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"Many of the presidentâs claims were rejected by the Columbia University economics professor Joseph Stiglitz. âResearch shows that Trump normally tells five or six lies a day. He far exceeded that today,â he said, noting that growth had been faster under Barack Obama than it was currently under Trump, and that life expectancy had fallen every year of his presidency."
Even in the article you linked to there is one of Trump's lie-filled rambles where he goes on about how: "the American dream was back, âbigger, better and strongerâ than before, adding that the benefits of growth were going primarily to low-income workers rather than the better off. Trump added that 7m jobs had been created and 12,000 factories opened during his presidency." The "12,000" figure is particularly ironic (and misdirectional) for him to use since according to the Commerce Dept., US factories lost about 12,000 jobs in December - which is likely where he came across that specific number.
There's a tendency to almost ignore his lies because he does it constantly. He can make up any nonsense and never gets called on it. His supporters seem to dismiss it as just "bluster" instead of deliberate, calculated lying. Here is a short list of preposterous lies from his speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "We have the greatest economy we've ever had in the history of our country." "For the first time in decades, we're no longer concentrating wealth in the hands of a few..." "Just last week alone, the United States concluded two extraordinary trade deals â the agreement with China and the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement â the two biggest trade deals ever made."
Obviously pathological and habitual...
"Many of the presidentâs claims were rejected by the Columbia University economics professor Joseph Stiglitz. âResearch shows that Trump normally tells five or six lies a day. He far exceeded that today,â he said, noting that growth had been faster under Barack Obama than it was currently under Trump, and that life expectancy had fallen every year of his presidency."
There's a tendency to almost ignore his lies because he does it constantly. He can make up any nonsense and never gets called on it. His supporters seem to dismiss it as just "bluster" instead of deliberate, calculated lying. Here is a short list of preposterous lies from his speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. "We have the greatest economy we've ever had in the history of our country." "For the first time in decades, we're no longer concentrating wealth in the hands of a few..." "Just last week alone, the United States concluded two extraordinary trade deals â the agreement with China and the United States-Mexico-Canada agreement â the two biggest trade deals ever made."
In 2017, Trump made 1,999 false or misleading claims. In 2018, he added 5,689 more, for a total of 7,688. And in 2019, he made 8,155 suspect claims.
In other words, in a single year, the president said more than the total number of false or misleading claims he had made in the previous two years. Put another way: He averaged six such claims a day in 2017, nearly 16 a day in 2018 and more than 22 a day in 2019.
To a core question â did the U.S. killing of an Iranian general avoid an imminent attack on U.S. interests? â there is no definitive answer days after missiles flew. Trump and his officials said the U.S. attack achieved that result but have yet to prove it.
In other matters, Trump offered distortion across the breadth of public policy. He declared clean-air achievements when the air has become dirtier. He claimed to have come up with the âgreat ideaâ of letting veterans seek private care at public expense, when that was already law, accomplished by President Barack Obama.
He complained that he didnât get the Nobel Peace Prize for peace in Ethiopia, when he had little to nothing to do with it.
He invented a dialogue with a Democrat in Congress and claimed he succeeded on two fronts where other presidents failed, each time for at least 44 years, a made-up number.
And as he done repeatedly, but this time in the midst of dangerous brinkmanship with Iran, he falsely accused Obama of opening the U.S. treasury to Tehran and handing over a fortune. (...)
"His Twitter feed alone â with its habitual string of mischaracterizations, lies, and slanders â is a near perfect example of a human being who is morally lost and confused."
"His Twitter feed alone â with its habitual string of mischaracterizations, lies, and slanders â is a near perfect example of a human being who is morally lost and confused."
"His Twitter feed alone — with its habitual string of mischaracterizations, lies, and slanders — is a near perfect example of a human being who is morally lost and confused."
And as Congress decides whether it should deem Trumpâs abuses of power to be high crimes, surprisingly little attention has been given to the fact that Trumpâs entire career leading up to the presidency has consisted of habitual criminality.
"YOUR GRANDMOTHER AT THANKSGIVING DINNER: Are you part of the deep stage?"
(...) The Trump lies relating to Ukraine are numerous and serious, although not delivered under oath. CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale has documented 45 Trump lies concerning Ukraine (...)
But they are the bigliest lying liars ever in the history of lying liars.
(...) The Trump lies relating to Ukraine are numerous and serious, although not delivered under oath. CNN fact-checker Daniel Dale has documented 45 Trump lies concerning Ukraine (...)
At a speech to the Economic Club of New York today, President Trump declared that his daughter, Ivanka, has personally created 14 million new jobs. The president announced this figure â so astonishingly ludicrous it would embarrass a Stalin-era pronouncement â and then repeated it twice more as the crowd applauded politely.
The entire U.S. economy has created fewer than 6 million new jobs since Trump took office. So Trump is crediting his daughter with having personally created more than 200 percent of all new jobs in the United States. This is like supply-side economics but for authoritarian nepotism.
The judge said the administrationâs central justification of a âsignificant increaseâ in complaints related to conscience violations âis flatly untrue. This alone makes the agencyâs decision to promulgate the rule arbitrary and capricious.â