Now, after indulging you in your attempt at deflection, let's go back to your callous disregard for a 13 year old girl. Is it your innate pathology at work, or your desire to entertain yourself by saying things that are generally socially unacceptable? (The two are kind of inseparable, but you have a little wiggle room.)
I find it interesting and quite disturbing that the evangelical right (I'm not talking about TOL's Libertarian crowd: ok doser, Patrick jane, Catholic Crusader, I'm talking about American Family Association's Tim Wildmon and Bryan Fischer, Barbwire's Matt Barber, etc.) who were outraged at the sexual escapades of Bill Clinton, are looking the other way when it comes to Donald Trump.
On that note:
More flip flopping from Donald Trump.
How Donald Trump Perpetuated the 'Birther' Movement for Years
2011
Following a successful Conservative Political Action Conference appearance where Trump announced he is considering a run for the presidency, he begins appearing on talk shows urging President Obama to release his birth certificate and questioning if he was born in the United States.
"I want him to show his birth certificate.
2012
Trump decides not to run for president, but continues to use media appearances and social media to question the authenticity of Obama's birth certificate.
That October, one month before the election, Trump releases a YouTube video claiming he will give $5 million to charity of the President’s choice if he releases his passport/college applications and records.
2013
Trump did fewer media appearances speaking about this issue. But when he spoke with ABC News' Jon Karl in August 2013 in Iowa, he said he was still unsure about the authenticity of President Obama's birth certificate.
"Some people say that was not his birth certificate. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't. I’m saying I don’t know. Nobody knows," he told Karl.
2014
Speaking at the National Press Club, Trump says he doesn’t regret questioning President Obama’s citizenship, and there’s a “chance” he was born in the United States. He also speculates that President Obama wrote he was born in Kenya on his college applications to receive more financial aid.
2015
After Trump announces his presidential candidacy in June, he begins appearing frequently on cable and talk shows. During these appearances, he refuses to say if President Obama was born in the United States. "No. I don't know. I really don't know," he said in a July interview with Anderson Cooper. ABC News' George Stephanopoulos presses him about this on "This Week" in September, and he declines to answer. "I don't get into it. And I just don’t talk about it," he said.
Two days after this interview, he tweets that Hillary Clinton started the birther movement.
2016
On Sept. 15, Trump again refuses to say if President Obama was born in the United States. In an interview with the Washington Post, Trump refuses to say if President Obama was born in the United States in an interview.
"I’ll answer that question at the right time," he said. "I just don’t want to answer it yet."
This is despite a number of surrogates saying on the campaign trail that Obama was born in the U.S.
That same day, his campaign releases a statement saying Trump believes President Obama was born in America, and repeats the claim Hillary Clinton’s campaign sparked the birther movement.
The next day, Trump, speaking from his new property in Washington DC, reiterates his belief that Clinton started the birther movement, but concedes President Obama was born in the United States.
https://www.yahoo.com/gma/donald-tr...ent-years-203024019--abc-news-topstories.html
It appears that flip flop Trump does take orders from the GOP establishment.