Make the Universe Great Again and Trump Bigotry

When you put together everything we know about Donald Trump, it's terrifying.

Over the by twelvemonth and a half, there has been a lot of reporting done on what'due south perhaps the biggest question of the 2016 presidential campaign: Who is Trump?

What we've learned should not give anyone much comfort. This is a man who's just one election away from becoming the leader of the most powerful country in the world. Yet he'south too someone who has time and time again proven to be corrupt, sexist, racist, and all sorts of other -ists. He has appeared in newspapers enervating the executions of accused men of colour who turned out to be innocent. He's been repeatedly sued for discrimination against people of color and women. He'south engaged in shady business practices that push and at times break the boundaries of the law.

Trump also seems willing and even enthusiastic to bring all of these characteristics to the White House. He has built his campaign around a proposal to build a wall at the U.s.a.-Mexico border, based in large part on his belief that Mexican immigrants are "bringing crime" to the United states of america. (Nope.) He has proposed policies that target people based on their nationality and religion. He has continued to insult women based on their looks on the entrada trail. And in the second presidential argue — on national television! — he threatened to put his political opponent, Hillary Clinton, in jail if he becomes president.

Many people accept called this beliefs shocking. But when y'all get to know Trump, this behavior isn't really shocking; it's entirely in character. Mostly, Trump's campaign has simply reflected the very public figure Americans accept known for decades — and that makes him all the scarier.

To really understand that, though, it's useful to look dorsum at Trump's history of racism, sexism, and corruption. Information technology'southward a very long history. But it'southward actually worth reading and agreement in full. After all, Trump could be the next president of the Usa.

Trump has a long history of racism and bigotry

Donald Trump. Andrew Walker/Getty Images

The presidential campaign is far from the first fourth dimension Trump has faced accusations of racism. The very commencement time he appeared in the pages of the New York Times, back in the 1970s, was when the Usa Section of Justice sued him for racial bigotry. Since then, he has repeatedly appeared in newspaper pages across the world equally his remarks and deportment led to more similar controversies.

Here's a breakdown of Trump'due south long history, taken largely from Dara Lind's list for Vox and an op-ed past Nicholas Kristof in the New York Times:

  • 1973: The U.s. Department of Justice — under the Nixon assistants, out of all administrations — sued the Trump Direction Corporation for violating the Fair Housing Act. Federal officials found bear witness that Trump had refused to rent to black tenants and lied to black applicants about whether apartments were available, amongst other accusations. Trump said the federal government was trying to get him to rent to welfare recipients. In the aftermath, he signed an understanding in 1975 agreeing not to discriminate to renters of colour without admitting to discriminating before.
  • 1980s: Kip Dark-brown, a one-time employee at Trump's Castle, accused another of Trump's businesses of discrimination. "When Donald and Ivana came to the casino, the bosses would guild all the black people off the floor," Brown said. "It was the eighties, I was a teenager, merely I remember it: They put us all in the back."
  • 1988: In a commencement speech at Lehigh University, Trump spent much of his speech accusing countries like Nippon of "stripping the United states of america of economic dignity." This matches much of his current rhetoric on China.
  • 1989: In a controversial case that's been characterized every bit a modern-day lynching, four black teenagers and one Latino teenager — the "Central Park 5" — were accused of attacking and raping a jogger in New York Metropolis. Trump immediately took charge in the case, running an advertisement in local papers demanding, "BRING Back THE Decease PENALTY. BRING BACK OUR POLICE!" The teens' convictions were afterward vacated after they spent 7 to xiii years in prison, and the urban center paid $41 million in a settlement to the teens. Simply Trump in Oct said he still believes they're guilty, despite the Deoxyribonucleic acid evidence to the contrary.
  • 1991: A book by John O'Donnell, former president of Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, quoted Trump's criticism of a black auditor: "Black guys counting my coin! I hate it. The but kind of people I want counting my coin are short guys that wear yarmulkes every twenty-four hours. … I think that the guy is lazy. And it'south probably not his fault, considering laziness is a trait in blacks. Information technology really is, I believe that. Information technology'southward not anything they can control." Trump at first denied the remarks, but later on said in a 1997 Playboy interview that "the stuff O'Donnell wrote virtually me is probably true."
  • 1992: The Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino had to pay a $200,000 fine because it transferred black and women dealers off tables to adapt a big-time gambler's prejudices.
  • 2000: In opposition to a casino proposed by the St. Regis Mohawk tribe, which he saw as a fiscal threat to his casinos in Atlantic City, Trump secretly ran a serial of ads suggesting the tribe had a "record of criminal action [that] is well documented."
  • 2004: In flavor ii of The Apprentice, Trump fired Kevin Allen, a blackness contestant, for existence overeducated. "You're an unbelievably talented guy in terms of education, and you lot haven't washed annihilation," Trump said on the show. "At some point you have to say, 'That's plenty.'"
  • 2005: Trump publicly pitched what was essentially The Apprentice: White People vs. Black People. He said he "wasn't specially happy" with the almost contempo flavour of his prove, then he was considering "an idea that is adequately controversial — creating a squad of successful African Americans versus a team of successful whites. Whether people similar that idea or non, it is somewhat reflective of our very vicious world."
  • 2010: Just a few years ago, there was a huge national controversy over the "Basis Nil Mosque" — a proposal to build a Muslim community heart in Lower Manhattan, nigh the site of the 9/11 attacks. Trump opposed the project, calling it "insensitive," and offered to buy out 1 of the investors in the project. On The Late Show With David Letterman, Trump argued, referring to Muslims, "Well, somebody's bravado us up. Somebody'southward blowing up buildings, and somebody's doing lots of bad stuff."
  • 2011: Trump played a big role in pushing false rumors that Obama — the country's first blackness president — was not born in the Us. He fifty-fifty sent investigators to Hawaii to look into Obama's birth certificate. Obama later released his birth certificate, calling Trump a "funfair barker."
  • 2011: While Trump suggested that Obama wasn't born in the US, he also argued that peradventure Obama wasn't a proficient plenty student to have gotten into Columbia or Harvard Constabulary School, and demanded Obama release his academy transcripts. Trump claimed, "I heard he was a terrible educatee. Terrible. How does a bad student go to Columbia and so to Harvard?"

