Archive for April, 2017

VP Mike Pence commuting from Sanibel for Gorsuch ceremony? – The News-Press

Pecking Order Fried Chickens Bridgit Stone-Budd welcomes Vice President Mike Pence to Sanibel Island, Fla., on Saturday with an invite for fried chicken, waffles and fried pickles on the house. Patricia Borns/news-press.com

The plane (Air Force Two) of U.S. Vice President Mike Pence lands Saturday at Southwest Florida International Airport in Fort Myers, Florida. Pence is believed to be visiting Sanibel Island over the weekend.(Photo: Kinfay Moroti/news-press.com)Buy Photo

It hasnt been officially confirmed.

However, circumstances point to Vice President Mike Pence returning to Southwest Florida and his presumed vacation shortly after 6 p.m., following a day trip to Washington, D.C.

This was more than an hour past the window of time listed in an FAA "Notice to Airmen" for a temporary restriction on air space use near Southwest Florida International Airport.

And, the plane that a handful of people saw land from a nearby observation lot wasnt the huge 747 jet Pence arrived in on Saturday.

Instead, it was a much-smaller Air Force Gulfstream jet, said Daniel Felton. Hes a commercial pilot who lives nearby, and thought he might catch a glimpse of the arrival from the observation lot on the airfields north side.

Vice President Mike Pence, wife start Sunday at Sanibel church

Why is Felton convinced that indeed was the jet carrying Pence? Besides the plane'smarkings, Felton sawthe cars lined up on Chamberlin Parkway and Air Cargo Lane, stopped by law enforcement officers shortly after the Gulfstream landed and a small motorcade sped from Private Sky Aviation Services toward Daniels Parkway.

Also, there was the ear-piercing siren blast that sounded before and after its landing.

That, Felton said, signaled a ground stop of all aircraft operations, which is probably very usual when youre dealing with VIPs such as the president or the vice president.

Felton also noted that aircraft size does not make a particular plane Air Force Two. A vice president of the United States traveling aboard makes it Air Force Two.

If Monday's motorcade indeed carried Pence, he would have returned to Sanibel in time for one of its belovedwaterfront sunsets.

Pence arrived in Southwest Florida on Saturday, and rode in a motorcade to Sanibel Island.

On Sunday morning, he attended the 8 a.m. service at Sanibel Community Church.

Based on aNotice to Airmen posted concerning a temporary restriction on air space use, it appeared that Air Force Twowould return to RSW sometime between 3:30 p.m. and 4:45 p.m.

That time window passed before the Air Force Gulfstream was sighted. And as of 5:30 p.m. Monday, no new notice had been posted on the FAA website.

Connect with this reporter @Alvascribe (Twitter) and LauraPatrickRuane (Facebook).

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VP Mike Pence commuting from Sanibel for Gorsuch ceremony? - The News-Press

Carla Pestana, UCLA religion professor, attacks Donald Trump and … – Washington Times

A professor who specializes in religious studies at University of California, Los Angeles says President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence represent troubling trends in American Christianity.

Professor Carla Pestana of UCLA published Arrogant Christians In The White House over the weekend for The Huffington Post, which warns of a future America shaped by the fundamentalist Christian views of Mr. Pence and Mr. Trumps self-indulgence.

Pence adheres to biblical literalism. Put simply, this view asserts that the Bible is a transparent document, one that prescribes specific behavioral guidelines, Ms. Pestana wrote Saturday. Its arrogance lies in the hubris of those who believe that only their chosen answers are correct. Its potential to harm others comes when adherents gain political power and force their mandates on nonbelievers. One of the many dangers emanating out of the Trump White House is the power of Pence to impose not his religion but the behaviors his religion dictates onto the rest of us.

The professor, who currently teaches History of Religion in U.S., then analyzed Mr. Trumps faith as something akin to the prosperity theology adopted by some Christians.

Trumps religion, although very different, is similarly alarming, she wrote. Unsurprisingly Trump accepts a religious viewpoint that tells him he is uniquely awesome. Whatever he has however he acquired it God wants him to enjoy to the fullest. Although traditional Christian social practice mandates that believers exercise humility, charity and other virtues that put others before self, Trumps faith rejects all curbs on self-indulgence and self-aggrandizement.

Quotes by the president and vice president to buttress the professors claims were not provided.

Mr. Pence, a lawyer and Indianas former governor, has a long track record of stating his respect for the U.S. Constitution and the rule of law.

The presidency must adhere to its definition as expressed in the Constitution, and to conduct defined over time and by tradition, Mr. Pencesaid while addressing Hillsdale College students on Sept. 20, 2010. While the powers of the office have enlarged, along with those of the legislature and the judiciary, the framework of the government was intended to restrict abuses common to classical empires and to the regal states of the 18th century.

