That was a natural, unrehearsed, and sincere moment.
It was right then that I saw Trump’s character shine through.
I was a Trump supporter while my wife wasn’t crazy about him, but loved Ben Carson.
When Trump stood with him during the intro, my wife almost started tearing up and from that day forward she stopped believing the lies about Trump.
“That’s a big problem because you don’t cure that, he continued, adding: As an example: child molesting. You don’t cure these people. You don’t cure a child molester. There’s no cure for it. Pathological, there’s no cure for that.”
This video reminds me of the White House propaganda Obola tried to pull off: The “Bring them over for a beer” meeting.
Video shows Oboma walking out and firmly striding away from the older black man as he struggles through a door.
The “racist” white cop stops, and helps the old black guy limp along.
Exactly
That was so great! to be able to see it actually happen unscripted. It was then many made the decision this man was not what others professed him to be. A touching, heart warming moment.
precisely
Yep—that moment said more about the candidates than anything else in all the debates.
It was right then that I saw Trumps character shine through.
Throughout this campaign the public has had these cameo moments to witness the man and his reactions to events as they happen.
While speaking, he is also observing then taking in everything happening around him. He thrives in those situations of change.
But I agree, that was a moment where we saw the real Trump and the real Jeb Bush, two different reactions to an awkward situation.
When Trump says "I can fix it", he is ready.
I knew Trump from years of stories about in the media that he was a genuine and caring person.
That moment with Ben Carson was classic.
Jeb's expression spoke volumes--he thought Trump a dope for not showing up Carson.
yes