YEAH YEAH YEAH. WE know. You LOVE Mexicans.
Donald,
as a Mexican-American whose family has been here for generations (I
have no relatives in Mexico who are rapists or drug dealers. In fact, I
have
no relatives in Mexico, because, well …WE WERE ALL BORN HERE) ...
anyway, I don't need your freaking apology. You know why? Because you're
not sorry. Your
insulting words about Mexicans and Mexican-Americans
mean nothing to me because you are an idiot. Liken it to this ... I'm
walking down the sidewalk, I see a pile of dog-shit, I walk AROUND it. I
do not step IN it. YOU, Donald are the dog-shit.
This
is what happens when you give an idiot too much power and fame. Trump
will say anything, retract, and then say it again if the wind is blowing
in
the right direction. I notice that he has been quite silent in the wake
of these latest remarks when normally he would be on every television
and radio station on the planet to "address" his comments and stress how
much he LOVES THE MEXICANS while eating a
taco.
I
think Mr. Trump has finally gone too far. Which is shocking to me
because in my opinion “too far” was a long time ago. When Lindsay
Graham states that
he wants to the party to un-endorse Trump you have obviously done some pretty
serious damage. I have to hand it to the Republicans for stepping up.
Even they can see that Trump is cuckoo for coco puffs.
Mexico steals U.S. jobs! Donald Trump recently resurrected this jewel by weighing in against Nabisco and
Ford for shifting production to Mexico from high-cost Illinois and
Michigan. Never mind that one reason Ford made
the move was to take advantage of Mexico’s free-trade agreements with
the European Union and other countries, meaning that opposition to free
trade is the very thing that drives business abroad. YET, while Donald Trump condemns Mexico for "taking our jobs," he had a waterfront development in Baja California, MEXICO which included 525 condo-hotel units in three 16 story towers. Emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity; swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and find dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got. It was hit by financial problems in 2008 and everything came to a screeching halt.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by 200 people against Trump, his children and the developer, claiming that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump property.
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1678 127
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpufHere’s why Trump might not like Mexico
Buyers sued after Baja resort had been sold as a Trump project
1678 127
Thanks
to the monitoring of real estate developer Donald Trump’s Twitter
account, the world knows what he thinks of the Academy Awards, the
winning Mexican director’s film Birdman, and investing in Mexico which,
in short, is very little.
What the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet
regarding investing in Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for
nearly 200 people who paid a total of more than US $20 million in
deposits on luxury ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
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Skip to content
1678 127
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpufHere’s why Trump might not like Mexico
Buyers sued after Baja resort had been sold as a Trump project
1678 127
Thanks
to the monitoring of real estate developer Donald Trump’s Twitter
account, the world knows what he thinks of the Academy Awards, the
winning Mexican director’s film Birdman, and investing in Mexico which,
in short, is very little.
What the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet
regarding investing in Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for
nearly 200 people who paid a total of more than US $20 million in
deposits on luxury ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
Skip to content
1678 127
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpufHere’s why Trump might not like Mexico
Buyers sued after Baja resort had been sold as a Trump project
1678 127
Thanks
to the monitoring of real estate developer Donald Trump’s Twitter
account, the world knows what he thinks of the Academy Awards, the
winning Mexican director’s film Birdman, and investing in Mexico which,
in short, is very little.
What the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet
regarding investing in Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for
nearly 200 people who paid a total of more than US $20 million in
deposits on luxury ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
Skip to content
1678 127
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpufHere’s why Trump might not like Mexico
Buyers sued after Baja resort had been sold as a Trump project
1678 127
Thanks
to the monitoring of real estate developer Donald Trump’s Twitter
account, the world knows what he thinks of the Academy Awards, the
winning Mexican director’s film Birdman, and investing in Mexico which,
in short, is very little.
What the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet
regarding investing in Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for
nearly 200 people who paid a total of more than US $20 million in
deposits on luxury ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
Trump claimed that he did no more than license his name to the developer and that he was not responsible for the development, although his name appeared on all its marketing materials. That, said an attorney representing the plaintiffs, gave a sense of security to buyers who would not have invested had they known the truth.
Trump told the San Diego Union-Tribune at the time that while he was not happy with what had occurred, he had never been to the site and that the developers had simply licensed his name.
Four years later, the plaintiffs reached a settlement with Trump.
A similar situation has since occurred in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where buyers sued after a Trump International Hotel & Tower project went off the rails. In that case as well, Trump denied responsibility, saying he had done nothing more than license his name.
Sources: San Diego Union-Tribune (en), SanDiegoRed (en), New Times (en)
1678 127
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump project.
But in fact they were not.
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
What
the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet regarding investing in
Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for nearly 200 people who
paid a total of more than US $20 million in deposits on luxury
ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
What
the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet regarding investing in
Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for nearly 200 people who
paid a total of more than US $20 million in deposits on luxury
ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
What
the world might not know is that Trump’s tweet regarding investing in
Mexico might stir up some unpleasant memories for nearly 200 people who
paid a total of more than US $20 million in deposits on luxury
ocean-view condominiums at Trump Ocean Resort Baja.
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
The seven-hectare waterfront resort development at Playa Bandera, Baja California, 16 kilometers from the U.S. border, was to include 526 condo-hotel units in three 16-story towers, and was announced in 2006 as a Trump project. A report by SanDiegoRed says the emphasis would be on luxury living and exclusivity: swimming pools, spas, tennis courts and fine dining.
Ground was broken but that was as far as it got: it was hit by financial problems in 2008 and shut down in 2009.
Shortly after, a lawsuit was filed by nearly 70 plaintiffs against Donald Trump, his children and the developer. They claimed that they were deceived into believing they were buying into a Trump
- See more at: http://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/heres-trump-might-not-like-mexico/#sthash.Wx9TYn7L.dpuf
Know what Trump said?
Trump told The Times that the developers were to blame, saying he
merely licensed his name to the 525-unit oceanfront project and was not
involved in building it.
THIS IS HIS M.O. He deflects. Denies. Lies.
HERE IS THE POINT. Trump will build and do business with anyone, anywhere ... even Hitler if he knew he'd make a YUGE profit. He's a shyster. A hypocrite and a racist.