Rome News-Tribune

A refresher on our esteemed leader

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From The Valdosta Daily Times

pril is many things.

Christians around the world celebrated Easter, as they honored and remembered the death and resurrecti­on of Jesus Christ.

The Jewish holiday of Passover commemorat­es the liberation of the Jews from slavery in Egypt, taking its name from the Book of Exodus when the Israelites were told to mark the doorposts of their homes with lamb’s blood so the spirit of the Lord would pass over as it carried out the 10th plague of the death of the first born.

So it’s appropriat­e that in the month these two holidays are held, both in their own way celebratin­g life in the face of death, that we also remember National Donate Life Month. Organ donation also celebrates life in the face of death. There are around 118,000 men, women and children in America currently awaiting an organ transplant. Some need lungs. Some need kidneys. Some need a liver. Some need a heart. Some need eyes or even skin. One donor can save up to eight lives, and through the donation of eyes and skin, can improve the lives of many more.

Roughly 45 percent of American adults are registered as organ donors, though it varies greatly from state to state. Georgia is currently at about 4.7 million. Registerin­g is simple. Georgia residents can sign up for organ donation at www. donatelife­georgia.org.

Georgia residents can also choose to have it listed on their driver’s licenses when they get or renew their licenses.

For grieving friends and family members, there’s comfort in knowing the death of their loved one has resulted in so much life, both lives saved and lives improved.

It’s somber to think about it, but planning ahead is a way to perform one last act of kindness and generosity, to reach out to someone and help them, to celebrate life in the face of death.

You’d think with 24/7 exposure to everything Donald Trump, we’d know all about him. But here are a few fun facts you may have missed.

During the president’s six business bankruptci­es, investors lost $1.5 billion. He had to reduce his personal expenses to $450,000 a month. Ultimately, the government bailed him out from his many bankers, who didn’t know about the others’ loans to Trump.

When Trump had money troubles, he asked an employee to put the arm on a friend who worked for a bank. She said she couldn’t do it. Trump was furious. He said: “She turned on me after I had done so much to help her. … She ended up losing her home. Her husband … walked out on her and I was glad. … And now I go out of my way to make her life miserable.”

Trump didn’t always love the military. During the Vietnam War, he got four student deferments and one medical deferment, apparently for a bone spur, although he can’t remember which foot had been affected.

Trump would have been ineligible to own the casinos he bought in Atlantic City if the previous federal criminal investigat­ions of him and his associatio­ns with mob figures had been revealed in the background checks. Somehow, the required investigat­ion was never done.

Although Trump has spent almost two years urging Republican­s to vote, he did not vote in any Republican primary for 27 years until he voted for himself.

The nearly nude photo of Melania Trump for GQ magazine was arranged by Trump, then her boyfriend, who watched the photo shoot. GQ says Melania was “featured in our naked profile shoot on his customized Boeing 727 wearing handcuffs, wielding diamonds and holding a chrome pistol.”

After Trump’s father died, the young Trump sought out as his dad’s mentor, Roy Cohn, the chief lawyer for Sen. Joe McCarthy, the infamous conductor of witch hunts for non-existent communists.

Trump said that he was “amazed” Cohn told him he had spent more than two-thirds of his adult life under indictment for various charges. Cohn went on to unsuccessf­ully defend Trump on federal charges he engaged in racial discrimina­tion in his housing projects despite getting federal money. Trump settled. Cohn was also Trump’s fixer on constructi­on projects.

Trump has been involved in more than 3,500 lawsuits, either as plaintiff or defendant.

Trump’s grandfathe­r was kicked out of Germany for draft dodging. He set up a bordello and a bar in Seattle and later prospered as a barbershop owner in New York, although it isn’t clear how. Trump’s father partnered with a known organized crime figure, cheaply built 27,000 subsidized apartments and row houses and was accused of gaming the Federal Housing Administra­tion. Life father, like son. Trump, too, associated with known gangsters. And he loves manufactur­ed news, as did his father. The elder Trump once hired beautiful women wearing hard hats and bikinis to start knocking down a beloved ride on Coney Island that stood where Trump’s father planned to build an apartment building.

Trump’s older brother had a grandson born very sick and in need of constant medical attention to live. According to Trump biographer David Cay Johnston, when Trump’s father died, all but disinherit­ing the older brother’s family, Trump made certain that the sick boy’s health insurance was no longer paid.

When Trump tore down the famed Bonwit Teller department store to build Trump Tower in New York, he used undocument­ed Polish laborers working off the books, without hard hats or face masks despite handling asbestos. They did have sledgehamm­ers.

A federal court concluded they were paid $4 or $5 an hour for 84-hour weeks. No Social Security was paid. Workers slept on site on concrete floors and went hungry when their paychecks bounced while Trump threatened deportatio­n. Sued, Trump settled out of court 10 years later.

To save money, Trump destroyed the art deco sculpture above Bonwit’s door that he’d promised to the Metropolit­an Museum of Art. (By weird numbering, Trump Tower, billed as having 68 stories, has only 58.)

Trump uses tape to hold down the edge of one end of his tie so the front hangs below his belt, dyes his hair, wears padded suits, paid no income tax for years and personally has donated little to charity. But, hey, you know all of that. ANN McFEATTERS

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