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Warren Buffett challenged Donald Trump to release his taxes. Trump has yet to do so because he said he's being audited.

CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The cartoon above is a bit of a stretch. It's doubtful Donald Trump knows the Sixteenth Amendment allowed Congress to levy an income tax. Or that Article 1, section 8 of the Constitution granted Congress the "power to lay and collect taxes," in general.

Two weeks after Warren Buffett challenged Trump to release his tax returns, Hillary Clinton has released hers, while Trump has just released more Trumpisms.

The tax returns of Hillary and Bill Clinton showed they are in the country's top 1% with a 2015 adjusted gross income of $10.6 million. They paid $3.6 million in federal taxes. Half of their income came from speeches. Bill earned $5.2 million from speeches. Hillary earned $1.5 million from speeches and an additional $3 million from her book "Hard Choices", a memoir of her tenure as Secretary of State.

That memoir didn't include recently released State Department emails from Bill Clinton seeking State Department clearance to give speeches before groups paying him nearly half a million dollars.

From 2007 to 2015, the Clintons have earned $150 million and given $16 million to charity. In 2014, Hillary Clinton had eyes rolling when she cried poor, claiming the couple were broke when they left the White House.

On August 1, Warren Buffett challenged Trump to release his tax returns. Dismissing Trump's excuse that he's being audited, Buffett said, "I've got news for him, I'm under audit too. I would be delighted to meet him any time, any place before the election. I'll bring my tax return. He can bring his tax return, Nobody is going to arrest us. There are no rules against showing your tax returns and just just let people ask questions about items that are on there."

Buffett also dismissed Trump's argument that that the Federal Election Commission finance forms he filled out should suffice. "As someone who's filled out financial statements and someone who has filled out an income tax return, I can tell you, they are two very different animals, You will learn a whole lot more about Donald Trump if he produces his income tax return," said the 'Oracle of Omaha.'

Trump would be the first major presidential candidate since Richard Nixon, not to release his tax returns. It's speculated that he's reluctant to do so for one or more reasons. The returns could show his income hasn't been as much as he's boasted it's been. They may show he has paid little or no taxes by taking advantage of real estate tax loopholes. They may show he has financial dealings that further hurt his election chances, especially if they're with Russian interests.

If the Trump campaign is going to raise questions about the Clinton Foundation's financial dealings, which are fair game, his own business dealings and tax returns should be fair game.

Trump has said voters,critics and the Clinton campaign should be more concerned with the release of Clinton's 30,000 deleted emails instead of his tax returns. It shouldn't be a question of either or, both the emails and Trump's tax returns should have been released.

The cartoon and column above have been updated to reference the Sixteenth Amendment, which allowed Congress to levy an income tax.