And, of course, there'south what Trump has said and done over the past ii years during his presidential campaign:

  • Trump launched his campaign calling Mexican immigrants "rapists" who are "bringing criminal offense" and "bringing drugs" to the US. His entrada is largely built on building a wall to keep these immigrants out of the Usa.
  • He called for a ban on all Muslims coming into the United states. He has since expanded this ban to include anyone from specific countries, including possibly French republic and Germany.
  • When asked at a Republican debate whether all 1.6 billion Muslims hate the US, Trump said, "I mean a lot of them. I mean a lot of them."
  • He argued that Judge Gonzalo Curiel — who's overseeing the Trump Academy lawsuit— should recuse himself from the case because of his Mexican heritage and membership in a Latino lawyers association. House Speaker Paul Ryan, who'due south endorsed Trump, afterwards called such comments "the textbook definition of a racist comment."
  • Trump has been repeatedly slow to condemn white supremacists who endorse him, and he regularly retweets messages from white supremacists and neo-Nazis.
  • He tweeted and later deleted an epitome that showed Hillary Clinton in front of a pile of money and by a Jewish Star of David that said, "Most Decadent Candidate Always!" The tweet had some very obvious anti-Semitic imagery, just Trump insisted that the star was a sheriff'south badge and said his campaign shouldn't have deleted information technology.
  • Trump has repeatedly referred to Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who has said she has Cherokee ancestors, as "Pocahontas."
  • At the Republican convention, he officially seized the curtain of the "law and order" candidate — an obvious dog whistle playing to white fears of black crime, even though crime in the US is historically low.
  • In a pitch to black voters, Trump said, "You're living in poverty, your schools are no practiced, you have no jobs, 58 percent of your youth is unemployed. What the hell do you lot have to lose?"

This long history is important. It would exist one matter if Trump made just a few racist remarks. One, ii, or even three of these types of comments might just show a bad speaker who's seriously racially insensitive, not necessarily a full-blown racist. Maybe even on the campaign trail, Trump is merely a racial opportunist, saying things he doesn't really believe to rile up voters.

But when yous take all of his actions and comments together, a clear pattern emerges — 1 that suggests that discrimination is not just campaign opportunism on Trump's part only a real chemical element of his personality, character, and career that could guide how he governs as president.

