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Is It Fake? Or Can You Not Handle the Truth?

There’s a name for sensational information and opinion sources posing as news: we call them “fake news.” A writer who identifies as Seminole Democrat offers this definition of the term: “’Fake News’ is a very real thing. It is the publication of hoaxes, propaganda, and disinformation purporting to be real news with the deliberate intent to mislead. Many fake news websites originate from Russia, Macedonia, and Romania” (“Media Bites Back,” The Daily Sentinel).

Anyone who has been marginally conscious during the last month knows one thing above all else about our new “president”: He HATES the media. His hatred extends to any news source, any reporter, and any writing which does not feed his gargantuan ego. He was so discouraged after his first four weeks in office that he felt it necessary to throw himself a great big love fest in Florida, attended by about 9000 enthusiastic rally goers who gave his spirits just the lift they needed.

Having a name for a phenomenon which is clearly a problem is good; readers need to distinguish between what is factual news and what is propaganda, and labels help us sort things out. However, Trump’s media war and his irresponsible attacks on the free press have rendered the term meaningless and left us once again without clear guidelines on what to believe and what to reject in the flood of information we encounter each day. Trump latched onto the term “fake news” like it was a stack of $100 bills and turned it into a convenient slur for any reports that cast him in an unfavorable light, of which there have been plenty.

To be fair, probably everyone reading this article has at some time criticized the media and blamed them for all that is wrong in the world. It’s a national pastime. I’ve done it. So why is it an emergency when the “president” does the same thing? Well, because he’s not really doing the same thing. Most of us have a limited audience for our rantings: a dinner party perhaps, an action group, blog readers, social media friends, students. But when the president speaks, the whole world is listening; and his words shape thoughts, opinions, attitudes, policies, and alliances or conflicts. Our nation’s chief executive is expected to speak publicly with intelligence, judgment, and diplomacy. That’s what we mean when we talk about being presidential, and those who are still expecting this “president” to pivot to presidential behavior are at best naïve.

Much as we may occasionally disdain the media, we live with the fact that without a free press there can be no democracy. What’s the old saying? Can’t live with them, can’t live without them. The press is sometimes referred to as the Fourth Estate. Thomas Carlyle, in his book On Heroes and Hero Worship, attributes the origin of the term to Edmund Burke: “Burke said there were Three Estates in Parliament; but, in the Reporters’ Gallery yonder, there sat a Fourth Estate more important far than they all.” The three estates of Parliament to which Burke refers were the Lords Spiritual (the clergy), the Lords Temporal (the nobility), and the Commons (the commoners).

Visualize that image: Three estates were joined in the governing body, each with a voice in the political process. Removed from that triad was the fourth estate: observing, reporting, but without a direct voice in the political process. They were politically independent and were expected to speak the truth to their readers; so while the other three estates’ purview was politics, the purview of the fourth estate was truth. The fourth estate was said to be “more important far than they all” because they act as the liaison between the government and the governed. Though they have no voice in government, their voice to the governed is invaluable.

Their presence acts as another check on the governing body, providing incentive to behave ethically or face the consequence of having their transgressions made known to the public. That’s not an enviable assignment. It takes courage and conviction to report honestly and hold people accountable, knowing that one’s honesty is not going to be appreciated by those being reported on. Nonetheless, a free and independent press is at the core of any democracy.

Governments that want to shun accountability and transparency and to conduct their operations in secret make the press their first target. Of all the appalling things Trump has done during his campaign and during the first five weeks of his “presidency,” his war on the media is the most significant. He has, in the minds of his followers, so delegitimized the press that the followers will accept his lies as truth and reject the press’s truth as lies. This is a very dangerous situation, and few members of our current congress are going to do anything about it. It’s up to each of us to be informed, to be willing to call a lie a lie every time we hear one, and to stand in solidarity with the honest journalists who devote their lives to bringing us the truth.

To begin, we have to sharpen our critical thinking skills. There really is fake news, and there really is honest journalism. Believing everything one reads and rejecting everything one reads are equally naïve, lazy, and dangerous; knowing what to believe and what to reject is not for the mentally slothful. Let’s look at a completely non-political example to illustrate the differences.

