The First 100 Lies: The Trump Team’s Flurry Of Falsehoods http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/donald-trump-administration-lies-100_us_58ac7a0fe4b02a1e7dac3ca6 White House press secretary Sean Spicer falsely claimed the crowd on the National Mall was “largest audience to ever witness an inauguration"}}'>largest audience to ever witness an inauguration.” (Jan. 21) Trump falsely claimed that the crowd for his swearing-in stretched down the National Mall"}}'>stretched down the National Mall to the Washington Monument and totaled more than 1 million people. (Jan. 21) As Trump fondly recalled his Inauguration Day, he said it stopped raining “immediately"}}'>immediately” when he began his speech. A light rain continued to fall"}}'>continued to fall throughout the address. (Jan. 21) During his speech at CIA headquarters, Trump claimed the media made up his feud"}}'>made up his feud with the agency. In fact, he started it"}}'>started it by comparing the intelligence community to “Nazi Germany.” (Jan. 21) During his speech at CIA headquarters, Trump repeated the claim that he “didn’t want to go into Iraq"}}'>didn’t want to go into Iraq.” He told Howard Stern in 2002 that he supported the Iraq War. (Jan. 21) During his speech at CIA headquarters, Trump said he had the “all-time record in the history of Time Magazine. … I’ve been on it for 15 times this year.” Trump had been featured on the magazine a total of 11 times. (Jan. 21) Trump claimed that his inauguration drew 11 million more viewers than Barack Obama’s in 2013. It didn’t, and viewership for Obama’s first inauguration, in 2009, was even higher. (Jan. 22) Spicer said during his first press briefing that there has been a “dramatic expansion of the federal workforce in recent years.” This is false"}}'>false. (Jan. 23) While pushing back against the notion of a rift between the CIA and Trump, Spicer claimed the president had received a “five-minute standing ovation” at the agency’s headquarters. He did not. The attendees were also never asked to sit down"}}'>never asked to sit down. (Jan. 23) Spicer claimed that “tens of millions of people” watched the inauguration online. In fact, about 4.6 million did. (Jan. 23) Trump told CBN News that 84 percent Cuban-Americans voted for him. It’s not clear where Trump got that number. According to the Pew Research Center, 54 percent of Cuban-Americans in Florida voted for him. (Jan. 23) While meeting with congressional leaders, Trump repeated a debunked claim"}}'>repeated a debunked claim that he only lost the national popular vote because of widespread voter fraud. (Jan. 24) In remarks with business leaders at the White House, Trump said, “I’m a very big person when it comes to the environment. I have received awards on the environment.” There is no evidence"}}'>no evidence that Trump has received such awards. (Jan. 24) In signing an executive memo ordering the construction of the Keystone pipeline, Trump said the project would create 28,000 construction jobs. According to The Washington Post Fact Checker, the pipeline would create an estimated 16,000 jobs, most of which are not construction jobs. (Jan. 25) Spicer said in a press briefing that Trump received more electoral votes than any Republican since Ronald Reagan. George H.W. Bush won 426 electoral votes in 1988"}}'>won 426 electoral votes in 1988, more than Trump’s 304. (Jan. 24) In remarks he gave at the Homeland Security Department, Trump said Immigration and Customs Enforcement and border patrol agents “unanimously endorsed me for president.” That’s not true"}}'>not true. (Jan. 25) Spicer said during a press briefing that a draft executive order on CIA prisons was not a “White House document.” Citing three administration officials, The New York Times reported"}}'>reported that the White House had circulated the draft order among national security staff members. (Jan. 25) In an interview with ABC"}}'>ABC, Trump again claimed he “had the biggest audience in the history of inaugural speeches.” False"}}'>False. (Jan. 25) Trump claimed during an interview with ABC that the applause he received at CIA headquarters “was the biggest standing ovation since Peyton Manning had won the Super Bowl.” It wasn’t even a standing ovation. (Jan. 25) In an interview with ABC, Trump attacked the Affordable Care Act and said there are “millions of people that now aren’t insured anymore.” Twenty million people have gained health coverage because of the law so far. The estimated 2 million people who did not qualify under the law received waivers that kept the plans going until the end of 2017. (Jan. 25) At the GOP retreat in Philadelphia, Trump claimed he and the president of Mexico “agreed” to cancel their scheduled meeting. Enrique Peña Nieto said he had decided to cancel"}}'>he had decided to cancel it. (Jan. 26) At the GOP retreat in Philadelphia, Trump said the national homicide rate was “horribly increasing.” It is down significantly"}}'>significantly. (Jan. 