Look who's in Hillary's Camp: - Big banks and Wall Street, - Big business, - Corporate media - And now TECH companies The elite do not just give money away, they are INVESTING in Hillary because they believe that Hillary will benefit the rich. Think about that. The elite will always take advantage of the people as long as the people allow it.... and one day the people will rise against it. The enemy of my enemy..... [video=youtube_share;YY-CiPVo_NQ]http://youtu.be/YY-CiPVo_NQ[/video]
Could it be that the 1% are worried that Trump will do what Obama promised to do? Think about that. - The 1%, - Big banks, - Wall street, - big business, - corporate media, - Tech companies. All the wealthy and elitist hate Trump. All the people who have no clue what it's like outside their bubble hate him. This explains one of the reasons why the once middle class, now struggling American people like Trump.
Trump's crew: John A. Paulson President and chief executive of the investment firm Paulson & Co. Mr. Paulson made billions of dollars by betting on the housing market’s collapse, right before the financial crisis, and has long been an advocate of relying on gold as a guide to monetary policy. __________ Steven Mnuchin National finance chairman of the Trump campaign. He made a fortune at Goldman Sachs and later started Dune Capital Management, which bailed out a failed California-based housing lender. Renamed OneWest, the bank was criticized for its harsh foreclosure practices. In Hollywood, Mr. Mnuchin has produced movies, including “American Sniper” and “Mad Max: Fury Road.” __________ Steven Roth Founder and chairman of Vornado Realty Trust, the largest owner of commercial real estate in New York City. He and Mr. Trump have frequently competed for properties and have teamed up in deals. __________ Harold Hamm An Oklahoma oil magnate. Mr. Hamm is the chief executive and founder of Continental Resources, which owns stakes in the shale-rich Bakken Formation. Last year, he sold Hiland Partners, an oil pipeline and gathering company, for $3 billion. He was Mitt Romney’s energy adviser during the 2012 presidential campaign. __________ Howard M. Lorber The chief executive of Vector Group, a holding company of tobacco and real estate interests. Mr. Lorber was named by Mr. Trump as one of his best friends and once appeared on his television show “The Apprentice.” __________ Andrew Beal A self-taught math whiz, the founder and president of Beal Bank, and an avid poker player. Mr. Beal made a lot of money in the recession, buying distressed assets around the country. Mr. Beal, with the investor Carl Icahn, sued Mr. Trump for control of Trump Entertainment Resorts in Atlantic City after the company filed for bankruptcy. They failed, and Mr. Beal says now there are “no hard feelings.” He describes himself as a libertarian, and previously backed Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky. In an interview in June, he said he did not know much about Mr. Trump’s policy goals, but trusted him to manage the economy. __________ Thomas Barrack Jr. The founder and executive chairman of the Los Angeles-based Colony Capital. A longtime friend, Mr. Barrack previously worked with Mr. Trump and sold him the Plaza Hotel. Mr. Barrack has some government experience as a deputy under secretary for the Interior Department in the Reagan administration. He founded a “super PAC,” Rebuilding America Now, to support the Trump campaign. __________ Stephen M. Calk The chief executive of the Federal Savings Bank. Mr. Calk has been critical of financial overhauls and regulations, including those advanced under the Dodd-Frank legislation approved by Congress after the financial crisis and supported by President Obama. __________ David Malpass A former chief economist at Bear Stearns who later founded an economic consulting firm. Mr. Malpass made his own bid for office in 2010, running to be New York’s Republican senatorial nominee. He has worked in Washington before, in the Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations and as an analyst in Congress. A prominent contributor to The Wall Street Journal opinion pages, he helped lead an attack by conservatives of the Federal Reserve’s aggressive asset-purchasing program in 2010.
You don't think Trump's business isn't, "big business?" And you don't think Trump has bowed to the big banks in New York either? Talking about media, tech companies, or polling organizations being against the American People sounds like the ramblings of a crazy person on a LA street corner. Elitism is not a bad thing. Being ordinary, average, middle class is more detrimental.