Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Let me highlight that 2002 answer so it doesn't get lost:
Howard Stern: “Are you for invading Iraq?”
Donald Trump: “Yeah, I guess so."
You are really pathetic if you have to dig into Howard Stern for serious political discussion. Debating Iraq war is a lost cause for Hillary, if all you got is a "I guess so" on Howard Stern.
Joe Scarborough was a congressman and hosted a show for Politics. Donald Trump was on the record opposing the war with Joe on his show at a time when the war was still very popular.
Why does it matter who they are if they asked the same exact question? Stern is one of the best interviewers in any business. Scarborough is a hack addicted to access journalism, and that's coming from someone who watches his show every day.
It's not about Howard Stern the person but about the venue that Howard Stern produces. The stuff that Howard Stern puts out on his show, I don't know anyone can take it seriously other than just a crude form of entertainment. It's like finding clues on economy from the Jerry Springer show.
You can like or dislike Joe Scarborough the person, but his show was about discussing politics only. In 2003, Trump told Scarborough he was not for going into Iraq.
In SEPTEMBER 2003. After the war started.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Let me highlight that 2002 answer so it doesn't get lost:
Howard Stern: “Are you for invading Iraq?”
Donald Trump: “Yeah, I guess so."
You are really pathetic if you have to dig into Howard Stern for serious political discussion. Debating Iraq war is a lost cause for Hillary, if all you got is a "I guess so" on Howard Stern.
Joe Scarborough was a congressman and hosted a show for Politics. Donald Trump was on the record opposing the war with Joe on his show at a time when the war was still very popular.
Why does it matter who they are if they asked the same exact question? Stern is one of the best interviewers in any business. Scarborough is a hack addicted to access journalism, and that's coming from someone who watches his show every day.
It's not about Howard Stern the person but about the venue that Howard Stern produces. The stuff that Howard Stern puts out on his show, I don't know anyone can take it seriously other than just a crude form of entertainment. It's like finding clues on economy from the Jerry Springer show.
You can like or dislike Joe Scarborough the person, but his show was about discussing politics only. In 2003, Trump told Scarborough he was not for going into Iraq.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Let me highlight that 2002 answer so it doesn't get lost:
Howard Stern: “Are you for invading Iraq?”
Donald Trump: “Yeah, I guess so."
You are really pathetic if you have to dig into Howard Stern for serious political discussion. Debating Iraq war is a lost cause for Hillary, if all you got is a "I guess so" on Howard Stern.
Joe Scarborough was a congressman and hosted a show for Politics. Donald Trump was on the record opposing the war with Joe on his show at a time when the war was still very popular.
Why does it matter who they are if they asked the same exact question? Stern is one of the best interviewers in any business. Scarborough is a hack addicted to access journalism, and that's coming from someone who watches his show every day.
Anonymous wrote:"During the floor debate over the resolution authorizing the invasion of Iraq, Clinton was the only Democratic senator to have categorically accepted the Bush administration's claims regarding Iraq's alleged chemical, biological and nuclear weapons programs, Iraq's alleged long-range missile capabilities, and alleged ties to al-Qaeda. (Some Democratic senators accepted some of those claims, but not all of them.)"
Source: antiwar.com
Hillary better avoid discussing Iraq war or calling Donald a sexist, a misogynist. It will not be a pleasant debate for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP again. Let me highlight that 2002 answer so it doesn't get lost:
Howard Stern: “Are you for invading Iraq?”
Donald Trump: “Yeah, I guess so."
You are really pathetic if you have to dig into Howard Stern for serious political discussion. Debating Iraq war is a lost cause for Hillary, if all you got is a "I guess so" on Howard Stern.
Joe Scarborough was a congressman and hosted a show for Politics. Donald Trump was on the record opposing the war with Joe on his show at a time when the war was still very popular.
Anonymous wrote:PP again. Let me highlight that 2002 answer so it doesn't get lost:
Howard Stern: “Are you for invading Iraq?”
