The goodie-good businessman Donald Trump who recently announced his presidential bid is all smiles when in front of his pageant's cameras. When he reportedly said he will have undocumented workers deported if they do not work hard for the country, he sounded like the Egyptian pharaoh from Moses' time.
Is Donald Trump America's Messiah when he said he will bring the "dead American dream" back alive, or the villainous pharaoh who enslaved the Israelites who were the migrant workers then?
In a recent report by TMZ, Donald Trump said if he is elected as president of the U.S., "he would let undocumented workers who are productive stay in the United States, but if they just sponge off the system and don't contribute, he'd have them deported."
Donald Trump, if elected president, said in the TMZ report that he will create a "system of merit," which will allow illegal immigrants to have "a road to legal status" provided that they work hard.
He further noted that the recent figures about how many people are in the U.S. illegally, which is reportedly somewhere between 11 and 30 million, are unrealistic and it is inhumane to deport this population.
Recently, Univision, a broadcast company that caters to the Latino population, said it is not airing the Miss USA 2015 pageant this July and possibly the Miss Universe pageant later this year, as the company reportedly has cut ties with the Trump business. This is in protest to one of Donald Trump's presidential bid speeches where he tagged some Mexicans as "criminals and rapists."
But Donald Trump was not swayed and seemed to imposed sanctions on Univision in a scathing letter obtained by news organizations.
In the letter to Univision president and CEO Randy Falco, Trump said that "no Univision officer or representative" would be allowed to access the Trump National Doral resort and golf course in Miami. The letter also ordered Univision to close the gate between Trump's properties and Univision's properties. If not abided by in the next days, he said he will have it stopped.
Is this a rehearsal should he decide to put sanctions on future nuclear issues if Donald Trump becomes president?
"I love what I'm doing. But I love the country more. And I can straighten it out. And I can truly make this country great again and nobody else can do what I do," the businessman said in a Fox News report.