The Art Of The Trump Con
Duration: 7:28
Views: 17
Submitted: 1 day ago
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Yo…
I ain’t here to sugarcoat Mathematical idiots, enjoy my free video as ya’ll pay ‘muh and MORE “AGAIN AND AGAIN” because you elected a ranting old Geezer who sucks at Math SOO BAD that he is a $ERIAL BANKRUPTCY FILER…
“FI$CAL Hell awaits fools who bow to MaThEmAtIcAl RETARD$!”
Kids: don’t be $UCKER$ like your idiot parents who voted this senile bastard into HIGHEST OFFICE in the Americano land…
No?
$hit ‘fuh MaThEmAtIcAl $cience BRAIN$?
Genetic fuckups are their mothers lifelong sorrow so I will allow you to my IQ borrow..
Let’s dig in to your double digit issues as I provision cognitive tissues… Donald Trump's approach American nation's affordability crisis is a direct extension of the deceptive practices that defined his business career—a reliance on bombast and illusion over substance. Having built his fortune through fraudulent means it follows that his proposed solutions are merely the same carnival tricks he used for years to dupe banks and investors.
This Conman president, born into privilege, has undeniable skill as a con artist. His companies operated for decades on scams, as evidenced in the New York Attorney General's civil trial where he tripled the square footage of his apartment to secure favorable terms. Despite this talent for extracting money, he led ventures to multiple bankruptcies. His salvation came from a different fraud: the manufactured persona of a business titan on NBC's "The Apprentice," which earned him nearly half a billion dollars only to be squandered through financial mismanagement.
This knack for bamboozlement propelled him to the presidency in 2016 and again in 2024, convincing swing voters he could alleviate post-pandemic inflation. Instead, his chaotic policies have raised costs across housing, healthcare, and groceries. He now exhibits clear irritation when aides and the press note that voters care deeply about the cost of living—a concern that taxes the limited patience of a man notoriously lazy about anything except his own ego.
His policy choices are expressions of that ego, not sound economics. He imposes tariffs impulsively, while propagandists pretend a grand theory exists. Mass deportations are driving up labor costs in agriculture and construction. His obsession with erasing Barack Obama's legacy led him to end subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, sending premiums skyrocketing.
As analysis has shown, these self-inflicted wounds are crushing household budgets. One calculation estimates a net loss of $2,250 in 2025 spending power for the median American family, even before the coming health insurance hikes. With his approval ratings falling, Trump has reverted to the instinct that brought him this far: a hurricane of lies.
First, he dismissed affordability concerns as a "hoax," a "con job," and a "scam"—a classic tactic of accusing others of his own sins. When that failed, he adopted reality-TV gambits to create an illusion of action. He anointed himself "THE AFFORDABILITY PRESIDENT" on Truth Social and, in an interview, simply repeated the lie that "prices are all coming down," hoping repetition would override people's lived experience.
His proposals are more illusion. A promised $2,000 "tariff check" would be funded by borrowing, as tariff revenue has fallen drastically short. A $12 billion farmer bailout, falsely claimed to be tariff-funded, will only cover a third of losses and is dwarfed by $40 billion given to Argentina on a presidential whim.
At a Pennsylvania rally, his aggravation surfaced. He recycled the "hoax" claim but also lashed out Scrooge-like at working parents, mocking the idea of children having numerous toys. For those unconvinced, he turns to scapegoating: blaming Democrats without power, ordering fruitless "investigations" into foreign price-fixing, and having cabinet officials falsely blame immigrants for high prices.
Polls suggest this is backfiring. In office, he can no longer sell glittering promises; people see their rising bills. Troubling signs abound: a stagnant October jobs report, the suppression of a wholesale inflation report, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent divesting his soybean farm shares—a telling move since Chinese tariffs have devastated that market. Bessent's insider move suggests no confidence in a tariff reversal.
This was confirmed by Trump's early-morning Truth Social tirade, where he called any Supreme Court decision against tariffs the "biggest threat in history" and work of "dark and sinister forces." Such rants point to a leader unmoored, whose narcissism—now worsened by apparent cognitive decline and constant flattery—prevents course correction. He would rather sacrifice his party and the country's economy than admit error, forcing everyone else to pay the price for his lifelong con. Got all that? Now let it $INK in!
Don’t argue with me, I had NOTHING TO DO with electing him to his first nor second term.. To find the $UCKER$ who did, glance at’chuh mirruh’!
“Whenever the $UB$TANCE of governance collides with a habitual fraudster, constituents get defrauded in perpetuity under fraudster discharging governing power…”
$tateless Warrior
I included subtitles for visually Impaired..
Trump’s Taj Mahal clarification;
Background
Initial Ownership and Bankruptcies: Donald Trump opened the Trump Taj Mahal in 1990. The property and its parent company went through multiple bankruptcies in the 1990s and 2000s.
Trump's Departure: By 2009, following another bankruptcy filing, Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka resigned from the company's board, and he lost his ownership stake, though the property continued to use his name under a licensing agreement.
Icahn's Ownership: In 2015, the casino emerged from its last bankruptcy under the new ownership of Carl Icahn, who acquired it with the condition that union workers' health and pension benefits would be terminated.
Events Leading to the 2016 Closure
Labor Dispute: In July 2016, the casino's main union, UNITE Here Local 54, went on strike to fight for the restoration of their health and pension benefits.
Financial Losses: Carl Icahn stated that the casino was losing millions of dollars each month and that he had already lost nearly $350 million on the property over a few years.
Closure Announcement: In August 2016, Icahn Enterprises announced that the casino would shut down after Labor Day, as a path to profitability was impossible during the strike.
Final Closure: The Trump Taj Mahal officially closed its doors on October 10, 2016, laying off nearly 3,000 employees.
