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Republicans increasing use of intimidation around ballot boxs

Republicans are resorting to intimidation to dissuade Democrats from voting in some areas.

Clearly these uneducated unemployed Republicans have nothing better to do with their days than hang out near voting stations trying to intimidate voters.
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TAReturns · M
Throughout my lifetime the Republicans have been “Government of the rich by the rich for the rich” tricking the uneducated poor into believing it’s in their best interests to vote for them. This avalanched considerably in the last 6 years
helenS · 36-40, F
@TAReturns Some less than wealthy people in my hometown vote for the richest guy who runs for an office because he is rich. He's rich, so he knows how to manage money; he's rich so he doesn't need money and he's not corrupt; he is rich so God loves him.
TexChik · F
@helenS is it possible you have failed to realize the rich you are demonizing are socialists? And the poor are the blind democrat voters still waiting for the socialists to keep their campaign promises . 🤷🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️
helenS · 36-40, F
@TexChik I claim to be the only socialist in town.
I'm not rich though, I'm quite broke at the moment.
SW-User
@helenS Get rid of the hammer and sickle Helen. To any thinking people that's every bit as disgusting as the swastika.

I'm surprised and very disappointed in you
graphite · 61-69, M
@TAReturns Now, for some actual facts: https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/further-evidence-that-democrats-have-become-the-party-of-the-rich.

Excerpt: For generations, Democrats have sold themselves as the party of the working class, but as this data point — among many others — shows, that just isn’t true anymore. Democrats have become a party funded almost entirely by rich, white liberals. This is probably why the only tax changes Democrats were able to pass when they had control of the White House, Senate, and House was a massive tax cut for big business.
TexChik · F
@helenS you need to become a socialist politician . AOC wasn’t worth spit when she started , now she’s worth $26M , and all on $140K per year. Wow!
helenS · 36-40, F
@SW-User Done.–
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@helenS that didn't work out so well with #45! i hoped that having a businessman as president might make a difference, but it turned out he was a failed businessman, heavily in debt.
TexChik · F
@samueltyler2 propaganda and BS are never appreciated . Don’t you TDS people have traffic to go block?
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@TexChik did you really not read my comment? WTF does you comment have to do with mine?
helenS · 36-40, F
@samueltyler2 I'd assume the business man you referred to became #45 not because he was a business man; rather because he was a TV celebrity. Like the Governator or Ronald. Or Volodymyr.
SW-User
@helenS 🥰
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@helenS no, he claimed to be a successful business man, a tycoon on real estate and sold the world on that which got him his tv show!
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@sunsporter1649

