PredFan
Diamond Member
I don't want him, but I want him before Hillary.
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Wow what a suckup you are, You know it is permissible to admit his faults, it's not like they will send someone around to your house to arrest you for sedition against the Emperor......yet.Good god, you people bitched about the mythical "obamabots" for years just to create a cult around this man that would be embarrassing if any of you had a sense of shame. His record of failure is not spin, he really did lose massive amounts of money for people who believed the hype he builds around himself. When this campaign is over he will go trotting back to his life and not even care he failed you by being Donald Trump too much.Not necessarily a total failure but his record of things that have failed his investors is impressive. For some reason you do not find how he handles other people's money relevant to how he would do as president handling everyone's money.Oh you want me to go chase links to Trump's many business failures, constant law suits and the fact he would be richer if he had only invested his large inheritance in mutual funds? You should be familiar with the destruction he has left in his wake by now.
Yes I do, because I am sure those links offer as many facts as you do - zero. While also having a very liberal imagination.
#230 richest man in the world - a business failure. It's just incredible what these imbeciles will believe. Naturally they eat all of Hillary's lies.
His record of things that have failed is minuscule compared to those that have succeeded. You just focus ONLY on the failures. And when you have 500 businesses, of course you are going to find those! (That's how business works - but libs would know nothing about that, would they?)
The fact of course is, Trump is a complete success, once you take all the politics of envy and spin out of it.
What a perfect deflection. Yes he lost money, and he made even more... much more. The 2nd part, which you somehow forget, is what makes him an utterly successful businessman. He has no record of failure, but success. You are retard grade being if you honestly are dumb enough to believe that the #230 richest man in the world is a terrible businessman. I am sorry, the indoctrination got you.
Wow what a suckup you are, You know it is permissible to admit his faults, it's not like they will send someone around to your house to arrest you for sedition against the Emperor......yet.Good god, you people bitched about the mythical "obamabots" for years just to create a cult around this man that would be embarrassing if any of you had a sense of shame. His record of failure is not spin, he really did lose massive amounts of money for people who believed the hype he builds around himself. When this campaign is over he will go trotting back to his life and not even care he failed you by being Donald Trump too much.Not necessarily a total failure but his record of things that have failed his investors is impressive. For some reason you do not find how he handles other people's money relevant to how he would do as president handling everyone's money.Yes I do, because I am sure those links offer as many facts as you do - zero. While also having a very liberal imagination.
#230 richest man in the world - a business failure. It's just incredible what these imbeciles will believe. Naturally they eat all of Hillary's lies.
His record of things that have failed is minuscule compared to those that have succeeded. You just focus ONLY on the failures. And when you have 500 businesses, of course you are going to find those! (That's how business works - but libs would know nothing about that, would they?)
The fact of course is, Trump is a complete success, once you take all the politics of envy and spin out of it.
What a perfect deflection. Yes he lost money, and he made even more... much more. The 2nd part, which you somehow forget, is what makes him an utterly successful businessman. He has no record of failure, but success. You are retard grade being if you honestly are dumb enough to believe that the #230 richest man in the world is a terrible businessman. I am sorry, the indoctrination got you.
Clinton is not touting her business experience, if any, as a reason we should vote for her. Trump thinks we should consider his business record so here we are considering it, well I am anyway, you do not think it matters when it is really the only clue we have as to what kind of president he would be.Wow what a suckup you are, You know it is permissible to admit his faults, it's not like they will send someone around to your house to arrest you for sedition against the Emperor......yet.Good god, you people bitched about the mythical "obamabots" for years just to create a cult around this man that would be embarrassing if any of you had a sense of shame. His record of failure is not spin, he really did lose massive amounts of money for people who believed the hype he builds around himself. When this campaign is over he will go trotting back to his life and not even care he failed you by being Donald Trump too much.Not necessarily a total failure but his record of things that have failed his investors is impressive. For some reason you do not find how he handles other people's money relevant to how he would do as president handling everyone's money.
His record of things that have failed is minuscule compared to those that have succeeded. You just focus ONLY on the failures. And when you have 500 businesses, of course you are going to find those! (That's how business works - but libs would know nothing about that, would they?)