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Carla Pestana, UCLA religion professor, attacks Donald Trump and ... - Washington Times

Lohud Lacrosse Scoreboard: April 11 – The Journal News | LoHud.com

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(Photo: Mike Dougherty/The Journal News)

Stars of the Day

1. Ben Mautner (Byram Hills)

2. Riley Carroll (Arlington)

3. Tyler Carr (Somers)

April 11

Byram Hills 10, No. 10 Tappan Zee 8: Ben Mautner had five goals and an assist for the Bobcats, who improved to 4-2. Matt Grotta added three goals and an assist and Griffen Rackower made 22 saves. Ryan Maloney had four goals and an assist for the Dutchmen and Tom Chiapperino added three goals.

Scarsdale 13, Greeley 4: Andrew Bernstein and Cooper Schneider each scored three times for the Raiders, who have won three in a row. Jackson Bornstein added two goals and three assists. Damon Klein had a goal and an assist for the Quakers.

Arlington 12, North Rockland 9: Riley Carroll had five goals and an assist for the Admirals, who improved to 3-0. JT Flaherty got three goals and two assists and Matt Lopez wound up with three goals. Steven Apicella had three goals and one assist for the Red Raiders and Mike Csernicky added one goal and two assists.

Wappingers 12, Fox Lane 6: James Pratt had three goals and three assists for the Warriors, who have won three in a row. Jake Shaw added two goals and three assists and James Luciano got two goals and one assist for Wappingers, which scored five in the second to move in front 6-3 at the half.

Hen Hud 15, Carmel 7: Connor Gallagher had four goals and four assists to lead the Sailors to their first win of the season. Bryce Caffrey and A.J. Pannella each scored three times. John Melito had three goals for the Rams, who came in with a three game winning streak.

No. 1 Yorktown 15, Jamesville-DeWitt 11: Kyle Casey and Shane Dahlke each finished with three goals and one assist to lead the Huskers, who broke open a 5-5 game with nine third-quarter goals. Jamison Embury added two goals and two assists. Hunter Embury and Justin Cavallo each scored twice and Louis Ragusa made 14 saves. Andrew Barclay and Jai Benson combined for seven goals in the loss.

No. 8 Somers 6, Mahopac 5: Vincent Cartelli had two goals and two assists for the Tuskers, who ended a three game slide. Andrew Lowman tacked on two goals and one assist for Somers and Tyler Carr made 15 saves. Ryan Dugan had three goals for the Indians and Mike Argila made 14 saves in the loss.

Kellenberg 13, Stepinac 6: Colin Sharkey had two goals for the Crusaders, who lost for the first time in five games. Kevin McKenna added one goal and two assists. Tyler Rispoli made 10 saves for Stepinac.

Nyack 20, Albertus Magnus 4

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Lohud Lacrosse Scoreboard: April 11 - The Journal News | LoHud.com

Donald Trump News and Photos | Perez Hilton

Every court has its clown.

But since our President is already a clown, that makes Sean Spicer a talking balloon animal.

The White House Press Secretary tried to justify Donald Trump's decision to airstrike Syria last week and, in doing so, essentially told the entire press corps that he flunked World History in high school. (Sad!)

On Tuesday, Spicer painted Syrian president Bashar al-Assad as a villain more sinister than Adolf Hitler by proclaiming the Nazi leader "didn't even sink to chemical weapons" on his people like al-Assad has been accused of.

We guess he forget about the millions of Jews who were killed in gas chambers during WWII but thankfully, White House reporters (and the Internet) were quick to remind him.

Sadly, this isn't Spicer's first perplexing moment at the podium. Relive the press secretary's most profound snafus (below)!

CLICK HERE to view "6 RIDICULOUS Sean Spicer Moments!"

CLICK HERE to view "6 RIDICULOUS Sean Spicer Moments!"

CLICK HERE to view "6 RIDICULOUS Sean Spicer Moments!"

CLICK HERE to view "6 RIDICULOUS Sean Spicer Moments!"

CLICK HERE to view "6 RIDICULOUS Sean Spicer Moments!"

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Donald Trump News and Photos | Perez Hilton

Donald Trump’s on-the-job training – CNN

Various Trump officials for instance struggled to get on the same page Tuesday over the question of whether Russia knew in advance about the chemical weapons attack by its ally President Bashar al-Assad's government that killed more than 80 civilians.