Imagine that you’re 12 years old, and your parents have left you in your grandparents’ care for the day. Your grandparents instruct you at the beginning of the day that you may play unattended, but you must stay close to the house so that they can know where you are at all times. You agree and head outside. After a while, you meet some of the neighborhood kids who join you in your activities; and soon they invite you to go with them to hang out at their house and swim in their pool. That sounds like fun, so you go. An hour later, when you return, your grandparents are upset because they have been unable to find you and have been worried. Because of the safety factor (they don’t know the people whose house you visited) and the trust issue (you didn’t do what you agreed to do), they decide your parents should be informed.

Scenario One: Fake News

You really didn’t do any of this; but your grandparents are still a little miffed at you over something you did the last time you visited, so they fabricate a story for the sole purpose of getting you into trouble with your parents. Or perhaps your grandma went out to check on you, couldn’t see you for a few minutes because you were riding around the block on your bike, freaked out, and then exaggerated and embellished the story to teach you a lesson.

Scenario Two: Biased News

Your grandparents relate the facts exactly as they happened but focus on the fact that the people you visited are a different ethnicity or religion than your family is. They don’t lie, but they seem more concerned about the ethnic or religious difference than they do about the relevant factors of safety and trust.

Scenario Three: Objective Journalism

Your grandparents relate only the facts, leaving your parents to make their own decision about the gravity of the offense and what if any consequences you should incur.

Obviously the first scenario should never happen. It’s mean, unethical, and destructive. Just as obviously, the third scenario is the ideal; however, we all know that kind of reporting is probably the least common these days. The second scenario seems to be the most common. The important distinction, though, is that neither the second nor the third scenario is fake news. Both types report the facts, and a critical reader or listener can usually detect the bias and disregard it. Because fake news is either pure fiction or fiction built around a kernel of truth, and because one of the disturbing realities of our time is the low regard for fact and the high regard for anything that reinforces our previously held opinions, and because propaganda is composed with the intent to deceive, fake news is not so easily detected or rejected.

Although biased news sources attempt to influence readers toward a particular slant on the truth, fake news sources disregard truth altogether. They are operated for the sole purpose of spreading misinformation and propaganda—sometimes favoring the right, sometimes the left. They are characterized by sensational, misleading, and often downright dishonest headlines. The writers make no pretense of having vetted their information, and their readers do not require adherence to journalistic standards of investigation, use of primary sources, and vetting of sources and evidence. These sites exist only to reinforce the prejudices of their readers; and again, some are left and some are right.

CNN is not fake news; and even though I prefer CNN over Fox, I will say that Fox is not fake news. CNN leans a little left, and Fox leans a lot right, but both employ legitimate journalists who report documented information from different points of view. And calling the New York Times, one of our country’s most respected newspapers since 1851, “fake news” is just absurd! I would add that not all of those who host shows on Fox are “legitimate journalists”; but they offer opinions and would, in think, be most accurately categorized as talk shows. Talk shows are not fake news; they are sources of opinion, discussion, and entertainment and should be recognized as such.

So when DJT cries “fake news,” is the news really fake, or can the thin-skinned orange guy just not handle the truth? Well, you know what I think; and if you’ve read this far, you probably agree. Let’s all scream it together: “You can’t handle the truth, Donald!”

Here is CNN’s Don Lemon explaining to a Trump surrogate the definition of fake news:

Trump’s only defense is revenge; when you don’t have intellect, class, or integrity, all you can do is hit back at any perceived opponent. Our (yours and my) best defense, however, is knowledge. Here’s a good link recommended by one of my librarian friends on how to know the difference between fake news and objective or biased journalism: http://blogs.ifla.org/…/01/How-to-Spot-Fake-News-1.jpg

Meanwhile, Trump’s war against the media will go on. In his most shocking and egregious battle so far in that war, his administration barred news organizations from attending a White House briefing session conducted by press secretary Sean Spicer on Friday, February 24. Journalists from The New York Times, CNN, the LA Times, and Politico were told that they could not enter the briefing room because they were “not on the list.” Breitbart News was, of course, among the select groups granted admission. The New York Times’ executive editor said, “Nothing like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties.”