Examining Donald Trump’s Chapter 11 Bankruptcies
Donald Trump, the current frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination, has come under fire from both the media and the other candidates for his business record. Although Trump has never filed for personal bankruptcy, he has reportedly filed for business bankruptcy at least four times. Trump responded to the criticism by arguing that businesses often have to file for bankruptcy and that filing for bankruptcy was a financially sound move each time he did it. In fact, during the September 16 Republican debate, Trump observed that “hundreds of companies” have done the same thing. PolitiFact, the Tampa Bay Times’ award-winning fact-checking blog, recently analyzed the claims, from both sides, about Donald Trump’s business bankruptcies in an article straightforwardly titled “Fact-checking claims about Donald Trump’s four bankruptcies.” The website found that there is validity to many of Trump’s points about business bankruptcy being in the best interests of companies. Trump has filed for business bankruptcy four times: the Trump Taj Mahal in 1991, Trump Plaza Hotel in 1992, Trump Hotels and Casinos Resorts in 2004 and Trump Entertainment Resorts in 2009. Each time, the bankruptcy was a Chapter 11 filing. While Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy deal with personal bankruptcies, Chapter 11 is most often used by businesses filing for bankruptcy. Chapter 11 bankruptcy allows a financially struggling business to reorganize in order to keep going. A Chapter 11 filing can potentially enable a business owner to avoid liquidating the company. In fact, it can often be said that a Chapter 11 bankruptcy is in the best interests of the business and in no way a reflection of a poorly run company. PolitiFact took a look at all four of Trump’s Chapter 11 bankruptcies and determined that they were a result of business struggles largely beyond the billionaire-turned-presidential-candidate’s control. Like Trump in 1991, 1992, 2004 and 2009, you may be considering filing for bankruptcy due to circumstances largely beyond your control. The right attorney can help you look into filing and guide you through the bankruptcy process in New Jersey or Pennsylvania. Joel R. Spivack Esq. is an experienced bankruptcy attorney who specializes in helping individuals through personal bankruptcy. Contact him today to help you explore your legal options so that you can move on with your life and make a fresh financial start. The post Examining Donald Trump’s Chapter 11 Bankruptcies appeared first on Spivack Law.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@sunsporter1649 How Trump’s Casino Bankruptcies Screwed His Workers out of
Millions in Retirement Savings
Mother Jones
By PATRICK CALDWELL // October 17, 2016
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/10/donald-trump-atlantic-city-bankruptcy/
For indispensable reporting on the coronavirus crisis, the election, and more, subscribe to the
Mother Jones Daily newsletter.
When pressed about the multiple bankruptcies at his Atlantic City casinos, Donald Trump
routinely says the episodes highlight his business acumen. He made out well, he claims, at the
expense only of his greedy Wall Street financiers. “These lenders aren’t babies,” he said during a
Republican primary debate last fall. “These are total killers. These are not the nice, sweet little
people that you think, okay?”
Yet among those who suffered as a result of Trump’s bankruptcies were his own casino
employees, who collectively lost millions of dollars in retirement savings when the company’s
value plummeted.
Trump’s company encouraged its employees to invest their retirement savings in company stock,
according to a class-action lawsuit filed by employees against Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts
following its 2004 bankruptcy. Then, when the stock price was near its nadir as bankruptcy
loomed, the company forced the employees to sell their stock at a huge loss. More than 400
employees lost a total of more than $2 million from their retirement accounts, the lawsuit states.
The lawsuit was ultimately dismissed when a judge found no illegal actions on the part of
Trump’s company. But the conflict shows how Trump’s exploitation of bankruptcy laws for his
personal gain did end up hurting his employees.
“I didn’t realize he was as stupid as he is,” says a former casino worker at Trump Plaza who
asked not to be named. “Honestly. I thought, way back when, the guy was way brighter than we
were. He was running the company and we were working for him. We thought he was brilliant.
When we invested in it, we thought, how could this stock go so low?”
Trump has never had to declare personal bankruptcy, but the company he set up to operate his
Atlantic City casinos went through numerous corporate restructurings to reduce its debt load. As
the New York Times recounted last year, Trump used his company as a means of transferring his
personal debt load onto shareholders, issuing rounds of junk bonds to build up cash that would
erase his own debts. “Even as his companies did poorly, Mr. Trump did well,” the Times wrote.
“He put up little of his own money, shifted personal debts to the casinos and collected millions of
dollars in salary, bonuses and other payments. The burden of his failures fell on investors and
others who had bet on his business acumen.”
“I didn’t realize he was as stupid as he is,” says a former casino worker at Trump Plaza.
2
Starting in 1996, workers at Trump’s casinos were allowed to invest their 401(k) savings directly
into Trump stock. (It was the only individual stock offered; the other options were mutual funds.)
But that same year, THCR sold $1.1 billion in junk bonds to offset some of Trump’s personal
debt and buy two more ill-fated casino properties in Atlantic City. As the company floundered in
the years leading up to its second bankruptcy in 2004, the stock price plummeted. According to
the class-action complaint,
“Between 1996 and August, 2004, employees were encouraged to invest in THCR shares as the
price fell from $30/share to $2/share.”
By the end of 1997, employees had used more than $2 million in retirement funds to purchase
218,394 shares. The number of shares in employees’ retirement accounts rose steadily even as
the price dropped. By late 2003, the pool of employee retirement accounts held 1.1 million
shares of Trump stock.
But Trump’s casinos were in near-fatal trouble. On August 10, 2004, the New York Stock
Exchange removed the company from its listings as THCR announced a plan to restructure the
company’s debt and enter bankruptcy. Shares had been valued at $1.85 the previous day, but
tanked to $0.36 in over-the-counter trades after the de-listing.
The committee that managed the Trump employee retirement accounts—with which Trump had
no personal involvement—made the decision at that time to prevent workers from buying
additional shares in the company because it had become an overly risky investment. “This
prevented Plan participants from using an ‘averaging down’ strategy of buying additional shares
at the current much lower price, to recoup some of their losses,” the class-action complaint
alleged. Employees could still sell shares, but with the $0.10-per-share transaction fee the
company charged whenever an employee liquidated stock from his or her retirement account,
there was little incentive to do so.
The company’s initial bankruptcy plan fell through a month later, but in late October 2004 a new
restructuring plan was approved. With the company soon slated to enter bankruptcy, the
retirement fund committee voted on October 25 that any remaining shares of THCR held in the
retirement accounts would be sold in bulk by Merrill Lynch on November 15 and sent a letter to
workers at the casinos on October 28 informing them of the plan.
As the class-action lawsuit noted, that announcement didn’t help the share price. “Announcing a
planned sale of a huge block of stock in a letter to thousands of employees meant that market
participants would learn of the forced sale, and adjust their trading strategies to take advantage of
the anticipated increase in supply of THCR shares,” the complaint stated. “This would have the
unfortunate effect of depressing the stock immediately before the sale of Plan stock.” Employees
rushed to dump their stock before the forced sale, with 117,966 shares from the retirement plan
unloaded in the two weeks between the announcement and the date of the forced sale.
More than 400 employees still held Trump stock when the forced sale arrived. The stock had
been trading at $0.80 on the day of the announcement but had dropped by more than a quarter, to
an average of $0.57, when the employees were forced to sell their 924,698 shares the next
3
month. For an employee who’d put $1,000 into her retirement account in 1997 when shares
averaged $9.65 apiece, those savings had now withered to just $59.
For an employee who’d put $1,000 into her retirement account in 1996, those savings had now
withered to just $59.
Less than a week after the forced sale, the company filed for bankruptcy. The markets seemed to
approve of the restructuring plan. Three weeks after the forced sale, the share price was up to
$2.04. None of the employees were able to profit from that gain.
Five longtime Trump employees—four from the Trump Plaza and one from Trump Marina—
filed the lawsuit against the company the next year. They each held between 8,300 and 21,110
shares at the time the forced sale was announced. The lawsuit alleged that the committee in
charge of the retirement plan had breached its fiduciary duty by mandating the complete
liquidation of employee-held stock when its value was at a low, resulting in more than $2.3
million in losses for employees.
In the end, a federal judge in New Jersey dismissed the class-action lawsuit. “At its core,” the
judge wrote, “Plaintiffs’ assertion that Defendants breached their fiduciary duties amounts to
nothing more than a claim based on perfect hindsight.” The Trump executives on the retirement
fund committee couldn’t necessarily know that the restructuring would boost share prices, the
judge found, given the “tenuous” position of the company at the time. Still, the ruling didn’t
dispute the extent of the losses suffered by employees.
Trump himself fared well through the bankruptcy. He kept a $2 million annual salary after the
company emerged from bankruptcy and took in more than $44 million in compensation over the
course of the 14 years he served as chairman of THCR.
“I don’t think it’s a failure,” he said of the bankruptcy in 2004. “It’s a success.”
SW-User
@samueltyler2 Cope harder little boy!
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
The following is lifted from the very liberal publication: Forbes:

