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HAPPY FLAG DAY BIRTHDAY BOY

  

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By:  john-russell  •  3 years ago  •  10 comments

HAPPY FLAG DAY BIRTHDAY BOY
My personal favorite lie: Trump was once named Michigan's Man of the Year Trump has never lived in Michigan. Why would he have been named Michigan's Man of the Year years before his presidency? He wouldn't have been. He wasn't. And yet this lie he appeared to have invented in the final week of his 2016 campaign became a staple of his 2020 campaign, repeated at Michigan rally after rally. It's so illustrative because it makes so little sense.


800

Happy Birthday to One of America's Most Impactful Presidents


h/t to The 15 most notable lies of Donald Trump's presidency - CNNPolitics




The most telling lie: It didn't rain on his inauguration

Trump began his presidency by lying about the weather.

It   rained   during   Trump's inaugural address. Then, at a celebratory ball later that day, Trump   told the crowd   that the rain "just never came" until he finished talking and went inside, at which point "it poured."


This was the   first lie   of Trump's presidency. Like his lies that same week about his inauguration crowd, it hinted at what would come next.


The President would say things that we could see with our own eyes were not true. And he would often do this brazen lying for no apparent strategic reason.





The most dangerous lie: The coronavirus was under control






Trump speaks at the beginning of a new conference with members of the coronavirus task force, February 26, 2020 in Washington, DC. Trump updated the American people about what his administration's 'whole of government' response to the global coronavirus outbreak.





This was more like a family of lies than a single lie. But each one -- the lie that the virus was   equivalent to the flu ; the lie that the situation was " totally under control "; the lie that the virus was " disappearing " -- suggested to Americans that they didn't have to change much about their usual behavior.


A year into the crisis, more than 386,000 Americans have died from the virus.

We can't say with precision how the crisis would have unfolded differently if Trump had been more truthful. But it's reasonable to venture that his dishonesty led to a significant number of deaths.



The most alarming lie saga: Sharpiegate






Trump references a map held by acting Homeland Security Secretary Kevin McAleenan while talking to reporters about Hurricane Dorian in the Oval Office at the White House September 4, 2019 in Washington, DC.





Trump tweeted in 2019 that Alabama was one of the states at greater risk from Hurricane Dorian than had been initially forecast. The federal weather office in Birmingham then tweeted that, actually, Alabama would be unaffected by the storm.


Not great, but fixable fast with a simple White House correction. Trump, however, is so congenitally unwilling to admit error that he embarked on an   increasingly farcical campaign   to prove that his incorrect Alabama tweet was actually correct, eventually showcasing a hurricane map that was crudely altered with a Sharpie.


The slapstick might have been funny had White House officials not   leaped into action behind the scenes   to try to pressure federal weather experts into saying he was right and they were wrong. The saga proved that Trump was not some lone liar: he was backed by an entire powerful apparatus willing to fight for his fabrications.


The most ridiculous subject of a lie: The Boy Scouts



When I emailed the Boy Scouts of America in 2017 about Trump's   claim   that "the head of the Boy Scouts" had called him to say that his   bizarrely political address   to the Scouts' National Jamboree was "the greatest speech that was ever made to them," I didn't expect a reply. One of the hardest things about fact checking Trump was that a lot of people he lied about did not think it was in their interest to be quoted publicly contradicting a vengeful president.


The Boy Scouts did. A senior Scouts source -- a phrase I never expected to have to type as a political reporter in Washington, DC --   confirmed   to me that no call ever happened.

Yep, the President of the United States was lying about the Boy Scouts.



The ugliest smear lie: Rep. Ilhan Omar supports al Qaeda

At a White House   event in 2019 , Trump grossly   distorted   a 2013 quote from Rep. Ilhan Omar to try to get his supporters to believe that the Minnesota Democrat had expressed support for the terrorist group al Qaeda.



Trump went on to   deliver   additional bigoted   attacks   against Omar in the following months. But it's hard to imagine a more vile lie for the President to tell about a Muslim official -- who had   already been getting death threats   -- than a smear that makes her sound pro-terrorist.







The most entertaining lie shtick: The burly crying men who had never cried before

They were almost always male. They were almost always large. They were almost always blue-collar. And, according to the President, they kept walking up to him crying tears of gratitude -- even though they had almost always not previously cried for years.


Trump's   series of Tears Stories   -- which sometimes doubled as   "Sir" Stories   -- helped me understand his lying as a kind of performance art.


The stories were oddly grandiose, like something you'd hear from a two-bit foreign strongman. They were also pure shtick. Trump was like a touring stand-up comic, refining and re-using his favored dishonesty bits until they stopped working for him.



