64. Pelosi later bought 15,000 more, raising the total value of his investment to about $5 million. In the end, the legislation Visa fought starting in 2007 was forestalled two full years.

Publicly, Nancy Pelosi has been a frequent critic of the financial industry. The commission she impaneled in 2009 to investigate the root causes of the crisis summarily indicted Wall Street honchos, while exonerating guilty Democrats, including several who had their hands in the subprime pot. Among them:

Franklin Raines, Fannie Mae's CEO through 2005, who helped plunge the government-sponsored mortgage giant into the subprime abyss, while cooking Fannie's books to score fatter bonuses for himself and other Clinton Democrats on its board. Despite holding 20 hearings and 700 interviews, Pelosi's commission never found room for Raines on the witness list. One of the prime suspects in the crisis got off scot-free.

Henry Cisneros, Clinton's housing chief who strong-armed Countrywide Financial into signing "fair lending" contracts that exposed it to billions in risky subprime loans. Cisneros later joined Countrywide's board. (Pelosi's son also worked for Countrywide.)

Rahm Emanuel, who served on Freddie Mac's board, where he pocketed $320,000 before making millions working for an investment banker in Chicago that brokered high-cost subprime loans to minorities.

Barney Frank, who was one of Fannie's and Freddie's biggest protectors — and beneficiaries of their political donations — on Capitol Hill. Frank landed a plum Fannie job for his gay partner, Herb Moses, whose work involved relaxing Fannie's restrictions on home loans. Frank previously led the House committee charged with oversight of Fannie, which also gave at least $25,000 to Frank's mother's charity in Boston. His glaring conflicts of interest were never investigated.

Chris Dodd, the ex-Democratic senator who scored not one, but two sweetheart Countrywide mortgages, while protecting Fannie as head of the Senate committee charged with oversight of Fannie. Countrywide was Fannie's biggest customer.

Dodd and Frank did more than any other lawmakers to cover up the risks Fannie and Freddie took meeting government-imposed affordable lending quotas. Yet they got to write the law to supposedly stop the next financial crisis — one that doesn't even lay a glove on Fannie and Freddie, who together held or guaranteed almost half the subprime and other bad loans in the system when it crashed in 2008.

Maxine Waters, senior Democratic member of the House banking committee who defended Raines by arguing that reining him in would only hurt lending to lower-income and minority households.

After the subprime crisis, Waters allegedly swung $12 million in federal bailout money to her husband's ailing minority bank. Regulators cited OneUnited Bank for poor lending practices and excessive executive pay and perks — including providing its CEO a $6 million mansion and a Porsche SUV. The Waters at the time owned more than $350,000 in OneUnited stock.

It wasn't the first time Waters used her power to advance the interests of the bank. In 2002, when her husband first became a shareholder in OneUnited, the bank (then known as Boston Bank of Commerce) tried to purchase Family Savings, another minority-owned bank in Los Angeles. But when the thrift turned instead to a suitor in Illinois, Waters tried to block the merger by contacting FDIC regulators. Her efforts paid off. The thrift ended up merging with her husband's bank.

Waters remains one of Washington's most outspoken critics of "greedy" Wall Street bankers — whom she says conspired with Republicans to create the crisis.

But Democrats ought to look in the mirror. Their colleague Jon Corzine wasn't just tied to Wall Street bankers. He was one — and one of the worst.

As a Democratic senator and governor of New Jersey, Corzine decried income inequality and Wall Street pay. Then he joined MF Global Holdings and bagged a $14 million compensation package — including $2 million in guaranteed bonuses, regardless of performance.

It took Corzine just 18 months to run the Wall Street brokerage into the ground with risky bets on euro zone debt. Just hours before filing for bankruptcy, Corzine continued paying out executive bonuses, mimicking the actions of Wall Street CEOs he had criticized during the crisis.

The list of financial "greed" and sleaze on the left is long. What a bunch of hypocrites.

4/5/2020 12:54 PM

Donnie's total ineptness in dealing with this crisis adds understanding to some who have worked closely with him regarding his "prowess":

Rex Tillerson: "a f__king moron"

Gary Cohen: "dumb as sh!†" and "less a person than a collection of terrible traits"

HR McMaster: "a dope" and “An idiot [with the intelligence of] a kindergartener”

Sam Nurnberg: “this idiot”

Steve Mnuchin: "an idiot”

Rein Preibus: “an idiot”

Tom Barrack: "not only crazy, he's stupid"

4/5/2020 1:13 PM
Fact check ... which is a left wing coverup organization for the libs, claims the accusation that Pelosi kept the minimum wage below $7.25 an hour on American Samoa is false. The accusations were first made in 2007. The Fact Check denial was released in 2008. You can easily find that article. I read it and it seemed convincing until I got to the bottom and read the sources. It just didn't add up. Fact Check is for libs who want denial of the truth to cleanse themselves so they can move on ( dot org-pun intended ) and never look back. Absolved of all sin and ready once again to attack the perceived enemy they have been brainwashed and Pavloved into hating.