Trump has repeatedly insulted and objectified women over the decades

Donald Trump around 1980. Art Zelin/Getty Images

Trump's contemptuousness does not, even so, stop at minority Americans. Over the decades, he has besides repeatedly targeted individual women with nasty comments — more often than not focused on their advent. And he has been accused at least twice of sexual set on.

Trump's history became an enormous issue on the campaign trail in early October, when leaked audio from 2005 revealed Trump bragging that he can sexually attack women — "grab 'em past the pussy," as he put it — thanks to his celebrity status.

Vox has a running list of Trump's remarks going dorsum to 1988, calculation up to 61 insults toward 39 women. He called comedian Rosie O'Donnell "a big fat pig," "disgusting," "a slob," and "a very unattractive person." Bette Midler was "ugly." Heidi Klum is "no longer a 10."

The individual insults, though, are only one facet of Trump's broader attitude toward women. Anecdotes spanning decades make clear that Trump considers information technology his right to be surrounded past "beautiful" women. He has no boundaries well-nigh commenting on their appearance or sexuality. Twice earlier, he was accused of sexual assault, and he reportedly kissed women on the lips without their consent:

  • Jill Harth, who was meeting with Trump about promoting his dazzler pageants in the early 1990s with her boyfriend, said Trump reached upwardly her brim and groped her at dinner, took her to Ivanka Trump'due south bedroom and did the same, and connected pursuing her physically despite her protests. Harth filed a sexual harassment lawsuit in 1997 that she subsequently withdrew, only her accusations have been consistent for near 20 years. (Trump claims Harth pursued him.)
  • Ivana Trump, Trump'south first wife, said in a divorce deposition that he raped her: Trump, co-ordinate to the 1996 biography Lost Tycoon, pulled out Ivana's hair, held back her arms, and penetrated her forcibly. (Ivana now says the story is "totally without merit" and was told at "a fourth dimension of very high tension"; Trump's lawyer refuted the allegations merely also said that spousal rape is impossible, which is non true.)
  • Temple Taggart told the New York Times that when she was 21 and Miss Utah, Trump kissed her "directly on the lips" the first time they met. (Trump was married at the time.) "I idea, 'Oh my God, gross,'" she told the Times, proverb at that place were "a few other girls" he treated the same way. (Trump disputes this.)
  • In 2005, Trump told The Howard Stern Show that he made a habit of going into beauty pageant contestants' dressing rooms even when they weren't yet dressed: "No men are anywhere, and I'm immune to go in, because I'm the owner of the pageant and therefore I'm inspecting it. … 'Is everyone okay'? You know, they're standing there with no clothes. 'Is everybody okay?' And you run into these incredible looking women, and then I sort of get away with things similar that," he said, co-ordinate to BuzzFeed.

Trump too has a long track record of discriminating against women in the workplace:

  • At the Trump Organisation, he insisted that but the near bonny employees take tiffin orders for visitors at a meeting, Barbara Res, a sometime structure executive, told the New York Times. "That was purely about looks," Res told the newspaper. "He wanted the people in that room to call up that all the women who worked for him were beautiful."
  • During the same era, Trump kept an unflattering photograph of i employee that he called the "fat motion picture," and would evidence it to the employee, Louise Sunshine, when she did something he didn't like. He told Res, when she gained weight, that "you lot like your candy," according to the New York Times.
  • When Trump visited the Trump National Golf game Course in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, he'd need that employees he found unattractive be fired, Matt Pearce reported for the Los Angeles Times. And Trump passed this attitude down throughout the organization. Two senior managers urged that overweight employees be let get because they weren't attractive plenty, and managers began scheduling the most beautiful women for shifts when Trump was visiting to avert problem.
  • On set for The Apprentice, Trump talked virtually women's breast sizes, discussed which contestants he'd desire to sleep with, asked male person contestants to rate the women based on their sexual desirability, and singled out a camera operator for special attention considering he found her beautiful, co-ordinate to Slate and the Associated Press.
  • Whenever he could, Trump establish a business excuse to surround himself with cute immature women. He owned or co-endemic the Miss Universe, Miss USA, and Miss Teen United states of america pageants. He pitched a reality show called Lady and the Tramp, where, according to Diverseness, "girls in honey with the party life will exist sent to a charm school where they will receive a stern course on debutante manners." (Thankfully, it was never made.)
  • Later Trump tried, and failed, to get Nancy O'Dell to have sexual activity with him — "I did attempt and fuck her. She was married," he said on the leaked audio — he tried to supplant her equally host of the 2007 Miss U.s.a. pageant, according to Slate. O'Dell was pregnant at the fourth dimension. Although Slate doesn't draw a direct line between action and reaction, firing a woman for beingness pregnant is illegal. And so is firing a woman because she refused to sleep with you.