The biggest lie by omission: Trump ended family separation

Much of Trump's lying was clumsy, half-baked. Some of it was almost art. Here's what he   told   NBC's Chuck Todd in 2019 about his widely controversial policy of separating migrant parents from their children at the border: "You know, under President Obama you had separation. I was the one that ended it."


Yes, Trump signed a 2018 order to end the family separation policy. What he did not mention to Todd is that what he had ended was   his own policy   -- a plan announced by his own attorney general that had made family separation standard rather than occasional, as it had been   under Obama .

All of Trump's words in those two sentences to Todd were accurate in themselves. But he was lying because of what he left out.


The most shameless campaign lie: Biden will destroy protections for pre-existing conditions


Trump's re-election campaign was consistently and consciously dishonest, especially in its   attempts   to cast Joe Biden as a frightening radical. When Trump   claimed   in September that Biden would destroy protections for people with pre-existing health conditions -- though the Obama-Biden administration created the protections, though the protections were overwhelmingly popular, though Biden was running on preserving them, and though Trump himself had tried repeatedly to weaken them -- Trump was not merely lying but turning reality upside down.


The lie he fled: He got Veterans Choice


Trump could have told a perfectly good factual story about the Veterans Choice health care program Obama signed into law in 2014: it wasn't good enough, so he replaced it with a more expansive program he signed into law in 2018.


That's not the story he did tell -- whether out of policy ignorance, a desire to   erase Obama's legacy , or simply because he is a liar. Instead, he claimed over and over --   more than 160 times   before I lost count -- that he is the one who got the Veterans Choice program passed after other presidents tried and failed for years.


And why not stretch? He knew he probably wouldn't be challenged by a press corps drowning in other Trump drama. It wasn't until August 2020 that he was asked about the lie to his face.














The most hucksterish lie: That plan was coming in two weeks



Trump's big health care plan was   eternally   coming in "two weeks." So were a bunch of   other   plans and announcements.


Trump is, at his core, a huckster. Every moment of his presidency was a chance for him to sell someone on something, whether or not that something actually existed. And if they asked when they could actually see the magic elixir he said was being brewed just over there behind the curtain, he would just have to delay them until they forgot about it.


My personal favorite lie: Trump was once named Michigan's Man of the Year


Trump has never lived in Michigan. Why would he have been named Michigan's Man of the Year years before his presidency?

He wouldn't have been. He wasn't. And yet this lie he appeared to have invented in the   final week of his 2016 campaign   became a staple of his 2020 campaign,   repeated   at Michigan rally after rally.

It's so illustrative because it makes so little sense.



The most depressing lie: Trump won the election



Trump's long White House campaign against verifiable reality has culminated with   his lie   that he is the true winner of the 2020 presidential election he clearly, certifiably and fairly lost.

To many of us, it's ludicrous nonsense. But to millions of deluded Americans, it's the   truth . And it has now gotten people killed.

The nation's truth problem, clearly, isn't just a Trump problem. With this last blizzard of deception and the Capitol insurrection it fomented, Trump has shown us, once more, just how detached from reality much of his political base has become -- or always was.



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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  author  JohnRussell    3 years ago

Donald Trump lied about the Boy Scouts. That is unAmerican. 

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
1.1  JBB  replied to  JohnRussell @1    3 years ago

Can you site anything Trump was truthful about? 

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
1.1.1  Ender  replied to  JBB @1.1    3 years ago

That he could shoot someone on Fifth Ave and not lose his supporters.

 
 
 
JBB
Professor Principal
2  JBB    3 years ago

original original

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  JBB @2    3 years ago

Boris looks like an unmade bed next to everyone else

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2.1.1  Ender  replied to  Trout Giggles @2.1    3 years ago

He always looks like a slob that just rolled out of bed.

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2.2  Ender  replied to  JBB @2    3 years ago

I have to say I am for a men's revolution.

I think suits are some of the ugliest clothes around. Generic, boring and ugly.

Not to mention a tie. What the hell is that anyway? Today I think I will tie a noose around my neck...

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.2.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  Ender @2.2    3 years ago

A tailored suit looks great on just about any man. Mr Giggles bought a suit and had it tailored for our wedding and he looked handsome and debonair in it. I think he can still fit into it (jerk).

I don't understand ties, either. I like the open neck look with a suit

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
2.2.2  Ender  replied to  Trout Giggles @2.2.1    3 years ago

Some dress blues can look really sharp.

Imo none of those men pictured above look good at all.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2.2.3  Trout Giggles  replied to  Ender @2.2.2    3 years ago

Well, I'm coming from a different perspective. I think Biden, Trudeau and Macron look good. The tall feller in the back would look better if he wasn't wearing flood pants. He should fire his tailor

 
 

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