If he cheats like Donnie does.
If Trump says he shot a 68, then rest assured that he actually shot a 98.
He is widely ridiculed for being an obvious cheat.
If he cheats like Donnie does.
If Trump says he shot a 68, then rest assured that he actually shot a 98.
He is widely ridiculed for being an obvious cheat.
Not when Mueller gets hold of him, he won’t.
Could be another exciting week coming up.
This is all too true, and makes me mad as hell.
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Agreed – they’re not going after the salacious details but confirmation of timelines and guests…
Trump was the most corrupt President in history before he even took the oath of office.
Hawaii – isn’t that “overseas”?
It’s a little bit further than Vieques.

Yes, I’m [deeply] afraid that that is precisely what I meant when I wrote “everyone acknowledges”…
Was it Thomas Jefferson who pointed out that fed a constant diet of lies, eventually people will no longer tolerate the truth?
It’s surrounded by water.
He’s actually there to find the guys he sent there to check on Obama’s birth certificate.

I believe it’s a Kenyan territory.
He’s being called before a congressional committee to lie for Don the Con. That was part of his job for two decades and why Republican apologists want to bring him out now to counter Mueller: “Trump never done nothin. He a great guy, I tell ya.”
I don’t know but I do know what Reinold Nieburh said about that - nobody can be forced to believe anything they don’t know is true. Every one is responsible for his and her decision to believe a lie. it’s a free will choice and if you believe it then you’re responsible for that.
Otherwise it’s an excuse that the Germans tried to use after the wwii - we were lied to. No, you choose to believe what you want to believe.
Isn’t this the asshole who punched out the Hispanic demonstrator in New York?
He’s not in the security business: He’s in the Trump business. And he’s a thug. Belongs in jail on general principles.
How many times was his foot wedge used ![]()
“[T]he White House is delighted that Mr. Schiller will have an opportunity to shed some light on these scandalous allegations, and we are sure that his testimony will be of great interest to all fair-minded people.”
You know who else is “delighted,” Ty? That’s right — federal prosecutors!
I’ve heard many of them say regarding this very investigation that, having prosecuted mobsters for years, there is no one they like to talk to more than mobsters’ drivers and bodyguards. I suspect Keith will be no exception and will not disappoint. And, as you say, his “testimony will be of great interest.”
Yeah, but that was only on the front 9.
“TRUMP FLOUTS RULES AND EXAGGERATES HIS OWN ABILITIES”
The story of his life.
Trump’s handicap index is officially a 2.8. But just one thing about that…
TRUMP FLOUTS RULES AND EXAGGERATES HIS OWN ABILITIES
Does President Trump cheat at golf? The Washington Post investigated a couple years ago and determined that he did. [Sports Illustrated]'s reporting seems to corroborate the Post.
Here’s what SI found: “Trump will sometimes respond to a shot he duffed by simply playing a second ball and carrying on as if the first shot never happened. In the parlance of the game, Trump takes floating mulligans, usually more than one during a round. Because of them it is impossible to say what he has actually shot on any given day, according to 18 people who have teed it up with Trump over the last decade, including SI senior writer Michael Bamberger, who has done so nine times.”
Trump has also claimed to be an 18-time club champion. (He claimed this in an angry tweet calling Mark Cuban a loser.) It’s certainly possible Trump won those events, but SI couldn’t find any supporting evidence.
ETA: Did you know “clever and shrewd way to raise capital” is NGCOA-speak for “grift”?
Reporting by McClatchy, including nearly 20 interviews and hundreds of pages of documents — some from litigation involving Trump and his businesses — shows that the president put in place unusual policies that allowed him to keep the high one-time fees charged to new members and put language in his club rules that allowed him to spend the money on anything he wanted.
“It’s definitely unusual,” said Jay Karen, CEO of the National Golf Course Owners Association, who has been in the golf club business for two decades. “It certainly reflects a clever and shrewd way to raise capital.”
[source: http://www.miamiherald.com/latest-news/article159988504.html]