https://www.forbes.com/sites/willyakowicz/2021/02/17/trump-plaza-implosion-how-atlantic-city-celebrated-the-trump-plaza-demolition/?sh=651fe2e05751

A few minutes after 9 a.m. on a bitterly cold Tuesday morning on the Boardwalk in Atlantic City, New Jersey, a horn sounded, and a flock of seagulls perched on the former Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino flew away in formation.

A series of booms reverberated from each floor as 3,800 sticks of dynamite exploded and in 19.5 seconds, the 34-story building was on the ground. A cloud of dust thrust towards the Atlantic Ocean and just like that, the last remaining building former President Donald Trump built in the casino town by the sea came down, and his complicated four-decade legacy in Atlantic City was over.

Moments before the implosion, Gina Wislack, a retiree who has lived in Atlantic City for nearly 30 years, was sitting at a table in One Atlantic, a venue across the Boardwalk from Trump Plaza, taking in the last few moments the tower still stood tall.

“I wish he was in there,” says Wislack, who bought the front row seats for $500 through an auction held to benefit the city’s local Boys and Girls Club. “He screwed a lot of small businesses here in Atlantic City. Fuck him. That’s why we’re all here.”

The Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino was the first of three casinos Donald Trump owned in New Jersey—all of which eventually filed for bankruptcy protection multiple times and went belly up. Trump’s legacy in Atlantic City has long been defined by self-dealing, financial trouble, and avoiding paying small, mom-and-pop contractors.

The timing of the implosion could not have been more symbolic. With the second impeachment trial completed, hundreds flocked to Atlantic City to bask in the collective schadenfreude and celebrate the end of Trump’s presidency. Nearby hotels such as Caesars jacked up their midweek prices to take advantage of the surge in visitors coming to the gaming town, which was struggling long before its hospitality business was hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Minutes after the tower fell, Mayor Marty Small, who made bringing down Trump Plaza one of his promises during his first State of the City address in January 2020, spoke to the press huddled around him.