26) On Twitter, Trump repeated his false claim"}}'>repeated his false claim that 3 million votes were illegal during the election. (Jan. 27) In an interview on “Good Morning America,” Trump counselor Kellyanne Conway said Tiffany Trump, the president’s daughter, had told her she was “not registered to vote in two states.” A local election official confirmed to NBC News twice"}}'>twice that the younger Trump indeed was. (Jan. 27) Trump said he predicted the so-called “Brexit” when he was in Scotland the day before the vote"}}'>predicted the so-called “Brexit” when he was in Scotland the day before the vote. He was actually there the day after the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union. (Jan. 27) Trump claimed"}}'>claimed The New York Times lost subscribers “because their readers even like me.” The Times experienced a sharp uptick"}}'>a sharp uptick in subscribers after Election Day. (Jan. 27) Trump claimed"}}'>claimed two people were fatally shot in Chicago during Obama’s last speech as president. That didn’t happen. (Jan. 27) Trump claimed"}}'>claimed that under previous administrations, “if you were a Muslim you could come in, but if you were a Christian, it was almost impossible.” In fact"}}'>In fact, almost as many Christian refugees were admitted to the U.S. as Muslim refugees in fiscal year 2016. (Jan. 27) Trump defended"}}'>defended the swiftness of his immigration order on the grounds that terrorists would have rushed into the country if he had given the world a week’s notice. Even if terrorists wanted to infiltrate the refugee program or the visa program, they would have had to wait months or even years while being vetted to get into the country"}}'>months or even years while being vetted to get into the country. (Jan. 30) The White House maintained that Trump’s immigration order did not apply to green card holders and that was “the guidance from the beginning"}}'>the guidance from the beginning.” Initially, the White House said"}}'>said the order did include green card holders. (Jan. 30) Trump said his immigration order was “similar to what President Obama did in 2011 when he banned visas for refugees from Iraq for six months.” Obama’s policy slowed"}}'>slowed resettlement of refugees from Iraq, but did not keep them from entering the country. Moreover, it flagged the seven countries included in Trump’s order as places the U.S. considered dangerous to visit"}}'>considered dangerous to visit. (Jan. 30) Spicer said that “by and large,” Trump has been “praised” for his statement commemorating the Holocaust. Every major Jewish organization, including the Republican Jewish Coalition, criticized it for omitting any specific references to the Jewish people or anti-Semitism. (Jan. 30) A Trump administration official called the implementation of Trump’s travel ban a “massive success story.” Not true"}}'>Not true ― young children, elderly people and U.S. green card holders were detained for hours. Some were deported upon landing in the U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) even criticized the rollout as “confusing.” (Jan. 30) Spicer equated White House adviser Steve Bannon’s appointment to the National Security Council Principals Committee with Obama adviser David Axelrod attending meetings pertaining to foreign policy. Axelrod, however, never sat "}}'>never sat on the Principals Committee. (Jan. 30) Spicer said people would have “flooded"}}'>flooded” into the country with advance notice of Trump’s immigration order. Not true"}}'>Not true. (Jan. 30) Spicer insisted that only 109 travelers were detained because of Trump’s immigration order. More than 1,000 legal permanent residents"}}'>1,000 legal permanent residents had to get waivers before entering the U.S. An estimated 90,000 people in total were affected by the ban. (Jan. 30) Trump tweeted the false claim that “only 109 people out of 325,000 were detained and held for questioning.” (Jan. 30) Trump took credit for cutting $600 million from the F-35 program. But Lockheed Martin already had planned for the cost reductions"}}'>already had planned for the cost reductions for the next generation fighter plane. (Jan. 31) Trump accused China of manipulating its currency by playing “the money market. They play the devaluation market, and we sit there like a bunch of dummies.” According to The Washington Post, the United States is no longer being hurt by China’s currency manipulation, and China is no longer devaluing its currency. (Jan. 31) In defending the GOP’s blockade of Merrick Garland, Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court, Spicer said no president had ever nominated a justice “so late” in his term. It previously happened three times"}}'>three times. (Jan. 31) Spicer repeatedly insisted during a press conference that Trump’s executive order on immigration was “not a ban.” During a Q&A event the night before, however, Spicer himself"}}'>Spicer himself referred to the order as a “ban.” So did the president"}}'>the president. (Jan. 31) White House officials denied"}}'>denied reports that Trump told Peña Nieto that U.S. forces would handle the “bad hombres down there” if the Mexican authorities don’t. It confirmed the conversation the next day, maintaining the remark was meant to be “lighthearted"}}'>lighthearted.” (Jan. 31) Trump claimed that Delta, protesters and the tears of Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.)"