Here's an update.

NICOLAS CESARE | July 10, 2019

American Samoa occupies a unique place in minimum wage law. In 2007, Congress passed the Fair Minimum Wage Act, which raised the minimum wage across the nation and its territories to $7.25 an hour. The law left the door open for states and local governments to raise their own minimum wages even higher if they so desired, but no state or territory was permitted to have a minimum wage below the federal minimum wage.

So, in 2007, American Samoa began to incrementally increase its minimum wage towards the $7.25 standard, as did other U.S. states and territories. However, following economic turmoil in American Samoa, Congress amended the Fair Labor Standards Act in 2015, setting a schedule for incremental increases of the minimum wage in American Samoa based on the minimum wage as of September 29, which had not yet been raised to $7.25 an hour.

According to this new schedule, the minimum wage in American Samoa would be raised by 40 cents per hour every three years, starting on September 30, 2015, up until the point where the minimum wage in American Samoa is identical to the federal minimum wage.

2020 Minimum Wage in American Samoa: $4.98 to $6.39 per hour

Today, the minimum wage in American Samoa varies depending on industry. Those amounts, expressed as per hour wages, are as follows:

  • Canning: $5.56;
  • Shipping: $6.18 to $6.39, depending on duties;
  • Travel Services: $5.78;
  • Petroleum Marketing: $6.15;
  • Construction: $5.90;
  • Hotel: $5.30;
  • Retail: $5.40;
  • Ship Maintenance: $5.81;
  • Bottling: $5.49;
  • Printing: $5.80;
  • Finance and Insurance: $6.29;
  • Private Hospitals and Educational Institutions: $5.63;
  • Government Employees: $5.21;
  • Miscellaneous: $5.00;
  • Garment Manufacturing: $4.98;
  • Publishing: $5.93.
4/5/2020 1:22 PM
HERE ARE THE FACT CHECK SOURCES FROM THE 2008 ARTICLE:

Sources

Stouffer, Rick. "StarKist headquarters headed back to Pittsburgh." Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. 8 Oct. 2008.

Washington Times. "Pelosi moves to close Samoa wage loophole." 13 Jan. 2007.

Blumer, Tom. "Catch of the Day: The Pelosi-Samoa Connections May Be Even Deeper." NewsBusters. 12 Jan. 2007.

Associated Press. "Democrats pledge to extend federal minimum wage to all US territories." 13 Jan. 2007.

Office of Rep. Faleomavaega. "Faleomavaega Responds to StarKist’s Threats Regarding Minimum Wage." 11 May 2007.

Office of Rep. Faleomavaega. "Senator Inouye Agrees to Faleomavaega’s Request to Offer Amendment Regarding Minimum Wage in American Samoa." 18 May 2007.

Associated Press. "StarKist announces cuts in American Samoa." 19 Nov. 2008.

4/5/2020 1:27 PM

Nancy Pelosi’s vineyard makes her fourth-richest Californian in Congress

4/5/2020 1:34 PM

The top Democrat in the House of Representatives steered more than a billion dollars in subsidies to a light rail project that benefitted a company run by a high-dollar Democratic donor and in which her husband is a major investor.

When cloud computing giant Salesforce sold a large plot of land to the Golden State Warriors in April, it had House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D., Calif.) to thank for helping to swell real estate prices in the area.

Pelosi has worked for more than a decade to steer taxpayer funds to a light rail project in San Francisco’s Mission Bay neighborhood, where Salesforce had planned a new campus. Experts say the project boosted the value of Mission Bay real estate.

The company’s CEO, Marc Benioff, is a high-dollar Democratic donor. Pelosi and her leadership PAC are among the recipients of his generous campaign contributions. Pelosi’s husband is also a major Salesforce investor.

Pelosi’s tireless advocacy for federal support for San Francisco’s light rail system has come under scrutiny for potentially enriching another liberal billionaire, hedge fund manager Tom Steyer.

In Salesforce’s case, Pelosi’s work appears to have financially benefitted not just a Democratic mega-donor, but also a company in which Pelosi’s direct family owns a large stake as well as valuable real estate holdings in her husband’s portfolio.

Salesforce paid $278 million for 14 acres in Mission Bay in 2010. It bought the land from a group called Alexandria Real Estate Equities, which had purchased it from FOCIL-MB, a division of Democratic financier Tom Steyer’s hedge fund.

The exact dollar figure of its sale to the Warriors was not released. "We paid a very pretty penny," the team’s co-owner said.