Never happened before. That makes this decision an historic moment. Dan Rather calls it an emergency:

The time for normalizing, dissembling, and explaining away Donald Trump has long since passed. The barring of respected journalistic outlets from the White House briefing is so far beyond the norms and traditions that have governed this republic for generations, that they must be seen as a real and present threat to our democracy. These are the dangers presidents are supposed to protect against, not create.

For all who excused Mr. Trump’s rhetoric in the campaign as just talk, the reckoning has come.  . .  . What are you going to do about it? Do you maintain that an Administration that seeks to subvert the protections of our Constitution is fit to rule unchecked? Or fit to rule at all?

This is an emergency that can no longer be placed solely at the feet of President Trump, or even the Trump Administration. This is a moment of judgment for everyone who willingly remains silent. It is gut check time, for those in a position of power, and for the nation.

Jen Psaki, who held various positions related to communications during the Obama administration, sums it up well:

The Trump administration wants to continue to delegitimize institutions like the mainstream media. The more they can confuse the lines between facts and truth, legitimate and illegitimate sources of information, the more they will be able to brainwash the small segment of the public they care about reaching.

Because the way an administration interacts with the free press in the United States, through briefings and access to reporters — even those who have reported unflattering, harsh and sometimes unfair stories — sends a message to the rest of the world about how much we value the freedom of the press.

Knowledge is power. Is it fake, is it factual but biased, or is it factual and objective? Know before you share. Our lives depend on it.

 

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Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week Five

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 5

Welcome back to our weekly Swamp News chat! Those gators have been well fed this week! Here’s a sampling of goings-on in our nation’s capital during the last 7 days. It was a little challenging to limit the list to only 10.

  1. Sweden became the new Bowling Green. In his February 18 campaign-style rally in Melbourne, Florida, Delusional Donald made this statement: “You look at what’s happening last night in Sweden. Sweden. Who would believe this? Sweden. They took in large numbers. They’re having problems like they never thought possible.” What’s the problem here? Nothing had happened in Sweden, no one knew what Trump was talking about, and our “president” continues to undermine his own authority and credibility with his irresponsible ramblings.
  2. Multiple sources have reported that more taxpayer money has been spent on security for the Trump family in one month than was spent on protecting the Obamas for a year.
  3. Trump reversed President Obama’s guidance intended to protect transgender students in public schools by allowing them to use restrooms which correspond with their gender identity. Trump withdrew that protection on February 22 and designated the individual states as the appropriate agencies for setting such regulations.
  4. On Friday, February 24, the White House made the unprecedented move of barring journalists from The New York Times, CNN, the LA Times, and Politico from attending a briefing by press secretary Sean Spicer. Breitbart News was, of course, among the select groups granted admission. The New York Times’ executive editor said, “Nothing like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties.”
  5. According to an article in the February 24 Huffington Post, Trump enjoys a strong approval rating among Republicans: “While just 39 percent of all respondents in a recent Pew poll said they approved of the job Trump was doing, 84 percent of Republican and Republican-leaning voters said they felt that way. GOP support for Trump surpasses that for George W. Bush, his father, and Ronald Reagan at similar points in their presidencies.” This is alarming not only because it’s terrifying to know we share this country with that many really deluded people but also because those really deluded people will be voting again in 2020. We have a LOT of work to do!
  6. According to an exclusive report on CNN, the White House issued a request asking the FBI to publicly deny well-documented media reports of communications between Trump’s associates and Russians known to U.S. intelligence. Although the FBI rejected the request, the fact that the request was made is yet another indication of Dictator Trump’s efforts to control information received by the public.
  7. Trump’s media attacks have escalated throughout the week, culminating in Friday’s barring of major reputable outlets from the White House briefing. Most disturbing in this ongoing war with the media is Trump’s continual use of the term “fake news.” That expression was coined as a label for “the publication of hoaxes, propaganda, and disinformation purporting to be real news with the deliberate intent to mislead. Many fake news websites originate from Russia, Macedonia, and Romania” (SemDem, The Daily Sentinel). Referring to such respected outlets as The New York Times and others as fake news delegitimizes the free press in general and undermines their ability to ensure transparency in government. This is the most dangerous thing Trump is doing.
  8. During Trump’s CPAC speech on Friday, February 24, he briefly referred to Hillary Clinton’s “basket of deplorables” comment, which evoked boos and chants of “Lock her up!” from his audience. Trump stood silent during the chants and resumed speaking when the chanting ceased, once again demonstrating his inability to let go of a grudge or to behave in a presidential manner.
  9. Although the angry town hall meetings which have been reported this week were not conducted by Trump, the level of outrage expressed at those meetings is the result of Trump’s actions during his first chaotic month in office and the failure of many members of congress to effectively perform their constitutional duty. According to WhiteHouse.gov, “Oversight of the executive branch is an important Congressional check on the President’s power and a balance against his discretion in implementing laws and making regulations.” Haven’t seen much of that going on.
  10. The ever-creepy, ever-terrifying Steve Bannon, in his CPAC speech, “stressed the importance of Trump’s moves to begin a ‘deconstruction of the administrative state’ by appointing individuals from the private sector to key economic Cabinet positions who will help strip down federal regulations.” Scared yet?