Then there are the dozens of one-off comments Trump has fabricated about women'south concrete appearance on Twitter and in person. "It'due south a pretty moving picture, you dropping to your knees," he told a former Playboy playmate who had dramatically begged to stay on Glory Amateur. He was a frequent guest on The Howard Stern Testify, going along with Stern's questions near which women he'd want to have sex with.

All of this speaks to some other Trump feature: When Trump dislikes a woman, his instinct is to insult her physical appearance. When he likes one, he does the contrary, and immediately praises her beauty. He does this even if the context is odd or inappropriate, as when he fabricated certain to note that the victim of a murder committed by an unauthorized immigrant was beautiful:

He memorialized his height adjutant of 26 years, a vice president within his visitor, by noting her looks first:

And, of course, when he wanted to praise Ivanka Trump, his intelligent, accomplished daughter, he did it by conferring his highest award: He would date her.

Trump is seemingly incapable of separating a woman's value from her concrete appearance. He assumes that his intimate commentary on women's bodies is always welcome, no thing who might exist listening — every bit the leaked audio, in which Trump is having a conversation with an associate in a professional setting, demonstrates.

He apparently never stops to consider how the women he'southward subjecting to all of this might feel. In a professional person setting, information technology'due south degrading to know that people are paying more attention to your looks than your abilities or achievements. Information technology's gross for your boss to tell you you're beautiful, or for a man with more ability than you lot to speculate about what you're like in bed. It's dehumanizing to be reduced to a gear up of breasts and a pretty face.

Trump'south comments and actions routinely fabricated the women who worked with and for him feel uncomfortable and unvalued. As Kristi Frank, a former contestant on The Apprentice whom Trump once referred to by miming a gesture for giant breasts, told the Associated Press: "I thought he noticed my hard work, but I gauge he didn't."

And, disturbingly, Trump seems to call back all of this is welcomed. He wrote in his 2004 volume How to Get Rich, "All the women on The Apprentice flirted with me — consciously or unconsciously. That'due south to be expected. A sexual dynamic is always present between people, unless you are asexual."

In other words: The women were asking for it. And Trump may have truly believed information technology. Harth, whom he allegedly assaulted, said Trump "genuinely seemed to presume sexual interest on her part," Kristof wrote for the New York Times.

Mayhap equally a result, Trump has never tried to hide or apologize for his sexism. He hasn't deleted his old tweets. He hasn't made a big show of having a alter of center. Information technology would have been easy to, for case, acknowledge that his remarks nigh former Miss Universe Alicia Machado'southward weight gain were offensive and distasteful, say he's gained perspective and humility from his bigger responsibilities as a politico rather than a pageant possessor, and apologize.

Instead, Trump tweeted accusations at her: "check out sexual activity tape and past." (At that place is no sex tape.) To do otherwise would be to admit he was ashamed. And Trump is not ashamed.

Trump justifies his remarks well-nigh women either as amusement or as a blow against "political correctness":

All of this adds up to a gross — and potentially illegal — history of Trump'southward time in charge of an international business, a dazzler pageant, and a reality idiot box show.

But in the Oval Office, his disrespect for women could have fifty-fifty bigger consequences: Would federal appointments in a Trump administration go to the prettiest faces rather than the most able policy hands? Would Trump create a diplomatic incident by leering at foreign leaders or their wives? Would he employ the ability of the presidency to extort sexual favors from women besides intimidated to say no? His track record suggests the answer to all of those questions could hands be yeah.

When Trump has power, he uses it to further empower and enrich himself

Trump Tower. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Beyond the accusations of racism, sexism, and other forms of bigotry, we also know that Trump seems predisposed to abuse power when he obtains information technology. Whenever he has been in positions of ability or authority, he has demonstrated a pattern of trying to enrich himself by abusing the trust others have placed in him — whether it's creditors, contractors, charitable givers, Trump University students, regulators, or entrada donors.

