COMMENTS:
* Trump knows that people remember what they like so he gives two opposite statements so that they will remember what they like.
* It's about time the media start calling out Trump's BS...He attacked the media and his free ride is over.
* Trump's talent (and media success) consists of mastering a certain sort of "reality TV" audience, people with a retentive capacity of something less than four hours. Add to that, nobody is going to preserve copies of his junk TV show to compare what he says from week to week anyway. His latest scam, however, is politics, where media and others make a living out of datamining records and recordings for inconsistencies. Media also has a talent for bringing up every mistake a candidate ever made, and Trump's record is not a good one. I think it is going to be a long 5 months for Birther Don Trump and his gaggle of reprobates.
* Everything Don the Con says should be tagged with an asterisk.
* Great job by CNN. It's the medias responsibility to give us the truth. But when Trump said he didn't say what he obviously did, I believe he thought that was true. He probably doesn't remember saying it because he makes stuff up off the top of his head and doesn't have a real team to remind him of what positions he randomly takes.
* Why does trump have to say everything twice...? everything twice...? Believe me...
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CNN Discovers Elegant Way To Call Bulls**t On Donald Trump’s Bulls**t
Oh, the chyrony!
By Jason Linkins, June 2, 2016As I’ve noted before, one of the big challenges the media faces as it attempts to cover the policy positions of presumptive GOP nominee and seething ham planet Donald Trump is that those policy positions are in a constant state of flux. He’ll take one side in the morning, erase it entirely by mid-afternoon, and spend the evening insisting he never said anything at all. Trump has, in the past, stated that all of his “positions” are but ethereal suggestions — which makes him more difficult to pin down by design.
But if journalists are alert enough, this tactic will have a short shelf life. On Thursday, HuffPost video producer Liz Martinez caught a segment on CNN that demonstrated that whoever is writing the network’s chyrons is up for the challenge.
Liz del Carmen @LizMartinezGThis is a pretty fun example of the cack-handed way Trump attempts to paper over his previous statements whenever the need to do so arises. Later on Thursday, Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton will deliver a foreign policy speech, in which she’ll make the super obvious case that Trump is way too dangerously incompetent to represent America on the world stage. Among the things she will criticize: Trump’s previous call for Japan to develop a nuclear arsenal — an idea that is, to say the least, a complete non-starter from the point of view of the Japanese.
Trump is inspiring CNN to be more creative with its chyrons
8:05 AM - 2 Jun 2016
Trump caught wind of this criticism and is now insisting that he never ever said that Japan should acquire nuclear weapons. As Vox’s Matt Yglesias reports, Trump told attendees at a Sacramento rally that Clinton’s charge is false: “She made a speech, she’s making another one tomorrow, and they sent me a copy of the speech ... And it was such lies about my foreign policy, that they said I want Japan to get nuclear weapons. Give me a break.”
Fun fact, however: this is not a lie about Trump’s foreign policy. Per Yglesias:
In fact, Trump very explicitly said this. Here he is in an April interview with Chris Wallace:Some anonymous hero at CNN, charged with creating text on the lower third of the screen, heard about this and decided, “Nah, son.” The brief and eloquent parenthetical “(HE DID)” added to the chyron is a short, sharp, and effective means of conveying Trump’s rather mercurial relationship with the truth.
TRUMP: It’s not like, gee whiz, nobody has them. So, North Korea has nukes. Japan has a problem with that. I mean, they have a big problem with that. Maybe they would in fact be better off if they defend themselves from North Korea.
WALLACE: With nukes?
TRUMP: Including with nukes, yes, including with nukes.
It’s actually very important for the media to be awake to Trump’s tendency to radically switch positions and deny previous statements, because left untended, it can spawn errata by the metric ton. Here, for example, is an excerpt from a Wednesday piece in The New York Times by Amy Chozick, which also covers the pending Clinton foreign policy speech, and Trump’s reaction to it:
In an interview Wednesday night, Mr. Trump criticized Mrs. Clinton’s early support for the Iraq war, which he said he opposed, and questioned her judgment in Libya. “Bernie Sanders said it and I’m going to use it all over the place because it’s true,” Mr. Trump said. “She is a woman who is ill-suited to be president because she has bad judgment.”Did you spot Chozick’s goof? If you said, “Trump says he opposed the Iraq War (HE DIDN’T),” give yourself a prize, and consider a career in editing.
Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist
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CNN has finally figured out how to cover Donald Trump's constant lying
By Matthew Yglesias, June 2, 2016
Covering Donald Trump is great for ratings, and Trump is unusually willing to appear on cable television at basically all times, which is convenient for the cable networks. But cable news has often struggled with how to cover Trump accurately given his habit of constantly saying things that aren't true or don't make sense.
Today, CNN took a big step forward with this chyron:
This goes back to March, when Donald Trump was talking about the security situation in Northeast Asia.
He'd suggested earlier that the United States was spending too much money on stationing soldiers in South Korea and Japan, which are both high-income developed countries that can afford to defend themselves against North Korea.
This led to the suggestion that Korea and Japan should develop their own nuclear arsenals — obviously a big change from current American foreign policy, which tries to discourage the spread of nuclear weapons. It's also a politically sensitive issue in Japan, which is the only country that's actually been hit with nuclear weapons. Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said flatly, "It is impossible that Japan will arm itself with nuclear weapons."
Today at a rally in Sacramento, Trump said, falsely, that Hillary Clinton was lying when she said he had proposed this.
"She made a speech, she’s making another one tomorrow, and they sent me a copy of the speech" Trump said. "And it was such lies about my foreign policy, that they said I want Japan to get nuclear weapons. Give me a break."
In fact, Trump very explicitly said this. Here he is in an April interview with Chris Wallace:
TRUMP: It’s not like, gee whiz, nobody has them. So, North Korea has nukes. Japan has a problem with that. I mean, they have a big problem with that. Maybe they would in fact be better off if they defend themselves from North Korea....................................................................................................................................................................
WALLACE: With nukes?
TRUMP: Including with nukes, yes, including with nukes.
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