And finally, there is a new travel ban in the works which will no doubt be the centerpiece of next week’s list. According to reports, this ban will be coming soon to a news outlet near you. Of course, you may have to check out Breitbart or Fox, since your usual information source is probably on the hit list.

That’s it for this week’s Swamp News. Keep up the resistance! And let our fine Senator Rubio hear from you this week: tell him the next time he’s up for reelection, we’ll remember his statement that he didn’t hold a town hall during recess because “people get rude and stupid” at those things.

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Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week Four

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 4

Well, I’d like to report that our “president” has made progress on his promise to drain the swamp, but in fact, those gators are getting fatter by the day. This week’s Swamp News includes the following events:

  1. Trump fired Michael Flynn, his National Security Adviser, after evidence of his phone calls with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak was made public. Trump had known about the calls for weeks but took action only after the information was leaked to the public.
  2. On Saturday, February 11, while dining with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the open-air patio at Mar-a-Lago, Trump received word that North Korea had launched an intermediate-range ballistic missile. Rather than retiring to a secure location to discuss the crisis, aides huddled around the table—in full view of spouses, wait staff, and fellow diners. One diner posted photos on Facebook, along with commentary on what was happening and even posted a photo of himself with “Rick,” the aide-de-camp who carries the nuclear “football” for Trump. The Facebook account has been deleted, but the damaging photos and comments are still floating around the Internet. And needless to say, the stupidity which led to the mishandling of the situation is still very much intact.
  3. The Office of Government Ethics has recommended disciplinary action against top adviser Kellyanne Conway for giving Ivanka Trump’s clothing and accessory line a free TV commercial on Fox and Friends. Apparently she forgot to read the Emoluments Clause in the Constitution. But who can blame her? Has anyone in this administration read any part of the Constitution?
  4. Trump abandoned decades of diplomacy with Israel/Palestine by announcing that he would consider a one-state solution. This is a devastating blow to Palestinians who suffer under the continued incursions into their territory by Jewish settlers and to the decades of diplomacy that have kept the possibility of an equitable two-state solution alive.
  5. Trump walked out of a joint press conference with Benjamin Netanyahu when he was asked about Michael Flynn and the administration’s ties to Russia.
  6. Trump’s nominee for Labor Secretary, Andrew Puzder, withdrew after it became apparent he could not get the necessary votes for confirmation because of well-founded concern over his past business practices and personal ethics.
  7. Trump has scheduled a campaign-style rally in Florida this weekend to bolster his wounded ego. The screaming, chanting crowds are what he needs to reassure him that everybody likes him and he’s winning. Do we need any more proof that we’ve elected a mentally ill, emotionally crippled, man child to the White House?
  8. Trump’s first choice for a National Security Adviser to replace the fired Michael Flynn was Robert Harward. Harward, however, declined the offer after watching Trump’s chaotic performance in Thursday’s press conference, calling Trump’s offer a “shit sandwich.”
  9. A draft memo which has been circulating for a couple of weeks suggests that as many as 100,000 national guard troops will be militarized to round up immigrants for deportation. The Trump administration has called the report 100% false, but it seems this may be yet another embarrassing leak which they were unprepared to defend.
  10. And the centerpiece of this week’s Chaos in the Swamp is Trump’s first solo press conference since he took office. The conference has been variously described by media outlets as “unhinged,” “chaotic,” “a train wreck”; and his behavior has been called “petulant,” “combative,” “angry.” And these are the kinder descriptions. Aside from utterly humiliating our nation in the eyes of the world with his juvenile tantrums, Trump has declared all-out war on our media, calling such historically respected models of journalism as the New York Times “fake news.” This can’t possibly end well.

