Hey sweetie check this out.
I rest my case.
Originally Posted by Sistine Chapel
Well I don't know how old you are, but if you know anything about the history of this country and its economy, but his will give you a bit of insight into what happened at that time, heck people weren't gambling, they were loosing money other endeavors.
Hope this paragraph or two will give you a little insight into what happened worldwide, not just with Mr Trump.
From November 1982 to July 1990 the U.S. economy experienced robust growth, modest unemployment, and low inflation. The "Reagan boom" rested on shaky foundations, however, and as the 1980s progressed signs of trouble began to mount. On October 19, 1987 stock markets around the world crashed. In the U.S. the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost over 22% of its value. Although the causes of "Black Monday" were complex, many saw the crash as a sign that investors were worried about the inflation that might result from large U.S. budget deficits. The American housing market presented another sign of weakness, as in the second half of the 1980s a large number of savings and loan associations (private banks that specialized in home mortgages) went bankrupt. The collapse of the S&L industry negatively impacted the welfare of many American households and precipitated a large government bailout that placed further strain on the budget.
Although the 1987 stock market crash and the S&L crisis were separate phenomena, they demonstrated the growing importance of financial markets—and associated public and private sector debt—to the workings of the American economy. Other causes of the early 1990s recession included moves by the U.S. Federal Reserve to raise interest rates in the late 1980s and Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in the summer of 1990. The latter drove up the world price of oil, decreased consumer confidence, and exacerbated the downturn that was already underway.
Although the National Bureau of Economic Research has concluded that the early 1990s recession lasted just eight months, conditions improved slowly thereafter, with unemployment reaching almost 8% as late as June 1992. The sluggish recovery was a key factor in George H.W. Bush's defeat for re-election to the U.S. presidency in November 1992.
That all being said, you don't quit just because you had four "failures, which BTW is 0.00001143 of a percent, of the 3500+ business he has had in his lifetime, not even close to 1 percent. If you were to loan money (which banks, lenders, etc do is to make money) would you take your chances on Donald Trump or one of us little peons, I do believe I would go Trump.
Do you win every time, of course not, do you quit, absolutely not. In the long run The Donald is a WINNER.