Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Wilbur Ross

I used to watch a fair amount of Fox news.  I had a lot of clients who watched.  I wanted to see their viewpoint.  My favorite commentator was Wilbur Ross.  I was impressed by his intelligence.  I had no problem with his appointment to Trump’s cabinet.  I thought it was desirable.

I was wrong.  Turns out Ross failed to disclose he has a business with Putin’s son-in-law.  Ross testified he divested himself of $2 billion dollars in business interests prior to his confirmation hearing.  Now Ross owns up to his lie with a response that sounds like a contemptuous “Who cares?”  Forbes reports Ross did not divest $2 billion dollars.  Forbes says Ross never had $2 billion dollars.  Forbes reports Ross overstated his net worth as being 2.7 billion when it’s really $700 million.  Ross is a full-blown member of People of the Lie.  The basis of Ross’s entire Fox career, i.e., super net worth because he’s so smart, is a lie. 

When members of congress and governors run for office they have a solid record we see, because their work is public.  Financial records are private.  Trump and his minions hold them tightly.  Manafort, Flynn, Ross and Gates show us why.  Someday all Trump and his cabinet members’ financial records may be disclosed, and biographies will be written explaining the antics of a den of thieves.

The two highest rating’s draws at Fox, back when I watched, are gone.   Megyn Kelly says she’s glad to be gone.  Bill O’Reilly has become a wet, sobbing man, lashing out at God, failing to take responsibility for his actions, which, like Ross, is a complete contradiction of the principles upon which he expounded daily.

This morning I heard a billionaire on the news speak of how badly the current tax plan would hurt individuals.  The anchor shot back, “But you’re a billionaire.  It wouldn’t hurt you.  It would help you.”  The billionaire replied, “But it’s wrong.”  In this Year of the Lie many people appear to no longer be able recognize right from wrong.  They make it relative when emotions exceed intelligence.     

A liar shows he has zero respect for you.   You can choose to see things as they are, or make excuses, as your ego allows.  Adolf Hitler said, “If you tell a big enough lie and tell it frequently enough, it will be believed.”  But it didn’t end well for Hitler, and for millions of others, because of him and those complicit.  Hitler promised Germans a great nation, like the one they had before World War I.  Hitler told Germans (the white “Aryan”, non-mentally disabled Germans) he would make it better because they deserved better.   Being confronted with truth is so disappointing when the lie held such promise.  “Given a choice between a terrible truth and a beautiful lie, choose the truth every time.”   Mira Grant.

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