}}'>Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) were to blame for the problems over his travel ban. In fact, his administration was widely considered to blame for problems associated with its rollout. (Jan. 31) Trump said"}}'>said the Obama administration “agreed to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia.” The deal actually involved 1,250 refugees. (Feb. 1) Trump said the U.S. “has the most generous immigration system in the world.” Not really"}}'>Not really. (Feb. 2) Trump said the U.S. was giving Iran $150 billion for “nothing"}}'>nothing” under the Iranian nuclear deal. The money was already Iran’s to begin with, and the deal blocks Iran from building a nuclear bomb. (Feb. 2) Spicer called a U.S. raid in Yemen “very, very well thought out and executed effort” and described it as a “successful operation by all standards.” U.S. military officials told Reuters"}}'>Reuters the operation was approved “without sufficient intelligence, ground support, or adequate backup preparations.” (Feb. 2) Spicer said"}}'>said that Iran had attacked a U.S. naval vessel, as part of his argument defending the administration’s bellicose announcement that Iran is “on notice.” In fact, a suspected Houthi rebel ship attacked a Saudi vessel"}}'>attacked a Saudi vessel. (Feb. 2) In his meeting with union leaders at the White House, Trump claimed"}}'>claimed he won union households. He actually only won white union households"}}'>white union households. (Feb. 2) Conway cited the “Bowling Green massacre” to defend Trump’s travel ban. It never happened"}}'>never happened. (Feb. 3) Conway said citing the nonexistent “Bowling Green massacre” to defend Trump’s immigration order was an accidental “slip.” But she had mentioned it twice"}}'>twice prior to that interview. (Feb. 3) Trump approvingly shared a story on his official Facebook page which claimed that Kuwait issued a visa ban for five Muslim-majority countries. Kuwait issued a statement categorically denying it"}}'>categorically denying it. (Feb. 3) Trump claimed people are “pouring in"}}'>pouring in” after his immigration order was temporarily suspended. Travelers and refugees cannot simply rush into the U.S. without extensive and lengthy vetting"}}'>without extensive and lengthy vetting. (Feb. 5) After a judge halted his immigration ban, Trump claimed that “anyone, even with bad intentions, can now come into the U.S.” Not true"}}'>Not true. (Feb. 5) Spicer said"}}'>said nationwide protests of Trump are not like protests the tea party held, and called them “a very paid AstroTurf-type movement.” Although Democrats have capitalized on the backlash against Trump by organizing, the massive rallies across dozens of cities across the country ― which in some cases have been spontaneous ― suggests they are part of an organic phenomenon. (Feb. 6) During an interview with Fox News before the Super Bowl, Trump repeated"}}'>repeated his debunked claim of widespread voter fraud during the presidential election. There is no evidence of widespread voter fraud. Republican and Democratic state officials have said so, as have Trump’s own campaign attorneys"}}'>Trump’s own campaign attorneys. (Feb. 6) During an interview with Fox News before the Super Bowl, Trump repeated his false claim that he has “been against the war in Iraq from the beginning.” (Feb. 6) Conway said"}}'>said she would not appear on CNN’s “State of the Union” because of “family” reasons. CNN, however, said the White House offered Conway as an alternative to Vice President Mike Pence and that the network had “passed"}}'>passed” because of concerns about her “credibility.” (Feb. 6) Spicer claimed CNN “retracted” its explanation of why it declined to take Conway for a Sunday show appearance. CNN said"}}'>said it never did so. (Feb. 6) Trump cited attacks in Boston, Paris, Orlando, Florida, and Nice, France, as examples of terrorism the media has not covered adequately. “In many cases, the very, very dishonest press doesn’t want to report it,” he said at CENTCOM. Those attacks garnered wall-to-wall television coverage, as well as thousands of news articles in print and online. (Feb. 6) The White House released a more expansive list"}}'>list of terrorist attacks it believed “did not receive adequate attention from Western media sources.” Again, the list includes attacks that were widely covered by the media. (Feb. 6) Trump said sanctuary cities “breed crime.” FBI data indicates that crime in sanctuary cities is generally lower than in nonsanctuary cities. (Feb. 6) Trump