The apparent contradictions were symptomatic of the Trump team's failure to agree a public line on its first big national security test. Haley's comments and a string of other seemingly jarring interventions by officials are raising questions about the coordination of the foreign policy process between the National Security Council, the State Department and the Pentagon and may reveal a lack of basic strategic planning and messaging in the still understaffed administration.

The last few days have seen a flurry of gaffes, walk-backs, vague, sometimes conflicting statements and off-the-cuff policy making by President Donald Trump himself, Tillerson, Haley and Spicer.

A similar realization is now becoming evident on foreign policy.

Yet his heartfelt response to horrific images of gassed children in Syria, and decision to launch military action, appeared to completely reverse his stated foreign policy intentions. His instinctual move to order his first major military actions of his presidency also raised concerns that he was basing military action on emotion before arriving at a strategic long-term determination of next steps or the consequences of bombing Syria.

Tuesday was yet another dizzying day for America's allies, enemies and analysts as they try to arrive at clarity about Trump's intentions.

Attempts by the administration to explain its strategy on Syria and to shame Russia for its backing of Assad were blown out of the water by a huge blunder by Spicer.

Trump's spokesman reached for an unwise comparison by saying that even Adolf Hitler had never used chemical weapons against civilians during World War II, despite the gassing of millions of Jews and other minorities in death camps.

Spicer appeared on CNN's "The Situation Room" on Tuesday to apologize for the Hitler analogy.

"It was a mistake, I shouldn't have done it. I won't do it again. It was an attempt to do something that should not have been done. There really was no explaining it," he told CNN's Wolf Blitzer.

Former Bill Clinton chief of staff Leon Panetta, who served another Democratic President, Barack Obama, as CIA chief, praised Spicer for apologizing but said his comments were a damaging distraction for the administration.

"When he says the kind of stupid things that he did today, it hurts the administration, it changes the story," Panetta said.

Spicer is not alone in muddling the administration's message and fogging perceptions of the Trump administration's Syria policy.

The President himself also weighed in on Tuesday, blaming the previous Obama administration's failure to enforce a US red line over the use of chemical weapons -- though did not bring much clarity to the situation.

"We are not going into Syria," Trump told Fox Business Network.

It was left to Mattis, speaking to reporters at the Pentagon, to clarify that America's policy was still primarily geared towards destroying ISIS and not regime change. He said the missile strikes were a separate attempt to outlaw the use of chemical weapons.

"There is a limit, I think, to what we can do. And when you look at what happened with this chemical attack, we knew that we could not stand passive on this," the former general told reporters.

"But it was not a statement that we could enter full-fledged, full-bore into the most complex civil war probably raging on the planet at this time."

Mattis however, in his sober way did make clear to Assad that using chemical weapons again would draw a response, but did so in a way that avoided putting the administration's credibility on the line and highlighted the lack of precision and restraint evident in other administration statements.

But the Syria confusion is not only unfolding example of the administration learning that events have a way of quickly testing an inexperienced White House.

Events of the last few days appear to have completely reshaped the assumptions that Trump brought into office about improving relations with Russia that have pitched to their lowest point since the Cold War.

"If we got along with Russia and Russia went out with us and knocked the hell out of ISIS that is OK with me folks," Trump said at a campaign rally in October. Then-candidate Trump expressed his admiration for President Vladimir Putin many times, including in an NBC interview in September.

"If he says get things about me, I am going to say great things about him," Trump said. Back in August, Trump told supporters: "there is nothing I can think of that I would rather do than have Russia friendly."

Trump's room for maneuver with Russia was already curtailed by allegations that some campaign aides had links with Moscow at a time when it was accused of interfering in the presidential election.

The aftermath of the missile attacks ordered by Trump have appeared to have alerted the administration as never before to the geostrategic factors that make any rapprochement between Moscow and Washington a long shot.

Even members of his own administration appear to be undermining the President's hopes of improving relations with Russia, which sees Syria as a crucial Middle Eastern ally and props up Assad's government to maintain its influence in the region.

Tillerson, who was once branded by critics as too close to Moscow, owing to his business deals in his former job as the head of ExxonMobil, talked tough before arriving.

During a stop in Italy, the top US diplomat blasted the Russian government for supporting Assad and other US enemies.

"Russia has really aligned itself with the Assad regime, the Iranians and Hezbollah. Is that a long-term alliance that serves Russia's interests?" he said.

Back at the White House, Spicer effectively gave Moscow an ultimatum: choose better relations with Trump administration or its relations with nations that pursue policies contrary to US interests.

"It's no question that Russia is isolated. They have aligned themselves with North Korea, Syria, Iran. That's not exactly a group of countries that you're looking to hang out with," he said.

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Donald Trump's on-the-job training - CNN