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					Originally Posted by  VitaMan
					 
				 
				The Trumpites have no defense for Donald.  So they try several pages from the standard playbook. 
			
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what's to defend VitalessMan? 
 
https://www.thoughtco.com/former-pre...g-fees-3368127
Speaking Fees for Former Presidents Top $750,000 
How Much Obama, Clinton, Carter and Bush Earn By Just Talking
  The president of the United States 
is paid $400,000 a year while in office. They also 
earn a substantial pension for the rest of their life under the Former Presidents Act of 1958. 
  But, just like most politicians, presidents don't endure the rigors of  the campaign trail and put up with life as the most scrutinized leader  in the world 
for the money. The cash really starts rolling in when commanders-in-chief leave the White House and hit the speaking circuit. 
  America's former presidents are raking in tens of millions of dollars  just by making speeches, according to tax records and published reports.  They speak at corporate conventions, charity fundraisers and business  conferences. 
  
You don't have to be a former president to rake in speaking fees, though. Even failed presidential candidates such as Jeb Bush, Hillary Clinton,  and Ben Carson get paid tens of thousands of dollars—and in Clinton's  case a couple hundred thousand dollars—per speech, according to  published reports.  
  Gerald Ford was the first to take advantage of a president's status after leaving office, according to Mark K. Updegrove, the author of 
Second Acts: Presidential Lives and Legacies After the White House. Ford earned as much as $40,000 per speech after leaving office in 1977, Updegrove wrote. 
Others before him, including 
Harry Truman, deliberately avoided speaking for money, saying they believed the practice was exploitative.  
  Here's a look at how much America's 
four living former presidents earn on the speaking trail. 
 
 
  
 Bill Clinton - $750,000 
    
 
  Mathias Kniepeiss/Getty Images
     Former President Bill Clinton has made the most of any modern president  on the speaking circuit. He gives dozens of speeches a year and each  brings in between $250,000 and $500,000 per engagement, according to  published reports. He also earned $750,000 for a single speech in Hong  Kong in 2011. 
   In the decade or so after Clinton left office, from 2001 through 2012,  he made at least $104 million in speaking fees, according to an 
analysis by The Washington Post. 
   Clinton makes no bones about why he charges so much. 
   
“I gotta pay our bills,” he told NBC News. 
 
   Barack Obama - $400,000 
    
  
  Pete Souza/Official White House Photo 
     Less than a year after leaving office, former President Barack Obama  came under fire from fellow Democrats when it was revealed he was being  paid $1.2 million for three separate speeches to Wall Street groups.  That's $400,000 per speech. 
   
The $400,000 appeared to be Obama's standard fee, as he had already been  paid the same amount for a conversation with presidential historian  Doris Kearns Goodwin, the U.K.'s Independent reported. But it was the coziness with Wall Street that bothered those on the left. 
   Kevin Lewis, a spokesman for the former president, defended the  speeches, saying all Obama's appearances had given him a chance to say  things "true to his values." He continued:
 “His paid speeches in part have allowed President Obama to contribute  $2m to Chicago programs offering job training and employment  opportunities to low-income youth.” 
George W. Bush - $175,000 
    
  
  Ronald Martinez / Getty Images 
Former President George W. Bush earns between $100,000 and $175,000 per  speech and is considered one of the most prolific speech-makers in  modern politics. 
   The news source Politico has documented Bush's appearances on the  speaking circuit and found he's been the keynote in at least 200 events  since leaving office.
  
   Do the math. That amounts to at least $20 million and as much as $35  million in speaking fees he's raked in. Though it should come as no  surprise given his 
stated intention upon leaving off to “replenish the ol’ coffers.” 
   Politico reported in 2015 that Bush does his speaking,
 "in private, in convention centers and hotel ballrooms, resorts and  casinos, from Canada to Asia, from New York to Miami, from all over  Texas to Las Vegas a bunch, playing his part in what has become a  lucrative staple of the modern post-presidency." 
Jimmy Carter - $50,000 
    
  
  Scott Cunningham / Getty Images
 Former President Jimmy Carter "seldom accepts speaking fees," The  Associated Press wrote in 2002, "and when he does he typically donates  the proceeds to his charitable foundation." His fee for speaking about  health care, government and politics, and retirement and aging was  listed at $50,000 at one time, though. 
   
Carter was openly critical of Ronald Reagan at one time for taking $1  million for a single speech. Carter said he'd never take that much, but  added quickly: "I've never been offered that much." 
   "That's not what I want out of life," Carter said in 1989. "We give money. We don't take it."