Hillary Clinton's Campaign Launch Fake Infomercial for Trump University

Hillary Clinton's Campaign Launch Fake Infomercial for Trump University

Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign is spotlighting the controversy over Donald Trump’s now-defunct seminar program, Trump University, with a mock infomercial for the program which is the subject of a class action lawsuit alleging it was a scam. 


References biting video released Saturday the recent release of 'playbooks' explains in detail how sales people work to convince potential customers, even those already in debt, to pay for these expensive courses. Advertising programs have emerged and coaches chosen by Trump announcing by billionaire tycoon, but he later admitted under oath that he was not involved in choosing the trivial and qualifications of trainers and some complaints from students and now the center of a lawsuit.

“Step 2: Pay for Trump University at the amazing price of everything you have,” the chipper narrator says.
Trump, who maintained a "university" was brought legitimate and promised to restart it, it must come out victorious in the ongoing lawsuit, the case to the campaign conversation Center two weeks ago when he launched an attack on the presidency of the US District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel.

Trump said that the jurist was born of Mexican descent Indiana was out to get him, and should be disqualified from the case because of the inviting Trump to build a wall on the border between the United States and Mexico. Those comments raised Republican leaders to distance themselves from Trump, including the President of the House of Representatives Paul Ryan, declaring that "the definition of textbooks of racist comments."

"We guarantee you will give Trump U glowing review because we'll make you," the declaration continues, referencing reports that some support for the session may have been coerced.

"Trump University and was a huge scam and something close to the actual school," said an official in the Clinton campaign. "Preying on the elderly, and to encourage potential customers to max credit cards and draining their savings, and make false promises about how to take advantage out of the housing crisis."

Video on the Internet is part of the emerging effort to Clinton's campaign to brand Trump as a "fraud" and trying to make money from disadvantaged promised to help - with innovative spot designed to stand out amid the chaos in the social media.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Fashion 2016 Industry That Brings Life Again

Comming Soon: Ohio State Buckeyes football

Seoul Says: A Senior North Korean Intelligence Officer Defected To South