On Tuesday, Forbes published a bombshell report detailing the various ways in which Eric Trump and Donald Trump allegedly funneled $1.2 million that should have gone to kids with cancer to the Trump Organization. It didn’t start out that way, of course. According to reporter Dan Alexander, the Eric Trump Foundation, which raises money for the St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, was relatively generous in the first years of its existence, taking a moderate $50,000 in overhead to cover the costs of its annual charity golf tournament at the family’s club in Westchester County, New York. (Eric had told donors the charity was supposed to be getting access to the course at no charge.) But those costs suddenly soared into the hundreds of thousands of dollars when four of the foundation’s original board members were replaced by such people as Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen and Trump Organization executive vice president Dan Scavino Jr., who is now White House social media director. According to Ian Gillule, who served as membership and marketing director at Trump National Westchester at the time, the elder Trump “had a cow” when he realized the Trump Organization wasn’t milking the charity to recoup all its costs. “He was like, ‘We’re donating all of this stuff, and there’s no paper trail? No credit?’ And he went nuts. He said, ‘I don’t care if it’s my son or not—everybody gets billed.’” Around the same time, the Eric Trump Foundation started sending money to other charities instead of St. Jude’s, as donors had expected.

Those allegations didn’t sit very well with Eric Trump.

Appearing on Fox News Tuesday night, Trump’s second son lashed out at Democrats, calling them immoral, subhuman, and bitter about losing the election. “I’ve never seen hatred like this. And to me, they’re not even people,” he told Sean Hannity. “It’s so, so sad, I mean morality is just gone, morals have flown out the window. We deserve so much better than this as a country. You know, it's so sad. You see the Democratic Party—they’re imploding. They’re imploding. They have no message. You see the head of the D.N.C. who is a total whack job. There’s no leadership there. And so what do they do? They become obstructionists because they have no message of their own. They have no solid candidates of their own. They lost the election that they should have won because they spent seven times the amount of money that my father spent. They have no message, so what do they try and do? They try and obstruct a great man, they try and obstruct his family, they come after us viciously, and it’s truly, truly horrible.”

Because he wouldn’t be a Trump if he didn’t also respond on Twitter, Eric offered some choice words for his critics online, too. “I have raised $16.3 million dollars for terminally ill children at @StJude with less than a 12.3% expense ratio,” he wrote. “What have you done today?!”

In an email to the Hive on Tuesday, a spokeswoman for Eric Trump said that “contrary to recent reports, at no time did the Trump Organization profit in any way from the foundation or any of its activities.” (The Forbes report never alleges that the Trump Organization directly profited from the charity tournament, only that it billed the event for ever-higher costs that experts struggled to understand or justify.)

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