Posted on 03/07/2016 10:34:32 AM PST by Steelfish
Which is exactly why my original question is so important. If the number of people who took the course is immense, then 5,000 wanting out is no big deal. But if the 10,000 pieces of paper they point to as evidence that the course was great (98% approval), then 5,000 is a huge deal.
So, how many people took the course?
All I am saying is that it does not seam to be any kind of overwhelming evidence of fraud if only 150 have joined the lawsuit.
You have to believe that those lawyers are out there trying to convince as many as possible to join in.
You are right. I’m in my 22nd year. I get calls every few weeks from BBB to “join”. Some FReepers try to insinuate it reflects poorly on Trump because the business wasn’t “accredited”. That’s a crock. You pay for that.
Most churches have higher negatives than that!
PL2... agree with you. As Trump said, he fights this type of suit because a settlement makes him seem to be an easy target for the pilot fish.
Just the kind of backbone we haven’t seen for a long time. America needs a hard fighter.
Video of him saying Im changing it and Im softening the position because we have to have talented people in this country.
The web site says one thing, he says his position is different from the web site.
Read 69.
That’s inaccurate by a long shot per a CBS piece this morn....more like 40+ % dissatisfied.
Did you even read the article???
well, to get started, Let’s agree that Trump is not a politician, who’s had to rehearse and memorize and pontificate before congress for years over visas. And I know Jack Rabbit about visas. I’m sure that Trump has always had people who have people who worry about those things for him, too. When an ordinary citizen runs for President, it’s a learning process - for him and for us.
And so, I tend to agree with Virginia Carter who summarizes:
“It could be that Trump is not changing his mind by the day, but carefully threading the needle on the skilled visa issue in a specific way - supporting visas that go to brilliant foreign students and exceptionally talented foreigners but drawing the line at H-1B visas.”
http://gosporttimes.com/2016/03/07/donald-trumps-flip-flop-over-h1b-visa-lands-him-in/
Personally, I’d rather have a President, who, given more information, is willing to look at the subject from all angles - which opens the topic up to public discussion and mutual understanding. It reflects intelligence. I’d rather not have a President who is immovable because it might make him look bad to deviate outside a very narrow box his ‘official position’ has locked him in.
Cruz, for instance, will look like he’s flip-flopping if he backs off ‘no return ever’ deportation (and he will have to soften that position to get elected) (and not to mention the perceived flip-flop if he ‘doesn’t’ turn Iran into glass). And Rubio has certainly flip-flopped, having first not even mentioned a wall, he jumped on board with Cruz and Trump to be the popular kid, and then said his platform really was to argue and hem and haw for 10 years, or so. Rubio’s real platform, according to Trump’s site, is to increase H1B visa three-fold.
https://www.donaldjtrump.com/positions/immigration-reform
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