claimed"}}'>claimed The New York Times was “forced to apologize to its subscribers for the poor reporting it did on my election win.” The paper has not issued such an apology. (Feb. 6) Trump claimed the murder rate is the highest it’s been in 47 years. The murder rate rose 10.8 percent across the United States in 2015, but it’s far lower than it was 30 to 40"}}'>far lower than it was 30 to 40 years ago. (Feb. 7) Spicer explained"}}'>explained that the delay in repealing Obamacare was a result of the White House wanting to work with Congress. Unlike during the Obama administration, he asserted, the legislature ― not the White House ― was taking the lead on health care. Various congressional committees worked on drafting multiple versions of the bill that would become the Affordable Care Act ― a lengthy process that took over a year. (Feb. 7) Trump accused"}}'>accused Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) of misrepresenting “what Judge Neil Gorsuch told him” in response to the president’s attacks against the judiciary. Gorsuch called Trump’s tweets attacking federal judges “demoralizing.” A spokesman for Gorsuch confirmed"}}'>confirmed the judge’s remarks. (Feb. 9) Trump has repeatedly said he doesn’t watch CNN. But he had to in order to see and offer and opinion on the network’s interview with Blumenthal. (Feb. 9) Former national security adviser Michael Flynn has said that phone calls he made to Russia prior to Trump’s inauguration were not related to sanctions. According to a Washington Post"}}'>Washington Post report, however, Flynn held private discussions with Sergey Kislyak, the Russian ambassador, before Trump took office, suggesting that sanctions against Moscow would be eased by the incoming administration. (Feb. 9) Trump took credit for Ford’s decision not to open an auto factory in Mexico and instead expand its Michigan plant. The company said Trump was not responsible for its decision. (Feb. 9) Trump told"}}'>told a room full of politicians that “thousands” of “illegal” voters had been driven into New Hampshire to cast ballots. There is no evidence of such a claim. (Feb. 11) During an interview with ABC’s “This Week,” White House senior policy aide Stephen Miller falsely said the “issue of busing voters into New Hampshire is widely known by anyone who’s worked in New Hampshire politics.” Again, not true. (Feb. 11) Miller cited the “astonishing” statistic that 14 percent of noncitizens are registered to vote. The study the stat is based on has been highly contested"}}'> highly contested. (Feb. 11) Trump said"}}'>said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) was “cut off” on CNN for “using the term fake news the describe the network.” The senator was joking and he was not cut off"}}'>was not cut off. (Feb. 12) Trump accused"}}'>accused the media of refusing to report on “big crowds of enthusiastic supporters lining the road” in Florida. There were a few supporters, but they were vastly outnumbered"}}'>vastly outnumbered by hundreds of protesters. (Feb. 12) White House officials told"}}'>told reporters that Flynn decided on his own to resign. However, Spicer said during a press briefing that the president asked Flynn to resign. (Feb. 13) Trump denied"}}'>denied in a January interview that he or anyone on his campaign had any contact with Russia prior to the election. However, The New York Times"}}'>The New York Times and CNN both reported that Trump campaign officials and associates “had repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials” before Nov. 8. (Feb. 15) Spicer denied"}}'>denied in a daily briefing that anyone on the Trump campaign had had any contact with Russian officials. (Feb. 15) Trump complained he “inherited a mess"}}'>inherited a mess” upon being elected to office. The stock market is experiencing record highs, the economy is stable and growing, and unemployment is low. (Feb. 16) Trump disputed the notion that his administration is experiencing turmoil, telling reporters it is working like a “fine-tuned machine.” His poorly executed travel ban has been suspended by the courts, a Cabinet nominee was forced to withdraw his nomination, and Trump’s national security adviser resigned after less than four weeks on the job. (Feb. 16) Trump said"}}'>said his 306 Electoral College votes was the biggest electoral votes victory since Ronald Reagan. He actually received 304 electoral votes. Moreover, Obama got 332 votes in 2012. (Feb. 16) Trump said his first weeks in office “represented an unprecedented month of action.” Obama accomplished much more during his first weeks in office"}}'>much more during his first weeks in office. (Feb. 16) Defending himself from charges of hypocrisy on the matter of leaks ― which he frequently celebrated when they pertained to his campaign opposition but now denounces ― Trump said that WikiLeaks does not publicize “classified information.” It does, often anonymously. (Feb. 16) Trump repeated his claim that Hillary Clinton gave 20 