So until next week’s edition of the Swamp News, keep watching those waters rise. We’re in for a tidal wave.

 

 

 

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Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week Three

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 3

This week, in our nation’s increasingly chaotic capital, the Trump administration has clearly NOT drained the swamp. Here’s the raw meat they’ve thrown to those swamp gators this week:

  1. Kellyanne Conway (aka, per Keith Olbermann, Kellyanne Conjob) provided Ivanka Trump “a free commercial” for her clothing line, saying during a Fox News interview, “Go buy Ivanka’s stuff.” She has been “counseled” on this violation of ethics laws.
  2. The “president” was defeated in appeals court. The panel of judges voted unanimously, 3-0, to uphold the lower courts’ suspension of Trump’s travel ban. In his usual fashion, Trump expressed his fury via Twitter: “See you in court.” When you think about it, that’s somewhat ironic, since he had already seen them in court, and he lost. The case is almost certain to wind up in the SCOTUS.
  3. Betsy DeVos was confirmed as Secretary of Education, a job for which she has clearly demonstrated her gross lack of qualification.
  4. Jeff Sessions was confirmed as Attorney General, despite his being rejected for a federal judgeship 30 years ago based on his overt racism.
  5. The Senate Majority Leader silenced a fellow senator (a woman) who had begun to read a letter written by the widow of Martin Luther King Jr. citing relevant information regarding Jeff Sessions’ qualifications to serve as Attorney General. “She was warned. She was given an explanation. Nevertheless, she persisted.” This may well be the most important story of the week.
  6. Trump’s SCOTUS nominee called Trump’s Twitter attacks on the judge who imposed the suspension of his travel ban “disheartening” and “demoralizing.” When Sen. Richard Blumenthal reported these remarks, Trump went after the messenger, attacking Blumenthal’s past actions and accusing him of lying about Gorsuch’s comments. It became clear Trump was the one who was lying (again) when Gorsuch and other Republicans affirmed that he had indeed made the comments.
  7. Trump allegedly didn’t know that he had signed the appointment seating Bannon on the National Security Council and unseating the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the director of national intelligence. Many interpret this to mean that Bannon himself is making the appointments and Trump is rubber stamping them.
  8. Trump attacked Nordstrom on Twitter for dropping his daughter Ivanka’s clothing brands from their stores.
  9. Steve Bannon can’t stop talking about war, making dire predictions about imminent catastrophic conflicts.
  10. White House national security adviser Michael Flynn is in the hot seat for “potentially illegal” phone calls with officials in Russia, some of which took place before Trump was officially president. He of course has lied about his actions.

Overall, from the administration’s inability to find light switches to the mountain of lies they are piling up, the laws they are violating, the constant leaks, the conflicts of interest, and the appointments of unqualified cabinet members, our White House is sitting in the middle of a big, creepy swamp that won’t be drained any time soon.

 

 

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Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week Two

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 2

This week, our new “president”

