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Donald Trump’s Week of Misrepresentations, Exaggerations and Half-Truths POLITICO fact-checked both candidates

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. · Sunday, September 25th 2016 at 1:21PM · 1756 views
Donald Trump’s Week of Misrepresentations, Exaggerations and Half-Truths
POLITICO fact-checked both candidates for a week.

This is what we found.
By Kyle Cheney, Isaac Arnsdorf , Daniel Lippman, Daniel Strauss and Brent Griffiths
September 25, 2016


As August ended, a new Donald Trump emerged. Coached by his third campaign management team, he stayed on message, read from a teleprompter, and focused on policy. It lasted about a month.

After he lied on Sept. 16 that he was not the person responsible for the birtherism campaign to delegitimize Barack Obama’s presidency, POLITICO chose to spend a week fact-checking Trump. We fact-checked Hillary Clinton over the same time too.

We subjected every statement made by both the Republican and Democratic candidates – in speeches, in interviews and on Twitter – to our magazine’s rigorous fact-checking process. The conclusion is inescapable: Trump’s mishandling of facts and propensity for exaggeration so greatly exceed Clinton’s as to make the comparison almost ludicrous.

Though few statements match the audacity of his statement about his role in questioning Obama’s citizenship, Trump has built a cottage industry around stretching the truth. According to POLITICO’s five-day analysis Trump averaged about one falsehood every three minutes and 15 seconds over nearly five hours of remarks.

In raw numbers, that’s 87 erroneous statements in five days.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/201...
Follow us: @politico on Twitter | Politico on Facebook


Donald Trump’s Week of Misrepresentations, Exaggerations and Half-Truths POLITICO fact-checked both candidates

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Comments (6)

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. Sunday, September 25th 2016 at 2:17PM

Some metrics on Trump’s statements this week:

Number of appearances: 6 speeches; 1 town hall, 7 TV interviews; 0 press availabilities; 37 tweets
Combined length of remarks (speeches, interviews): 4 hours and 43 minutes
Raw number of misstatements, exaggerations, falsehoods: 87

Rate: 1 untruth every 3.25 minutes
The Trump campaign was asked for comment on Saturday on specific misrepresentations identified. This fact-check will be updated if the campaign responds.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/201...
Follow us: @politico on Twitter | Politico on Facebook

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. Monday, September 26th 2016 at 1:39PM

worth of Trump’s factual transgressions.
ECONOMY:
1. “The reason I do manufacture things overseas — I have to do this, there is no choice, because [other countries] have devalued their currency so much that our companies are out of business for the most part.” (Sept. 20, Fox 8 interview)
Manufacturing is diminishing as a share of the economy, but it’s hardly vanishing. The sector constituted 11.8 percent of GDP in the first quarter of 2016. In the first quarter of 2006, it made up 13.1 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

So, how is he going to bring JOBS BACK AGAIN?

Steve Williams Monday, September 26th 2016 at 5:41PM

Writers of creative or narrative non-fiction often discuss the level, and limits, of creative invention in their works, and justify the approaches they have taken to relating true events. Melanie McGrath, whose book Silvertown, an account of her grandmother’s life, is "written in a novelist's idiom",[9] writes in the follow-up, Hopping, that the known facts of her stories are "the canvas on to which I have embroidered. Some of the facts have slipped through the holes—we no longer know them nor have any means of verifying them—and in these cases I have reimagined scenes or reconstructed events in a way I believe reflects the essence of the scene or the event in the minds and hearts of the people who lived through it. [...] To my mind this literary tinkering does not alter the more profound truth of the story."[10] This concept of fact vs. fiction is elaborated upon in Brenda Miller and Suzanne Paola's book entitled "Tell it Slant." They argue that "...memory itself can be called its own bit of creative nonfiction. We continually—often unconsciously—renovate our memories, shaping them into stories that bring coherence to chaos. Memory has been called the ultimate 'mythmaker'..." as even one’s firsthand accounts are unreliable.

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. Monday, September 26th 2016 at 8:43PM

Hey Steven, this blog is not talking about a book but we are talking about the FACT CHECK of Donald Trump’s Week of Misrepresentations, Exaggerations and Half-Truths POLITICO fact-checked both candidates.

2. “Excessive regulation costs our economy $2 trillion a year. Can you believe that? Two trillion dollars a year.” (Sept. 21, Toledo, Ohio, rally)
One week of Donald Trump fact-checks


The $2 trillion estimate comes from a report from the conservative Competitive Enterprise Institute. It’s widely quoted, but independent fact-checkers have questioned its methodology. Additionally, the figure excludes any benefits derived from the effect of regulations. The Cleveland Plain Dealer notes that car seat belts, for example, are included as a cost. But the lives/money saved as a result is not used as an offset, even though the federal government has estimated the benefits of regulations outstripped the costs.



Steve Williams Tuesday, September 27th 2016 at 1:39AM

Somebody needed to fact check Politico. They are purveyors of "creative non-fiction".

Dea. Ron Gray Sr. Tuesday, September 27th 2016 at 6:59AM

Sorry Steven but the FACTS ARE THE FACTS!!!!

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