I ain’t here to sugarcoat Mathematical idiots, enjoy my free video as ya’ll pay ‘muh and MORE “AGAIN AND AGAIN” because you elected a ranting old Geezer who sucks at Math SOO BAD that he is a $ERIAL BANKRUPTCY FILER…
“FI$CAL Hell awaits fools who bow to MaThEmAtIcAl RETARD$!”
Kids: don’t be $UCKER$ like your idiot parents who voted this senile bastard into HIGHEST OFFICE in the Americano land…
No?
$hit ‘fuh MaThEmAtIcAl $cience BRAIN$?
Genetic fuckups are their mothers lifelong sorrow so I will allow you to my IQ borrow..
Let’s dig in to your double digit issues as I provision cognitive tissues… Donald Trump's approach American nation's affordability crisis is a direct extension of the deceptive practices that defined his business career—a reliance on bombast and illusion over substance. Having built his fortune through fraudulent means it follows that his proposed solutions are merely the same carnival tricks he used for years to dupe banks and investors.
This Conman president, born into privilege, has undeniable skill as a con artist. His companies operated for decades on scams, as evidenced in the New York Attorney General's civil trial where he tripled the square footage of his apartment to secure favorable terms. Despite this talent for extracting money, he led ventures to multiple bankruptcies. His salvation came from a different fraud: the manufactured persona of a business titan on NBC's "The Apprentice," which earned him nearly half a billion dollars only to be squandered through financial mismanagement.
This knack for bamboozlement propelled him to the presidency in 2016 and again in 2024, convincing swing voters he could alleviate post-pandemic inflation. Instead, his chaotic policies have raised costs across housing, healthcare, and groceries. He now exhibits clear irritation when aides and the press note that voters care deeply about the cost of living—a concern that taxes the limited patience of a man notoriously lazy about anything except his own ego.
His policy choices are expressions of that ego, not sound economics. He imposes tariffs impulsively, while propagandists pretend a grand theory exists. Mass deportations are driving up labor costs in agriculture and construction. His obsession with erasing Barack Obama's legacy led him to end subsidies for the Affordable Care Act, sending premiums skyrocketing.
As analysis has shown, these self-inflicted wounds are crushing household budgets. One calculation estimates a net loss of $2,250 in 2025 spending power for the median American family, even before the coming health insurance hikes. With his approval ratings falling, Trump has reverted to the instinct that brought him this far: a hurricane of lies.
First, he dismissed affordability concerns as a "hoax," a "con job," and a "scam"—a classic tactic of accusing others of his own sins. When that failed, he adopted reality-TV gambits to create an illusion of action. He anointed himself "THE AFFORDABILITY PRESIDENT" on Truth Social and, in an interview, simply repeated the lie that "prices are all coming down," hoping repetition would override people's lived experience.
His proposals are more illusion. A promised $2,000 "tariff check" would be funded by borrowing, as tariff revenue has fallen drastically short. A $12 billion farmer bailout, falsely claimed to be tariff-funded, will only cover a third of losses and is dwarfed by $40 billion given to Argentina on a presidential whim.
At a Pennsylvania rally, his aggravation surfaced. He recycled the "hoax" claim but also lashed out Scrooge-like at working parents, mocking the idea of children having numerous toys. For those unconvinced, he turns to scapegoating: blaming Democrats without power, ordering fruitless "investigations" into foreign price-fixing, and having cabinet officials falsely blame immigrants for high prices.
Polls suggest this is backfiring. In office, he can no longer sell glittering promises; people see their rising bills. Troubling signs abound: a stagnant October jobs report, the suppression of a wholesale inflation report, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent divesting his soybean farm shares—a telling move since Chinese tariffs have devastated that market. Bessent's insider move suggests no confidence in a tariff reversal.
This was confirmed by Trump's early-morning Truth Social tirade, where he called any Supreme Court decision against tariffs the "biggest threat in history" and work of "dark and sinister forces." Such rants point to a leader unmoored, whose narcissism—now worsened by apparent cognitive decline and constant flattery—prevents course correction. He would rather sacrifice his party and the country's economy than admit error, forcing everyone else to pay the price for his lifelong con. Got all that? Now let it $INK in!
Don’t argue with me, I had NOTHING TO DO with electing him to his first nor second term.. To find the $UCKER$ who did, glance at’chuh mirruh’!
“Whenever the $UB$TANCE of governance collides with a habitual fraudster, constituents get defrauded in perpetuity under fraudster discharging governing power…”
$tateless Warrior
I included subtitles for visually Impaired..
Trump’s Taj Mahal clarification;
Background
Initial Ownership and Bankruptcies: Donald Trump opened the Trump Taj Mahal in 1990. The property and its parent company went through multiple bankruptcies in the 1990s and 2000s.
Trump's Departure: By 2009, following another bankruptcy filing, Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka resigned from the company's board, and he lost his ownership stake, though the property continued to use his name under a licensing agreement.
Icahn's Ownership: In 2015, the casino emerged from its last bankruptcy under the new ownership of Carl Icahn, who acquired it with the condition that union workers' health and pension benefits would be terminated.
Events Leading to the 2016 Closure
Labor Dispute: In July 2016, the casino's main union, UNITE Here Local 54, went on strike to fight for the restoration of their health and pension benefits.
Financial Losses: Carl Icahn stated that the casino was losing millions of dollars each month and that he had already lost nearly $350 million on the property over a few years.
Closure Announcement: In August 2016, Icahn Enterprises announced that the casino would shut down after Labor Day, as a path to profitability was impossible during the strike.
Final Closure: The Trump Taj Mahal officially closed its doors on October 10, 2016, laying off nearly 3,000 employees.
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