percent of American uranium to the Russians in a deal during her tenure as secretary of state. Not true"}}'>Not true. (Feb. 16) Trump said drugs are “becoming cheaper than a candy bar.” They are not. (Feb. 16) Trump said his administration had a “very smooth rollout of the travel ban.” His immigration caused chaos at the nation’s airports and has been suspended by the courts. (Feb. 16) Trump said the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is in “chaos” and “turmoil.” It is not. (Feb. 16) Flynn lied to FBI investigators"}}'>lied to FBI investigators in a Jan. 24 interview about whether he discussed sanctions with Russian officials prior to Trump’s inauguration, according to The Washington Post. (Feb. 16) Trump falsely suggested at a Florida rally that Sweden had suffered a terror attack"}}'>Sweden had suffered a terror attack the night before his speech. It had not, and Trump was likely referring to a Fox News segment on crime in Sweden. (Feb. 18) During his Florida rally, Trump repeated his false claim that the United States has already let in thousands of people who “there was no way to vet"}}'>there was no way to vet.” Refugees undergo the most rigorous vetting process of any immigrants admitted to the United States, often waiting upwards of two years to be cleared for entry. (Feb. 18) White House chief of staff Reince Priebus said in a “Fox News Sunday” interview that Trump “has accomplished more in the first 30 days than people can remember.” Obama accomplished much more during his first weeks in office"}}'>much more during his first weeks in office. (Feb. 19) Trump said during his campaign that he would only play golf with heads of state and business leaders, not friends and celebrities like Obama did. Trump has golfed with world leaders like Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Most recently"}}'>Most recently, however, he hit the links with golf pro Rory McIlroy, International Sports Management’s Nick Mullen and his friend Rich Levine. (Feb. 19) A White House spokesperson told reporters that Trump only played a “couple” of holes at his golf resort in Florida. A day later, as reports"}}'>reports came out saying the president had played 18 holes with Mcllroy, the White House admitted he played “longer.” (Feb. 19) Trump said the media is “trying to say large scale immigration in Sweden is working out just beautifully. NOT!” Sweden’s crime rate has fallen in recent years, and experts there do not think its immigration policies are linked to crime. (Feb. 20) Spicer said Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R) asked for a meeting with Trump at the White House. John Weaver, a former campaign aide of the governor, said"}}'>said the president asked for the meeting. (Feb. 21) Vice President Mike Pence called Obamacare a “job killer.” Overall, job growth has been steady since it was signed into law. And the number of unwilling part-time jobs has also gone down, contrary to GOP claims. (Feb. 22) Trump claimed that he negotiated $1 billion in savings to develop two new Boeing Co. jets to serve as the next Air Force One. The Air Force can’t account for that number. (Feb. 22) During a meeting with the nation’s CEOs at the White House, Trump claimed his new economic adviser Gary Cohn “paid $200 million in tax” to take a job at the White House. Cohn didn’t have to pay taxes, he had to sell more than $200 million of Goldman Sachs stock. (Feb. 23) Trump claimed there were “six blocks” worth of people waiting to get into the Conservative Political Action Conference to see him. People filled only three overflow rooms. (Feb. 24) At CPAC, Trump said that Obamacare covers “very few people.” Nearly 20 million people have gotten health insurance under the law. (Feb. 24) At CPAC, Trump said companies like Intel were making business investments in the United States because of his election. The company planned their new investments before the election. (Feb. 24)
While i have no doubt that Trump is a bullshitter i find it funny that the media let obama get away with lie after lie after lie, even shit that was so dumb it defied basic economics, like : were going to insure 30 million more people, and people with pre existing conditions, and we will save you 2500 dollars.......... i mean it was so fucking obvious to anyone with a basic understanding of economics that he was promising the impossible, and alot of the media made fun of republicans for calling him on it, calling them nut jobs, so why is it none of them ever called obama on any of his lies until it was obviously such a trainwreck he couldnt contain it? Why did no one on CNN ever question obamacare when the chief architect Gruber admitted whole heartedly that he had to lie to people in order to get them to accept it. Funny how the media who all of a sudden grabbed a pair of balls, couldnt possibly come to the conclusion that Obama had done anything wrong, do you not see how people on the right find that a little bit disingenous?