Over the by several months — and, indeed, the by few decades — reporters have unearthed many alarming stories that show this. They've reported on Trump'southward many shady business practices. His shady charity. His shady imitation university scam. His shady entrada spending. His many shady associates. And, last but by no means least, in that location is Trump'southward refusal to release tax returns or other financial information that would shed further low-cal on his business organisation practices, associates, and philanthropic undertakings.

Now, sometimes Trump'south abuses of trust entail breaking the law, and sometimes they're within the premises of the law. And sometimes the legality of Trump's actions isn't all the same clear — as in the case of Trump University, which will confront a fraud trial shortly later the ballot, and with some of the controversies around the Trump Foundation.

Here are just a few examples — amongst the many that reporters have unearthed over the decades — of Trump's tendency to corruption:

  • There are the hundreds of accusations that Trump refused to pay contractors and workers what they were owed, which the Wall Street Periodical and The states Today compiled this year. "The actions in total paint a portrait of Trump's sprawling arrangement frequently declining to pay pocket-sized businesses and individuals, then sometimes tying them up in court and other negotiations for years," Steve Reilly wrote for The states Today. "In some cases, the Trump teams financially overpower and outlast much smaller opponents, draining their resource." (Trump told Reilly that if he ever didn't pay, information technology must have been because he was unhappy with the piece of work.)
  • In 1986, Trump tried to take over 2 rival casino companies by buying up their stock. But the law required him to disembalm his large purchases to the Federal Trade Committee in advance, and he failed to do so. The matter ended up in court, and he was eventually forced to pay a $750,000 penalisation as a result.
  • Trump, like many other construction magnates from the 1970s and '80s, has several connections to the mob. Michael Isikoff reported for Yahoo News that Trump worked very hard to keep reputed mobster Robert LiButti happy when he gambled at the Trump Plaza in Atlantic City, keeping women and black card dealers off LiButti's tabular array — which led to a $200,000 fine for bigotry — and reportedly gifting LiButti 9 luxury cars, exchanged for a full of $1.65 million in cash.
  • Other reporters take corroborated Trump's connections to the mob. "I've covered Donald Trump off and on for 27 years, and in that fourth dimension I've encountered multiple threads linking Trump to organized crime," reporter David Cay Johnston wrote in Pol magazine. "No other candidate for the White House this twelvemonth has anything close to Trump's record of repeated social and business dealings with mobsters, swindlers, and other crooks."
  • Trump has a charitable family foundation to which, in contempo years, he has given hardly whatever money, instead raising the vast majority of its funds from others. That's rather dishonest of him, since he constantly claims that the foundation's donations are from his ain bag. But he's also used foundation money in deeply questionable ways that may well have run afoul of laws confronting "self-dealing" with charity coin — from an illegal $25,000 donation to Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi effectually the time she was looking into investigating Trump University to the $258,000 in foundation money Trump spent to settle legal issues regarding his businesses.
  • Trump Academy advertised itself every bit educational activity the secrets of real estate investment, but information technology was, apparently, a huge fraud — and it's now facing lawsuits. Jason Nicholas, a erstwhile employee, said in one degradation, "They were teaching methods that were unethical, and they had had little to no feel flipping properties or doing real estate deals. It was a façade, a total lie." Another employee, Ronald Schnackenberg, said in another deposition, "To my knowledge, not a single consumer who paid for a Trump Academy seminar program went on to successfully invest in real estate based upon the techniques that were taught."
  • As of Baronial, the Trump campaign had allotted vii percent of its total spending so far — more than than $eight.2 million — to companies owned by Trump or his children, according to an analysis by Ken Vogel for Politico. Payments went to various Trump venues, an aviation company Trump owns, Trump Tower for office space, his corporate staff, and diverse other vendors. Now, Trump isn't expected to provide this space for costless — and his entrada points out he's put $54 million of his own money into his run. Still, it sure looks like he'south trying to pad his business organisation instead of using independent vendors.
  • Presently after the Trump campaign shifted from a largely self-funded model to one more reliant on donors, Trump nearly quintupled the rent that Trump Tower was charging the entrada for office space, S.V. Dáte reported for the Huffington Post. This came at a time when the campaign didn't expand its staff size, though Trump's team later told CNN that they were paying for 2 new floors "in anticipation of more staff."
  • Trump has surrounded himself with shady people throughout his entrada. Amidst those people is Trump surrogate and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, whose assistants is under investigation for causing a serious traffic jam in Fort Lee, New Jersey, in an human activity of political revenge confronting the boondocks's mayor. There's also Trump adviser and former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, who was pushed out of Play tricks News over allegations that he sexually harassed women. And there's Jared Kushner, Trump'southward son-in-police force and a top adviser to the campaign, who tried to utilise a newspaper he owned — the New York Observer — to punish a existent estate mogul, Richard Mack, for refusing a write-down on a loan.