The fact of course is, Trump is a complete success, once you take all the politics of envy and spin out of it.
What a perfect deflection. Yes he lost money, and he made even more... much more. The 2nd part, which you somehow forget, is what makes him an utterly successful businessman. He has no record of failure, but success. You are retard grade being if you honestly are dumb enough to believe that the #230 richest man in the world is a terrible businessman. I am sorry, the indoctrination got you.
Being a poor businessman is not one of his fault. It's like saying Chopin was a terrible pianist, because somewhere he missed that one note. It's a retard grade argument.
Now since you keep on being stuck on this point, please list the successful Clinton business ventures... oh, they don't exist.
Many of us not doubting Donald Trump’s character flaws, dangerous ego, or even his ability to speak or think intelligently enough at times. This article may add to that.Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Very enlightening...
Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Amazing...
Not much contact with Trump. Biggest problem with this is that the guy should be immediately disbarred. Ever heard of attorney/ client privilege? No lawyer is at liberty to discuss anything said in private with a client. That doesn't change even when they are no longer their lawyer.
The guy sounds like the typical liberal who doesn't care about laws when they get in the way of their goals.
What did he divulge that was illegal?
Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Amazing...
Not much contact with Trump. Biggest problem with this is that the guy should be immediately disbarred. Ever heard of attorney/ client privilege? No lawyer is at liberty to discuss anything said in private with a client. That doesn't change even when they are no longer their lawyer.
The guy sounds like the typical liberal who doesn't care about laws when they get in the way of their goals.
What did he divulge that was illegal?
He talked about what was said in a meeting. That meant he was being paid as an attorney during that meeting and all info is confidential.
A lawyer can say anything about their clients as long as it does not divulge specific information on any case. That being said, some clients insist on broad non-disclosure agreements that it seems Trump did not get from this guy.Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Amazing...
that's an ATTORNEY??? communication between an attorney and his client is PRIVILEGED. I have been dealing with PRIVILEGED information since I was 19 (well----actually I was a switchboard operator in a large hospital ---part time---college job back then) I HAVE NEVER IN ALL THOSE YEARS (I am ----pushing-----or the decades are PUSHING ME towards 70) fucked around with privileged
information----I wouldn't tell my patients' SHOE SIZEs ---to
anyone----EVAH!!!!!! Moron who wrote that disgusting piece violated the "ethics" his profession---he is a bag of shit.-----one of my patients knew Donald quite well---he had worked for Donald's daddy. I ain't tellin' what he told me
about ANY OF THEM------nah nah nah nah nah.....
Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Amazing...
Not much contact with Trump. Biggest problem with this is that the guy should be immediately disbarred. Ever heard of attorney/ client privilege? No lawyer is at liberty to discuss anything said in private with a client. That doesn't change even when they are no longer their lawyer.
The guy sounds like the typical liberal who doesn't care about laws when they get in the way of their goals.
What did he divulge that was illegal?
He talked about what was said in a meeting. That meant he was being paid as an attorney during that meeting and all info is confidential.
Even a doctor could say you were the biggest asshole he ever met. Since you are thinking about attorney-client privilege you should know that it is something a lawyer can claim to protect his client during a case but he is not bound by it. At best Trump can sue this guy for slander in civil court, and lose.A lawyer can say anything about their clients as long as it does not divulge specific information on any case. That being said, some clients insist on broad non-disclosure agreements that it seems Trump did not get from this guy.Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Amazing...
that's an ATTORNEY??? communication between an attorney and his client is PRIVILEGED. I have been dealing with PRIVILEGED information since I was 19 (well----actually I was a switchboard operator in a large hospital ---part time---college job back then) I HAVE NEVER IN ALL THOSE YEARS (I am ----pushing-----or the decades are PUSHING ME towards 70) fucked around with privileged
information----I wouldn't tell my patients' SHOE SIZEs ---to
anyone----EVAH!!!!!! Moron who wrote that disgusting piece violated the "ethics" his profession---he is a bag of shit.-----one of my patients knew Donald quite well---he had worked for Donald's daddy. I ain't tellin' what he told me
about ANY OF THEM------nah nah nah nah nah.....
really? a lawyer has to SIGN A CONTRACT----in order to
maintain a decent level confidentiality? I did not know. That's disgusting. The same is, absolutely, not true of doctors. People in need of a lawyer are most often in a vulnerable state-----and should be told UP FRONT-----by
the lawyer. "I SHIT, SPIT, AND FART on any misapprehension on your part that I might keep secret---
YOUR secrets which you divulge to me in your distress.
