considering one of the talking points surrounding him was that he is a "real great businessman because of how much more money I made from the cash my dad gave me," that's a straight-up insane thing. cuz, iirc, if he'd just stuck it in an indexed fund, he'd have made much more than he did by trying to actually invest and build and manage on his own...
Yeah, pretty much. Perhaps the best(?) part of that latter bit is that he's actually spent time badmouthing those sorts of investors before, if my memory's working at the mo'. I mean, that's probably not saying that much, because there doesn't seem to be much that he
hasn't, but *shrugs*
I guess to an extent you can't
entirely blame people that bought that line, though. Most of the US electorate probably has a fair bit of trouble wrapping their heads around what a 40-100 million starting fund (and business connections
gratis, and more than one bailout, and...) and several decades to grow exactly
means, so far as dosh generation goes. Or even just a vague idea, for that matter (which is about where I'm at, tbh). Or had paid much/any attention (at least of a financial nature) to people working from similar (or worse off) starting points that (significantly) outperformed the guy. When you've got basically zero background to contextualize a conman, it becomes a lot easier for 'em to get away with an appropriately related lie, and largely harder to really fault the person buying it for falling for it. Eh.
E: Though, all that said, if someone of voting age hasn't realized that someone saying they're a great businessman is
probably lying, they may have some problems of one sort or another. Just... throwin' that out there.