Thursday, May 10, 2018

The LinC (Liar-in-Chief) Strikes Again: “The Biggest String of Lies in History Ever Believe Me”

The Other Trump Tower

Believe It or Not - It is Catching
(Achoo...!!!)

From Rolling Stone (April 2017 article) as way of introduction: Donald Trump is a shameless, brazen, bald-faced liar. He steals credit, describes the average as superlative, invents history and spins conspiracy theories. Trump even lies about the weather. Here, broken down by subject, is a selected (early) list of Trump's lies.

My Note: I never in my lifetime thought it would be so easy to call our president a liar – truth stretcher, fact fabricator, misinformation maker, false story spreader, etc., but Americans are reluctant to call Trump outright a liar – but he is – now documented over 3,000 lies (Washington Post tracking).

So, is he a serial liar? A pathological liar? A habitual liar? Does it come easy for him to lie with such ease? Or is it a combination of all those elements? 

I prefer to label him as a pathological habitual serial liar.

Proof as they say is in the proverbial pudding in this the latest dealing with him bailing out of the Iran nuclear agreement as reported on here from MSN The AP – in a very fine piece showing more documented and extreme lies from him,

Icing on the Trump cake as it were – the #1 lie of this series of whoppers:

TRUMP: “Making matters worse, the deal's inspection provisions lack adequate mechanisms to prevent, detect and punish cheating. And don't even have the unqualified right to inspect many important locations, including military facilities.”

THE FACTS: The deal gave inspectors wide latitude to do their work in Iran but not unfettered access everywhere. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) can inspect any declared nuclear site at any time. 

It also can request access to any other site deemed suspicious. Iran has 24 days to allow such an inspection

If Iran refuses, an arbitration panel weighs the request. Inspectors have placed some 2,000 tamper-proof seals on nuclear material and equipment, and installed a network of surveillance cameras at nuclear sites. The agency says its staff is spending twice as many days in Iran than it did in 2013.


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