I am a lawyer ----not a fucking doctor"
Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Amazing...
Not much contact with Trump. Biggest problem with this is that the guy should be immediately disbarred. Ever heard of attorney/ client privilege? No lawyer is at liberty to discuss anything said in private with a client. That doesn't change even when they are no longer their lawyer.
The guy sounds like the typical liberal who doesn't care about laws when they get in the way of their goals.
What did he divulge that was illegal?
He talked about what was said in a meeting. That meant he was being paid as an attorney during that meeting and all info is confidential.
that's what I thought------It amazes me that any lawyer would
shit, spit and fart on the issue of confidentiality
He didn't say anything that was privileged. Not to mention it was a relationship from decades ago.
Which of his statements do you think was privileged?
For once we agree on something.
Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Very enlightening...
Bullies will always exist somewhere, but the White House should not be that somewhere.
I like authenticity, especially as compared to survey-tested or heavily spun. I am prepared to let a candidate say something that I don’t completely agree with and still support him or her. I think the need to be politically correct has gone too far. I also think the media often hypes and slants stories to the point of being untruthful.
I think a prosperous middle class is the key to the American success story, both economically and politically, and that lobbyists have way too much sway. I am very much a pragmatist, so much so that I like compromise more than I like ideology. I like deals, especially those that are win-win.
So Donald Trump is my candidate, right? He is NOT!
In 1987, when I was 35 years old and he was 41, Donald Trump hired me to be his attorney on a major northern New Jersey project, a shopping center, which like everything else, was to bear his name, Trump Centre. It was a big deal that he picked me and a high honor for me just a couple of years after I started my law firm, which is now over 30 years old. This was at a time when Trump still built things, having recently finished Trump Tower.
[I’ll never forget when] my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.”
He seemed to me smart, business savvy, decisive. He had a very impressive office, a fancy and very big boat, an airline, a helicopter shuttle and several casinos. Within a few years, virtually all of this would be lost because of bad business decisions. Lots of lawyers have worked for Donald Trump; lots and lots. I am no Roy Cohn ― neither as aggressive nor (hopefully) nearly as ethically-challenged ― but I did know well how to get very tough land use matters through an always challenging application process in New Jersey. I was thrilled when he hired me.
After the initial interview, my client contact with Donald was actually not very much. One low point I do remember (actually will never forget) is a limousine ride to a meeting with the editorial board of a New Jersey newspaper in which my married client sought to regale me with the number and quality of eligible young women who in his words “want me.” I was just plain shocked and embarrassed, but I kept smiling. I wanted and needed this client happy.
While I was working for Donald, various press reports had Trump and his then-wife Ivanna living in a personal apartment in the Trump Tower of 8, 16 and even 20 or 30 rooms. Genuinely curious, I once asked him how many rooms the apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
Donald Trump was then, as he is now, larger than life, particularly in his own eyes, and at the same time frighteningly small, with very little moral grounding. He was then, and still is, all ego and show.
I once asked him how many rooms [his] apartment actually had. I will never forget his response to me: “However many they will print.”
I have thought about this a lot, and I want to share my humble insights of why we cannot elect Donald Trump as president of the United States. To me, it is more about character than politics. Because of lack of the former, the latter ― the actual politics of Donald Trump ― are not that easy to discern.
Once I got going with my reasons why Donald would not be good for our country, it was hard to stop. I did stop, however, when I hit 20, about 4,000 words from here. Read on if you are interested.
Much More: I Was An Attorney For Trump. Trust Me, You Don’t Want Him As President.
Wow, what an interesting read from someone who knows Trump from business and personal perspectives. For those who care about such things - it's definitely worth reading the entire article. Very enlightening...
HUff Po....well I can post Alex Jones articles of how great he is.,.....stop using biased leftwing sources.