To: Alex MG who wrote (204523 ) 10/10/2012 12:05:21 PM From: Sam Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 541518 This is the guy who claims he will shutter his company and fire his employees if Obama is elected (but he isn't telling them how to vote). It is clear from the photo below that he and his wife are truly authentic people who are a match made in heaven. I say, let him shutter his company. If it is filling a real need, someone else will take over, probably one of his current employees. Although if you look on the web, you will find plenty of complaints about his company, Westgate, calling it a scam. This guy is a real piece of work, a liar and a true asshole. Jay Bookman David Siegel and the billionaire’s sad lament 4:34 pm October 9, 2012, by Jay The man above is David Siegel, owner of Westgate Resorts, allegedly the largest time-share company in the world, with his wife Jackie. After a financial setback during the recession, Siegel now brags that “we’re the most profitable we’ve ever been.” He and Jackie have resumed construction on a 90,000-square-foot home, called Versailles, that they are building in Florida. If and when it is completed, it will be the largest private home in the country. According to the Wall Street Journal, when completed Versailles will boast “13 bedrooms, 23 full bathrooms, a 6,000-square-foot master suite (with plans in place for a bed on a rotating platform), a banquet kitchen plus 10 satellite kitchens, a 20-car garage, three pools, a two-story wine cellar and a grand hall with a 30-foot stained glass dome.” .... The email does raise an interesting question or two, such as, if it’s true that “even to this day, every dime I earn goes back into this company,” where did all the money for that house come from? And if he made all the right decisions, why did he come so close to bankruptcy? Why does he blame government for the fact that he had to pull his eight kids out of private school? If he couldn’t support a family that large, why did he keep having children? Under ordinary circumstances, I also wouldn’t think it necessary to pity poor Mr. Siegel. After all, he would seem to have more than enough pity for himself to fill all three swimming pools at Versailles, allowing him to wallow in that emotion to his heart’s content. But clearly, this is a man completely unfamiliar with the concept of “more than enough.” Judging from his email, the poor unappreciated soul wants and needs more pity still; he is a victim, you see, treated shabbily and unfairly, and he’s not going to take any more of it, by golly. Attention, attention must finally be paid to such a person. – Jay Bookman