Donald Trump: “Yeah, I guess so."
Anonymous wrote:Donald Trump was on the record opposing the war with Joe Scarborough on his show Scarborough Country in 2003.
Sept. 11, 2002: Trump is asked publicly about his stance on the invasion, apparently for the first time. In a recently revealed audio clip of the interview, Trump gives a lukewarm support for the war.
Stern: “Are you for invading Iraq?”
Trump: “Yeah, I guess so. You know, I wish the first time it was done correctly.”
March 20, 2003: Invasion of Iraq begins. Throughout 2003, Trump is asked about his views on Iraq. He’s not clearly outspoken against it.
Trump would go on to explain in 2016 that a Howard Stern interview was the first time he was asked about the war, and claim that by the time the war started in 2003, he was “totally against it.” But the evidence isn’t there.
March 21, 2003: Trump actually praises the invasion in an interview with Fox News. BuzzFeed News published an audio clip, where Trump says:
“Well, I think Wall Street’s waiting to see what happens but even before the fact they’re obviously taking it a little bit for granted and it looks like a tremendous success from a military standpoint and I think this is really nothing compared to what you’re gonna see after the war is over. … I think Wall Street’s just gonna go up like a rocket, even beyond, and it’s gonna continue and, you know, we have a strong and powerful country and let’s hope it all works out.”
April 30, 2003: Dow Jones News Service reports net income losses for Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts Inc., in first quarter of 2003.
“With the winter behind us and the war virtually over and possible signs of a strengthening economy, I am confident that we will rebound through the remainder of the year,” Trump concluded.
Sept. 11, 2003: Trump on MSNBC’s “Scarborough Country:”
“It wasn’t a mistake to fight terrorism and fight it hard, and I guess maybe if I had to do it, I would have fought terrorism but not necessarily Iraq.”
Trump at Feb. 14, 2016 debate:
“I’m the only one on this stage that said, ‘Do not go into Iraq. Do not attack Iraq.’ Nobody else on this stage said that. And I said it loud and strong. And I was in the private sector. I wasn’t a politician, fortunately. But I said it, and I said it loud and clear, ‘You’ll destabilize the Middle East.’ That’s exactly what happened.”
Anonymous wrote:Why is this a discussion - did you think Trump is telling truth or understood the intricacies of Iraq war? Why should his view (true or not true) matter? Some citizens of the country said Iraq war (before the war began) was a big mistake and some though we should go for it. Hindsight is 2020 - but none of the citizen knew all the details to make informed decision - to claim foreign policy experience based on coincidence is ridiculous and news media asking him this question is even more ridiculous. This is giving too much importance to his crystal ball - let us talk about his his abysmal knowledge of the world and his current policies.
George Stephanopoulos: “You were for it [the Iraq War], though, before you were against it.”
Trump: “No, I wasn’t. I was never for it. I was against it — before it ever started, I was against it. And I was against it from before 2004. I was against the war in Iraq, and I was against it for years. And [President George W.] Bush used to hate me for being so against it, and they sent people from the White House to try and convince me. All I’d say is, ‘It will destabilize the Middle East, and Iran will take over the Middle East.’ And that’s exactly what happened.”
—exchange on “Good Morning America,” April 27, 2016
This is blatantly false.
Trump did not oppose the Iraq War before 2004, as we and countless other media outlets have found. We compiled a complete timeline of all his public statements in 2002 and 2003 relating to the Iraq invasion and found no evidence to support this. In fact, in a September 2002 interview, Trump gave lukewarm support for the war.
Trump has said since October 2015 that the [GW Bush] White House tried to hush his (nonexistent) opposition ahead of the invasion. Trump never answered our request for the names of White House officials he supposedly met with. We checked with a dozen former Bush White House officials, and none could recall a meeting with Trump, concerns about his opposition, or even Trump’s views being on their radar prior to 2004. We awarded this claim four Pinocchios.