An item on Doonesbury's Mud Line sent me to the Atlantic website to read Molly Ball's August 13, 2015 article "Donald Trump and the Search for the Republican Soul" (www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/08/donald-trump-and-the-search-for-the-republican-soul/401192/). A good article, main memorable by the a great quip, flesh-colored gap in the space-time continuum."
Credit is hereby given to Ms Ball.
Donald Trump, God's gift to comedians, is a true phenomenon. (David Letterman lamented having left his late night talk show 2 weeks before the Donald announced his candidacy.) Rational beings, in my belief, would regard Trump as an exceptionally wealth clown with a surprising limited vocabulary worth of a few chortle-inducing sideshow.
That he isn't, or because he's been the front-runner in the polls for the Republican nomination for President, (polls show have him as the front runner with 32% of likely Republican voters) makes me wonder if all this noise is because no voting has yet taken place. I look forward to the primaries where levers get pulled. (Metaphors may be changing. Voting may be when pen meets paper.)
There was a recent piece on WNYC radio this morning in which a magazine author (didn't get the names and can't find it on their web site) argued that Trump was a failure as a businessman. The argument was that had Trump put the $40 million he inherited in 1974 into the general stock market (equivalent of an S&P market index fund) he would have more money than he has with all his business dealings.
My simple check is that the author is wrong. In 1974 the S&P was in the mid 80's to the mid-90's. The high for this year was 2063. A hypothetical standard investment would have increased a shade under 24 times. So $40 million times 24 is $960 million. Not a trivial sum, but not a billion which now seems to be the benchmark for serious money.
A random mental walk.
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