The Times was sold-out in the bodega where I get it in the morning. I had to go across the street and look for one. This is the Times editorial on the massive story it ran today:
Donald Trump and the Self-Made Sham
Now let’s see your tax returns, Mr. President.
“I built what I built myself.”
This boast has long been at the core of the mythology
of Donald Trump, Self-Made Billionaire. As the oft-told story goes,
young Mr. Trump accepted a modest $1 million loan from his father, Fred,
a moderately successful real estate developer from Queens, and —
through smarts, hard work and sheer force of will — parlayed that loan
into a multibillion-dollar global empire.
It’s
a classic American tale of ambition and self-determination. Not Horatio
Alger, exactly, but appealing, and impressive, nonetheless.
Except
that, like so much of what Mr. Trump has been selling the American
public in recent years, this origin story was a sham — a version of
reality so elaborately embellished that it qualifies as fan fiction more
than biography. Also, as we’ve come to expect from Mr. Trump, the
creation of this myth involved a big dose of ethically sketchy, possibly
even illegal activity.
As an in-depth investigation by The Times
has revealed, Mr. Trump is only self-made if you don’t count the
massive financial rewards he received from his father’s business
beginning as a toddler. (By age 3, little Donald was reportedly pulling
in an annual income of what today would be $200,000 a year.) These
benefits included not only the usual perks of hailing from a rich,
well-connected family — the connections, the access to credit, the
built-in safety net. For the Trumps, it also involved direct cash gifts
and tens of millions in “loans” that never charged interest or had to be
repaid. Fred Trump even purchased several properties and business
ventures, putting ownership either fully or partly in the names of his
children, who reaped the profits.
As
Donald Trump emerged as the favorite son, Fred made special deals and
arrangements to increase Donald’s fortunes in particular. The Times
found that, before Donald had turned 30, he had received close to $9
million from his father. Over the longer haul, he received upward of
what, in today’s dollars, would be $413 million.
Along
the way, it seems that certain liberties were taken with tax laws. The
Times found that concocting elaborate schemes to avoid paying taxes on
their father’s estate, including greatly understating the value of the
family business, became an important pastime for Fred’s children, with
Donald taking an active role in the effort. According to tax experts,
the activities in question show a pattern of deception, a deliberate
muddying of the financial waters. Asked for comment on The Times’s
findings, a lawyer for the president provided a written statement
denying any wrongdoing and asserting that, in fact, Mr. Trump had little
to do with the dizzying transactions involving his family’s wealth.
Everyone
can understand the impulse to polish one’s background in order to make a
good impression. For Mr. Trump, whose entire life has been about
branding and selling a certain type of gaudy glamour, this
image-polishing has been all the more vital to his success. And he has
pursued it with a shameless, at times giddy, abandon.
Veterans of New York news media still laugh to recall
how Mr. Trump would call them up, pretending to be a publicist named
John Barron, or sometimes John Miller, in order to regale them with
tales of Mr. Trump’s glamorous personal life — how many models he was
dating, which actresses were pursuing him, which celebrities he was
hanging out with. As gross and tacky and bizarre as this all seemed, it
was aimed squarely at fostering the image of Donald Trump as a master of
the universe who, as the cliché goes, women wanted and men wanted to
be.
With
this glimpse into the inner workings of the Trump family finances, some
of the grimier, ethically suspect aspects of Mr. Trump’s mythmaking
begin to emerge — and with them, many questions about all that we still
do not know about the man and his business empire. Seeing as how that
empire and his role in building it are so central to who Mr. Trump
claims to be — the defining feature of his heroic narrative — the
American public has a right to some answers. For starters, now would be
an excellent time for Mr. Trump to hand over those tax returns on which
he has thus far kept a death grip.
In his 1987 memoir
“The Art of the Deal,” Mr. Trump famously offered his take on the
origins of his success: “I play to people’s fantasies. People may not
always think big themselves, but they can still get very excited by
those who do. That’s why a little hyperbole never hurts. People want to
believe that something is the biggest and the greatest and the most
spectacular. I call it truthful hyperbole. It’s an innocent form of
exaggeration — and a very effective form of promotion.”
But
increasingly, Mr. Trump’s willingness to bend the truth — and the rules
— in the service of his myth looks less like innocent exaggeration than
malicious deception, with a dollop of corruption tossed in for good
measure. It’s not the golden, glittering success story he has been
peddling. It’s shaping up to be something far darker.
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