  1. Insulted the prime minister of Australia, one of our allies, in an angry and thuggish phone conversation which Trump ended abruptly less than halfway into the scheduled time. John McCain and others felt compelled to attempt damage control because of the embarrassment and the potential damage of Trump’s creating a rift between the U.S. and a solid ally.
  2. Hastily orchestrated and sloppily executed a raid on Yemen, which resulted in the deaths of a Navy SEAL and about 30 other people, some of whom were Al Qaeda operatives but the number also included 10 women and 3 children. (Huffington Post)
  3. Continued addressing conflict on his travel ban through Tweets rather than constructive dialogue among government agencies to arrive at an equitable solution. Ended the week in a battle with a federal judge in Seattle who has issued an order blocking Trump’s ban.
  4. Continued to embarrass our country in the eyes of the world through the careless and dishonest remarks of his adviser Kellyanne Conway and press secretary Sean Spicer. This week, Conway added the “Bowling Green Massacre” (an event she fabricated on the spur of the moment) to her book of “alternative facts.”
  5. Swore in Rex Tillerson as Secretary of State despite his receiving the largest number of negative votes for a secretary of state in U.S. Senate history. Tillerson is the former chairman and CEO of Exxon Mobil. From The Atlantic: “His company’s relationships with Russian President Vladimir Putin; a shadowy Russia-U.S. oil venture based in the Bahamas, a tax haven; as well as, allegedly, the governments of Iran, Syria, and Sudan, suggest a pragmatic businessman whose pursuit of profit, while legitimate, leaves him open to difficult questions on his foreign ties.”
  6. Appointed far-right evangelical Jerry Falwell Jr to head an education task force, which “will push to stop regulations coming out of the Education Department, especially those that apply to colleges and universities.” (per Len Stevens, spokesman for Liberty University)
  7. Made plans for his third weekend as “president” to include two events which place his conflicts of interest front and center once again: “Trump will spend Saturday and Sunday nights attending private events where his presence, and the attendant press coverage of the president, stand to directly benefit the properties’ bottom lines. Given that Trump earns income from both of these properties, his decision ― as president ― to attend events there creates the appearance that he may be using the presidency to increase the visibility, prestige and financial value of his clubs.” (Huffington Post)
  8. Threatened Iran. National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, in response to Trump’s criticism of various existing agreements between the U.S. and Iran: “As of today, we are officially putting Iran on notice.”
  9. Made remarks at a Black History Month event which not only managed to praise himself and attack CNN once again but revealed his utter ignorance of important black historical figures such as Frederick Douglass.
  10. Signed a deregulation order requiring administrative agencies to revoke two regulations for every new regulation they propose implementing. This order would apply to a wide range of agencies, including the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy, which affect public health and consumer protection.

What he did NOT do in Week 1 or Week 2 is show ANY sign at all of “draining the swamp.” Those gators are looking mighty healthy and well-fed to me.

 

 

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Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week One

This is a column I’ve been doing for an action group newsletter, and I’m going to start sharing it here on my blog also. Even though conscientious readers will already be aware of the events by the time the list is published, I think it’s helpful to see the full impact of what’s happening in one concise list; and although it’s difficult to limit the list to only 10, these are in my opinion the ones with the greatest impact.

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 1

During Week 1 of the Twilight Zone “presidency,” #45

  1. Signed 12 executive actions: 4 executive orders and 8 presidential memoranda.
  2. Gave the green light to Dakota Access and Keystone pipelines, removing environmental protections put in place by President Obama.
  3. Reinstated the global “gag rule” which bans U.S. support to foreign organizations that even discuss abortion with their clients.
  4. Issued a “Border Security” executive order which states that Congress will allot federal funds for the “immediate construction” of a southern border wall.
  5. Gave the go-ahead for Congress to begin immediately working toward repealing the Affordable Care Act (which, by the way, is the name we should use consistently from now on, since there are many among our citizenry who don’t know that the ACA and Obamacare are the same thing).
  6. Began managing information output to the public: gag orders on government agencies (Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Transportation, Interior Department, National Institutes of Health, Department of Agriculture, Health and Human Services [which includes the CDC and Food and Drug Administration] and other agencies) and removal of certain topics from the White House website.
  7. “Signed an executive order Friday that bans Syrians from taking refuge in the United States, halts the U.S.refugee resettlement program for four months and temporarily blocks people from a handful of unnamed countries from entering the U.S. at all.” (Huffington Post) It should also be noted that the ban excludes countries with which Trump has business ties.
  8. Imposed a federal hiring freeze.
  9. Lied repeatedly about the size of his inauguration crowd and the fantasy that he lost the popular vote because 3-5 million “illegals” voted for Hillary Clinton and required his press secretary and chief aides to repeat and validate his lie.
  10. Withdrew the U.S. from the Trans Pacific Partnership.

And as a footnote, Trump became the first president in U.S. history to be widely labeled a pathological liar and who made it necessary for news outlets to form policies regarding how they will respond to his lies and what terminology they will use (“falsehoods,” “misstatements,” “false statements,” “lies,” etc.) when referring to his frequent LIES.