“As we say, on and on and on: Today is truly a great day in the great city of Atlantic City,” Small proclaimed. “ . . . I still have chills.”

For the city, today was personal. “Trump stiffed many people and he made a mockery of Atlantic City,” Small said during an interview last week.

Chris Bilella, who came from Long Island to watch the implosion, said the symbolism and timing was a big reason he was here. “It’s a good end to the Trump presidency,” Bilella says. “Good riddance, out with the rubbish.”

In 1984, Donald Trump opened the Trump Plaza, which at the time was a joint operation with Harrah’s running the casino. To fund his vision of opulence in Atlantic City, which eventually included the Taj Mahal, which opened in 1990 and the Trump Marina, which was first dubbed Trump Castle and opened in 1985, Trump raised $675 million in bonds.

By 1990, the Trump Organization had amassed $3.4 billion in debt, straining the entire company. As Forbes senior editor Dan Alexander writes in his book about Trump, White House, Inc., one New Jersey regulator said at the time that the would-be president’s business was in a precarious position. “The possibility of a complete financial collapse of the Trump Organization is not out of the question.”

That same year, Fred, Trump’s father, sent a lawyer to the Taj in Atlantic City to purchase $3.5 million in chips. This money wasn’t going to be gambled at the tables—it went to Donald Trump so he could pay interest payments on a loan.

Trump took Trump Plaza public on the New York Stock Exchange in 1995, and by 2004, through a series of maneuvers and self-dealing, he had made more than $200 million while the company, which came to own his Taj Mahal and the Trump Marina, lost $647 million and declared bankruptcy. He resigned from the company in 2009, and Carl Icahn, who was a bondholder, bought the company out of bankruptcy in 2016. (The Taj Mahal closed in 2016 year and is now a Hard Rock Casino; Trump Marina is now the Golden Nugget.)

Dan Heneghan, who covered the opening of every casino in Atlantic City while he worked as a reporter for the Press of Atlantic City, says Trump came bringing a lot of jobs and hope to the Boardwalk. “He started off with a lot of goodwill,” Heneghan says. “But he eventually squandered all of it.”

Yet, the Trump Era also coincided with the best of times for Atlantic City. Trump Plaza was ideally located at the end of Atlantic City Expressway—in the middle of the Boardwalk—making it an instant entertainment hub and destination.

It hosted fellow billionaire Vince McMahon’s Wrestlemania IV and V and dozens of boxing matches, including Mike Tyson’s famous 1988 bout against Michael Spinks, whom he knocked out in one minute and nine seconds.

Of course, not everyone attending the implosion was there to bask in the bad will. Mike Lopez, a longtime Atlantic City resident who hosts an AM radio show, says in some ways, he misses the Trump Era.

“I loved the Plaza, I spent nearly 300 nights there in my 20s and 30s,” says Lopez from a table at One Atlantic facing the tower, protected by 22-foot-thick glass windows.

On fight nights, he recalls, the city had a magic aura. Limousines lined the streets, and actors, pop stars and titans of industry could be seen whooping it up. Lopez says he met Bruce Willis one night and remembers the thrill of seeing Michael Jackson behind an army of security guards.

“It was crazy—every fight night the whole city was electric,” says Lopez.

Others just came to have a blast while watching the implosion. Louis Woloszyn, dressed in an orange jumpsuit with fake explosives and a clock strapped to his chest, arrived in Atlantic City as his alter ego, “Implosion Man.”

While Mayor Small swears the demolition was not about politics, he was not above throwing a few jabs at the former president. Minutes before the tower fell, Small addressed a small crowd of politicians, union laborers and auction winners during a breakfast event right across the Boardwalk from Trump Plaza.

“Mike Pence just called,” Small joked, “and he’s not going to stop the implosion.”
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samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@SW-User when his tax fraud and tax returns are released, we will all know just how successful a business man he is/was!
SW-User
@samueltyler2 keep pounding your 1" wonder worm to that fantasy
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@TexChik this was not about the election, it was about what I hope he as a president, and as an alleged successful businessman would bring to the office. What did he bring? He took us from an almost balance budget, and forced through, granted with his political enamblers, among the biggest tax cut for corporations and uber rich ever, pushing the country back into a deep deficit.
samueltyler2 · 80-89, M
@SW-Usernice try, but, i don't see you arguing with the facts!
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SW-User
@samueltyler2 Look at the encyclopedia of bullshit you've posted about someone out of power whom you've never even met. THAT directs your life

You certainly have a rich, fullfilled stable life.

Try some introspection