Put this all together, and you go a picture of a businessman who'due south washed everything he can to enrich himself — at times going outside the bounds of the law. And he doesn't seem to care if the people around him do the same. That presents a very serious threat to American norms against corruption.

"Americans pride themselves on our politicians' respect for the rule of law, on the checks and balances that protect us from the powerful," Ezra Klein wrote earlier this year. "Merely as often as not, our real protection is establish not in laws simply in norms."

And that's the deeper problem underlying all this — that Trump has repeatedly shown he has little respect for norms of ethical or acceptable behavior.

At that place's been much give-and-take about how Trump has repeatedly violated political norms of acceptable behavior, with all the bigotry, racism, and sexism he'south spouted on and off the campaign trail.

But his decades-long track record in the business concern sector and the nonprofit world, and his management of his current campaign, suggests he's willing to violate upstanding norms too. He treats rules or laws every bit inconveniences. He ignores conflicts of interest. He takes what he wants, regardless of who gets hurt. And all this is when he is simply a wealthy businessperson.

Yet if Trump wins in November, he becomes the nigh powerful person in the globe, with a nuclear arsenal, the US military, and thousands of government appointees who can conduct out his ideas at his disposal.

This is who Donald Trump is — and we've always known it

Donald Trump takes notes at the second presidential debate. Win McNamee/Getty Images

Throughout the campaign trail, at that place have been repeated suggestions that we will somewhen discover out who the "real" Trump is. The thinking goes something like this: Trump doesn't really believe that Mexicans are criminals, Muslims are dangerous, women are objects for his pleasance, and so on. He's just taking reward of what many uneducated voters feel to endeavour to rile upwards the conservative base to victory. Once he'southward in power, he'll be much more reasonable.

Trump himself has pushed this myth, as Dara Lind reported for Vox:

When Ben Carson, during his endorsement speech in March, said that there were "two Donald Trumps," Trump himself agreed: "There are probably two Donald Trumps. The public version — and people run across that, and I don't know what they see exactly, but it seems to have worked over my lifetime, — merely it's probably different, I think, than the personal Donald Trump." The personal Donald Trump, Carson and Trump unsaid, wasn't a churl who would (say) casually accuse people of mental illness and sociopathy. He was a decent human being being.

And Trump all only promised that, if elected to the presidency, the kinder, gentler, more dignified Trump was the Trump that would dominion the country.

"When I'm president I'm a dissimilar person. I tin do anything. I tin can be the most politically correct person you have always seen," he told Iowa rallygoers in Jan. "Right now they come at you from 15 different angles. You have to be sharp, yous have to be quick, and you have to exist somewhat roughshod. When you are running the country, information technology is a dissimilar dialogue."

Just at that place is no reason to believe this is the case. Trump has had different levels of power and potency over the years, from running an enormous international family concern to candidature for president. And time and time once again, he has shown what he'south really like: He will do whatever he tin to enrich himself, even if it means pushing or breaking the boundaries of the law. He will apparently hire and fire employees based on his racial biases and gross conceptions of women.

And he'll never apologize for it — instead doubling downwardly on even the nearly absurd controversies, from his insistence that the Key Park 5 are guilty despite the DNA evidence to his vicious comments about Rosie O'Donnell to his justifications for non paying people he hired for piece of work.

This is who Trump is. That's what the history tells united states of america. So if Trump becomes president and behaves in the same way, none of us can say we weren't warned.

haristwelord.blogspot.com

Source: https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/10/11/13228598/donald-trump-racism-sexism-corruption

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