"Secondly, even if Bozo was correct, at least O'Rourke and/or his parents chose to embrace another culture . . . unlike Bozo's family who changed the family name "Drumpf" to the phony "Trump" to distancethemselves (sic) from their German heritage. "
Now help me understand. Are you saying the following?:
1. Firstly. Beto's phony name was because they supposedly wanted to embrace another culture? Really?
There are two versions that I could find:
a.His old man, a politician, gave it for possible future political aspirations.
Some people have criticized O’Rourke for supposedly using the Spanish-sounding nickname to curry favor with Latino voters (no, he’s not Latino). However, Beto has used the nickname since childhood. His father gave it to him. There is a political dimension to the name, though, because his dad was a political figure in El Paso, Texas who thought the Spanish-sounding name would help his son in that community if he ever ran for office.
b. There is Beto's won version of it:
My grandfather, Robert V. Williams, who passed away when I was 4 years old, but when I was little, my mom tells me, that since there were two Roberts around, so such a little guy, look, we weren’t going to also call you Robert, because that was confusing, and in El Paso, if you’re not Robert, you’re Beto, if you’re not Albert, you’re Beto, if you’re not Umberto, you’re Beto. Beto is as common in El Paso as Bob might be in Dallas. There’s Beto’s Tacos. Wood Floors by Beto. Beto, your mailman. Beto, your congressman.
2. Secondly. That Trump's grandfather changed his original name Drumpf to Trump? Really?
The truth, actually is that Freidrich Drumpf's original name was Trump.
"The immigration records list his name as Friedr. Trumpf.[24][25][26] The 1910 United States census lists his name as Fred Trump. [27] According to the German Verein für Computergenealogie, Trump's earliest known male ancestor was Johann Sebastian Trump (1699–1756)[4] from which neither parents nor place of birth, marriage or death are recorded.[6] The story of an itinerant lawyer Hanns Drumpf presented by Gwenda Blair in her book The Trumps (2000) who settled in Kallstadt in 1608 and whose descendants changed their name from Drumpf to Trump during the Thirty Years' War of the 1600s[28][29] could not be substantiated and is not in accordance with the data provided by the German genealogists.[9] Journalist Kate Connolly, visiting Kallstadt, found several variations in spelling of the surname in the village archives (including Drumb, Tromb, Tromp, Trum, Trumpff, Dromb) but her article does not note "Drumpf".[30] Furthermore, within the online database of the Verein für Computergenealogie, the search for "Drumpf" (in contrast to "Trumpf") yields no results.[31]"
Ancestors of Friedrich Trump.