Meanwhile, Trump will amp up military and infrastructure spending, cut taxes and all the while balance the budget. Win! Win! Win!
LOL, the difference is im not stupid enough to believe that, and i dont think most conservatives/libertarians are either, the scariest thing about Trump is that hes not a true conservative, im very worried right now that hes just going to blow a gigantic hole in the deficit trying to please everyone on both sides, increased spending, lowered taxes, bread and circuses for everyone, just like that fuckwad Bush. Trump has already said he doesnt want to touch medicare/medicaid, social security, and wants to boost the military, (vast majority of the budget) on top of infrastructure spending, and tax cuts so odds are pretty high that the deficit is going up. Only hope is that the Republicans block alot of this shit but they are phonies too so it most likely wont happen. Bottom line is the only way hes going to get tax reform is if he agrees to spending increases, to appease the left, so basically we are just going to get screwed by both sides again, because the politicians on both sides dont give a shit as long as they get their sacred cows.
But wait! Isn't Trump's supposed appeal that he says what he means and means what he says? Or some variation of that? So the guy lauded for being a "straight shooter" doesn't shoot straight?
LOL, are you implying that people in politics are full of shit? I never would have guessed, Trump definitely means what he says imo not political speak there, he has done exactly what he said he was going to do, (minus the obvious bombast) contrast that with career liars like Nany Pelosi or Paul Ryan, or Hillary, or McCain, who give you focus group tested meaningless responses to answers. Can you honestly tell me with full certainty where Hillary or McCain, or Pelosi, or Obama, or McConnell stands on issues like TPP, Keystone pipeline, immigration, etc...... lol we all know how that shit would have ended up but none of them had the balls to come out and give a legitimate reponse, they wanted to have their cake and eat it too. Ill take the guy who says whats on his mind every single time, over the asshole who tries to hedge his bets, and fleece people by sidestepping every difficullt question they get cause its not politically expedient. Trumps a bullshitter, no doubt about it but atleast with Trump what you see is what you get where as people like Hillary, or Jeb Bush, or Obama, or Paul Ryan or Harry Reid, or Nancy Pelosi, etc.... etc....... just shift opinions to whatever the politically correct mantra of the day happens to be, and outright lie when it serves their purpose. Trump has literallty done exactlty what he said he was going to do,(which is a little scary) banned immigrants from terrorist countries, kicking out illegal criminals, trying to renogotiate nafta, cut regs, trying to cut taxes, and wants to spend on infastructure.......etc.... etc...... sure he bullshitted about gettting mexico to pay for the wall, but everyone knew that was him being an overexxagerrating idiot. Can you actually tell me with 100% certainty what would have happened with Hillary on these issues? My bet is keystone would have been approved(direct contradiction to what she said), nafta would have been left alone, (direct contradiction to what she said) she most likely would have repealed dodd frank(Direct contradiction to what she said, shes a corparatist who knew it was garbage)and criminal illegals would have gotten a pass(direct contradiction to what she said) even though she openly stated the opposite oppinion on every single one of those issues when it didnt suit her politically, so tell me whose the real liar?
But that was not the point of his supposed appeal among the Believers. As for Hillary, I can't say for sure how things would have worked out if she won, but I think it's fair to say that most of the world misses her. (Hint: ET P&R, Breitbart, Fox et al are not the world.)
The "world" misses donating to Hillary's charity because they all expected to get favors in return when she became president. Of course, the charity is now broke and laying off staff. They are expected to go completely out of business by the end of this year.
You just can't help yourself, can you? You jump at innuendo about the Clintons but deny in-your-face stuff about Trump. Not very impressive. http://www.snopes.com/clinton-foundation-dead-contributions-dry/