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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsUp Is Down: Trumps Unreality Show Echoes His Business Past
As a businessman, Donald J. Trump was a serial fabulist whose biggest-best boasts about everything he touched routinely crumbled under the slightest scrutiny. As a candidate, Mr. Trump was a magical realist who made fantastical claims punctuated by his favorite verbal tic: Believe me.
Yet even jaded connoisseurs of Oval Office dissembling were astonished over the past week by the torrent of bogus claims that gushed from President Trump during his first days in office.
Weve never seen anything this bizarre in our lifetimes, where up is down and down is up and everything is in question and nothing is real, said Charles Lewis, the founder of the Center for Public Integrity and the author of 935 Lies: The Future of Truth and the Decline of Americas Moral Integrity, a book about presidential deception.
It was not just Mr. Trumps debunked claim about how many people attended his inauguration, or his insistence (contradicted by his own Twitter posts) that he had not feuded with the intelligence community, or his audacious and evidence-free claim that Hillary Clinton won the popular vote only because millions of people voted for her illegally.
All week long, news organizations chased down one Trump tall tale after another. PolitiFact, a website devoted to checking the veracity of claims by public officials, published 12 of the most misleading claims Mr. Trump made during his first White House interview. The Chicago Tribune found that Mr. Trump was incorrect when he claimed two people were shot and killed in Chicago the very hour President Barack Obama was there delivering his farewell address. (There were no shootings, police records showed.) The Philadelphia Inquirer found that Mr. Trump was incorrect when he said the citys murder rate was terribly increasing. (The murder rate has steadily declined over the last decade.) The indefatigable fact checkers at The Washington Post cataloged 24 false or misleading statements made by the president during his first seven days in office.
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