ADVERTISING

Real estate values in Mission Bay have skyrocketed over the past decade as the city works to transform the former industrial neighborhood.

"From a decrepit and seemingly abandoned old rail yard 15 years ago, Mission Bay has sprouted into San Francisco’s fastest-growing neighborhood," the San Francisco Business Times reportedlast year.

San Francisco real estate is some of the most expensive in the nation, and Mission Bay has seen some of the fastest-growing property values in the city in recent years.

Contributing to that rise has been the expansion of the city’s Third Street Light Rail line. Studies on the financial effects of public transit projects, including one that looked specifically at the Third Street expansion, have found that they increase property values in surrounding areas.

Pelosi has been the expansion’s champion at the federal level. Since 2003, she has secured well over a billion dollars for the project in the form of earmarks, federal funding agreements, and stimulus disbursements.

That work has come under scrutiny since it was revealed that Farallon was a major landholder in Mission Bay as Pelosi, a recipient of Steyer campaign contributions and an ally of the billionaire environmentalist, steered taxpayer money to the light rail extension.

A 2004 real estate deal gave Farallon ownership of roughly two million square feet of commercial space in Mission Bay. Salesforce’s planned campus in the area was a bit smaller, but still significant: according to documents submitted to San Francisco Planning Department, its four buildings would have comprised nearly 1.5 million square feet.

An increase in value of Salesforce’s real estate from 2010 to its sale this year would mean a financial gain for the company and its investors, one of whom is Pelosi’s husband.

According to her most recent personal financial disclosures, filed in May of this year, Paul Pelosi owns a stake in Salesforce worth between $500,000 and $1 million.

Pelosi first invested in the company in 2000, when he purchased between $15,000 and $50,000 in stock. According to financial news service Motley Fool, "Pelosi seems to have acquired shares in a private offering" prior to the company’s 2004 initial public offering.

Its stock has soared since then. It debuted at $3.75 a share on June 23, 2004. As of Thursday, it was trading near $53.

Pelosi’s office did not respond to questions about whether that might constitute a conflict of interest.

The Democratic leader’s investments in companies with business before the House came under intense scrutiny in 2011 and 2012 when Congress debated measures governing "insider trading" by members of Congress.

An eventual law imposing stricter regulations on members’ financial activities even included language informally dubbed the "Pelosi provision" due to her and her husband’s participation in IPOs of companies actively lobbying for or against federal legislation.

Much of the information and Pelosi’s and other members’ "insider trading" came to light in Hoover Institution fellow Peter Schweizer’s book Throw Them All Out, which investigated cronyism and self-serving financial deals by members of Congress.

In addition to his reporting on Pelosi’s IPO participation, Schweizer revealed that her husband owns property in San Francisco that will likely benefit from the Third Street light rail extension.

Two stops on the extended light rail line are about three blocks from a four-story office building owned by Paul Pelosi.

According to disclosure forms, the property, at 45 Belden Place, is worth between $1 million and $5 million. He made between $100,000 and $1 million in rent from the property last year.

"The National Association of Realtors says that high-quality mass transit (like [the Third Street light rail]) can increase property values by ‘over 150 percent,’" Schweizer noted. "There’s a sweet spot for obtaining the maximum transit premium: two to four blocks away is ideal."

That was roughly the distance from Salesforce’s planned campus to a Mission Bay stop on the light rail line as well.

In addition to the potential financial benefits of that "transit premium" for investors such as Pelosi, the light rail extension worked to the advantage of Salesforce itself. The company, which would not say whether it realized a gain on its sale to the Warriors, is helmed by a high-dollar Democratic donor.

CEO Marc Benioff bundled half-a-million dollars for President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign. He has donated an additional $300,000 to Democratic candidates, party organs, and interest groups, according to data compiled by CQ Moneyline.

Benioff is more bipartisan in his contributions than many prominent Obama supporters, but his Democratic donations dwarf the $62,000 he’s given to Republicans.

Among the most recent recipients of Benioff contrubtions is Pelosi, to whom the Salesforce CEO maxed out with two $2,500 contributions on Jan. 31 of last year. He gave another $5,000 to Pelosi’s leadership PAC and $15,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee the same day.

Those contributions came just four months after Pelosi secured $967 million in federal funding for the Third Street light rail project.

4/5/2020 1:37 PM
◂ Prev 1...710|711|712|713|714...940 Next ▸
TRUMP: Best President ever Topic

Search Criteria

Terms of Use Customer Support Privacy Statement

© 1999-2024 WhatIfSports.com, Inc. All rights reserved. WhatIfSports is a trademark of WhatIfSports.com, Inc. SimLeague, SimMatchup and iSimNow are trademarks or registered trademarks of Electronic Arts, Inc. Used under license. The names of actual companies and products mentioned herein may be the trademarks of their respective owners.