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Since I was very feminine and cute enough to make grandmothers and elderly nuns smile, I liked to call myself "plump," "pudgy," "roundish," "chubby" or the adverb-turned-adjective "dieting." It never occurred to me to think that I was growing up in a toxic society that judged me by the way I looked.
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Trump, allies try to contain tax avoidance story New York Times says Trump claimed a billion dollar loss and may have avoided taxes for years. Check out this story on USATODAY.com: http://usat.ly/2dQTYkT Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump gestures following a rally at Spooky Nook Sports center in Manheim, Pennsylvania on October 1, 2016.
"I think is that the evidence is overwhelming that the next president of the United States is going to be Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump," Sanders said on ABC's "This Week." "I think if you're voting for somebody else in the sense of not supporting Clinton because she doesn't live up to all of your specifications or all of your ideas, I think, in a sense, it is a vote for Trump."
The crowd listens to republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speak at Spooky Nook Sports Complex in Manhime, Pa., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016. The crowd listens to republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speak at Spooky Nook Sports Complex in Manhime, Pa., Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump heads to the stage to address a crowd of supporters during a campaign rally Wednesday at the Mid-America Center in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks to Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton during the presidential debate at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., Monday, Sept.
In this Saturday, Jan. 30, 2016 file photo, a member of the audience holds a sign that reads, "227 Years of Men. It's HER Time!" during a rally for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton at Washington High School in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Hillary Clinton's campaign Saturday night seized on a New York Times report about Donald Trump's 1995 tax records, in which the Times showed he declared a $916 million loss that could have allowed him to legally skip paying federal income taxes for years. The revelations threatened to put the controversy over Trump's refusal to follow recent precedent and release his tax returns at the center of the presidential campaign less than 40 days before the election, after a week in which the Republican nominee has struggled to bounce back from a debate in which most analysts and scientifically conducted polls scored Clinton as the winner.
A Philadelphia lawyer turned political commentator, Michael Smerconish is a nationally syndicated radio host, best-selling author and weekly contributing columnist to The Philadelphia Inquirer's Sunday Currents section. The Michael Smerconish Program is heard exclusively on SiriusXM - POTUS Channel 124 from 9a12p ET - reairing again 6-9p ET.
What happens on Nov. 9? What becomes of us after Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump is elected as the 45th president of the United States? With Election Day five weeks away, the race for president remains competitive. The path to 270 Electoral College votes is nowhere close to being clear, even though professional number-crunchers point to a Clinton advantage heading down the home stretch.
Trump 'may not have paid taxes for almost two DECADES': Leaked return reveals he declared a loss of almost $1BILLION in 1995, making him eligible for a loophole to avoid income tax for 18 years Mommy blogger who killed her son with a lethal dose of salt caused three of her friends' kids to become seriously ill before she became a mom, new book claims NJ Transit 'violated dozens of safety policies' according to a federal audit just months before train crash killed one and injured more than 100 others in Hoboken Two men wanted by the FBI after taking pressure cooker bomb out of a bag in New York City are identified as EgyptAir security employees who are still working for the company Gorgeous Prince George steals the show as Kate, Wills and the children wave a fond farewell to Canada after an action-packed eight-day Royal visit The fur flies after Kate and William wear traditional scarves ... (more)
The vice presidential nominees, Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine and Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, will meet on the debate stage Tuesday. It'll be two traditional politicians facing off in a non-traditional election year: Kaine as the safe and even boring choice by Hillary Clinton and Pence as the calm, unflappable balance to Donald Trump's bombast.
Donald Trump Trump seeks jumpstart from Pence Trump moves to poach Sanders supporters with Clinton remarks Trump: I don't think Hillary is loyal to Bill MORE had a mixed debate performance last Monday - he came out of the gate strong but scientific polls conducted after the debate all show that voters believe Hillary Rodham Clinton Trump seeks jumpstart from Pence Trump moves to poach Sanders supporters with Clinton remarks Trump: I don't think Hillary is loyal to Bill MORE Since then, the campaign has been caught in a negative headline vortex as Trump and his allies continue to spar with Democrats Now the campaign turns to Pence, the consummate politician, in the hopes of steadying concerns from Republicans and besting the Democrats on the national stage.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump declared a $916 million loss on his 1995 income tax returns and the large tax deduction may have allowed him to avoid paying federal income taxes for up to 18 years, according to report in the New York Times. In a statement responding to the Times report the Trump campaign said that the tax document was obtained illegally and that the New York Times is operating as an extension of the presidential campaign of Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.
The New York Times' new report on Donald Trump's tax returns suggests why the republican candidate may have wanted to keep the documents secret. According to the Times, Trump wrote off a loss of nearly a billion dollars in 1995.
In this Jan. 13, 2015 file photo, actor Alec Baldwin attends a special screening of his film "Still Alice" in New York. No debating: Baldwin stole the show Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016, in his new role as Donald Trump when "Saturday Night Live" spoofed the recent presidential debate.
Season 42 of "Saturday Night Live" debuted with "Suicide Squad" star Margot Robbie as host and musical guest The Weeknd. But both host and musical guest played second banana to the real star of the show, the 2016 presidential election.
Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign is seizing on a New York Times report about rival Donald Trump's taxes as a sign of his business failures and evidence he may not have paid taxes for years. Clinton campaign manager Robbie Mook said in a statement that "this bombshell report reveals the colossal nature of Donald Trump's past business failures and just how long he may have avoided paying any federal income taxes whatsoever."