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  1. Past hour
  2. Hanseng

    Kinship

    If it is addressed, it will only be on paper. Contrary to official church teaching but accepted in practice. Adventism is extremely weak when it comes to disfellowshipping people. Even disfellowshipping is just on paper. The disfellowshipee can still attend church. When Paul said a person should be delivered unto satan, he wasn't referring to a bookkeeping adjustment. People were shunned, avoided, not allowed at the Lord's table. If they pay tithe and hold a conservative theology [except in the bedroom]it is likely they will become commonplace. They already are, in some places. Online ezines made up of either current or former SDA openly promote homosexuality, employ homosexuals, validate homosexuality. These are not merely rogue editors. Editors are accountable to boards comprised of people who support this agenda as well. When an SDA kinship spokesperson advocated introducing SDA youth to the LGBQT+ agenda, most, if not all, online chatters simply stared at the post, like cows looking at a new gate. Keep in mind that one of the founders of kinship was not an Adventist, not sure if he was even a Christian. He had a fetish, of sorts, for gay SDA. He must have been beside himself when kinship had its first homosexual gathering at a private and secluded camp in the mountains. It brought together people with SSA from all over the country. This camp was the same camp meeting place from which Dr. Ford had been uninvited just a few years before. This was prior to Glacier View. He was, at that time, a theology teacher at PUC, on leave from the chairmanship of the theology department at Avondale. This was a man who a former associate director of the BRI said was a great gospel preacher. Gospel preaching not allowed, homosexual debauchery, OK, in that conference.
  3. Today
  4. So you agree that sin was transferred by confession and the laying of hands upon the sacrifice?
  5. Roy Gane published an article in the JATS on OT ordination practices. The article discusses the placing of hand upon sacrificial animals and individuals. Prior to the death of Moses, God had charged Moses with placing some of his honor upon Joshua. He did so by placing his hands upon him. 18 And the LORD said unto Moses, Take thee Joshua the son of Nun, a man in whom [is] the spirit, and lay thine hand upon him; 19 And set him before Eleazar the priest, and before all the congregation; and give him a charge in their sight. 20 And thou shalt put [some] of thine honour upon him, that all the congregation of the children of Israel may be obedient. 21 And he shall stand before Eleazar the priest, who shall ask [counsel] for him after the judgment of Urim before the LORD: at his word shall they go out, and at his word they shall come in, [both] he, and all the children of Israel with him, even all the congregation. 22 And Moses did as the LORD commanded him: and he took Joshua, and set him before Eleazar the priest, and before all the congregation:18 And the LORD said unto Moses, Take thee Joshua the son of Nun, a man in whom [is] the spirit, and lay thine hand upon him; https://digitalcommons.andrews.edu/jats/vol33/iss1/10
  6. If the sin was not transferred from the sinner, he would remain with it and have to pay the wages for it.
  7. Will be praying for the families and the Philippines that God will be with them in there hour of need!!
  8. phkrause

    Lest We Forget

  9. phkrause

    Lest We Forget

  10. phkrause

    Lest We Forget

  11. phkrause

    Lest We Forget

  12. phkrause

    Lest We Forget

  13. For the reader, the practical implication is clear: the threshold for criminal risk regarding public statements has been lowered. Expression that was previously protected by religious exemptions may now be subject to police investigation and prosecutorial scrutiny. ------------ Deeply troubling.
  14. Asia Joe

    The Shield They Are Dismantling

    Consider, then, the position La Sierra’s leadership has built. Suppose the university one day declines to terminate an employee for conduct its handbook forbids. That employee’s lawyer will not need to manufacture evidence of insincerity. He will introduce a photograph of the president on a chapel platform, beneath rainbow flags, assuring LGBTQ graduates that “La Sierra is big enough for all.” The handbook says one thing; the president performed another, in front of cameras, with the provost beside him. A church that disciplines a conservative preacher for his theology while celebrating what its own statutes forbid does more than play favorites. It assembles, in public, the exhibit that defeats its own exemption. More people need to be aware of this.
  15. Exhibit two. La Sierra University, and the drift that skips the vote entirely. On June 5 in Riverside its president stood under rainbow flags at a Lavender Graduation and told seven graduates the school “is big enough for all.” Adventist Fundamental Belief 23 calls marriage the union of a man and a woman. The La Sierra University Student handbook promises adherence to this very policy in two places, on pages 57 and 58. The platform said otherwise, the provost beside him. This is the quieter rot, the daylight between what an institution prints and what its leaders bless. The denomination that suspends conservative preachers for their sermons and lets a campus stage what its own statutes forbid. Two gospels, one letterhead, and nobody will say which one is real, and they can’t provide any assurance as to why church members shouldn’t be confused about what is going on not only in California but in the rest of North America. ---------------- Disturbing.
  16. Asia Joe

    Kinship

    But what if they are members already. Maybe 10 or 20 years ago they were baptized as a youth, but now, choose Homosexual behavior. I know several cases of that. They don't openly broadcast it because that would cause problems. But their family and friends know. I don't see anyone addressing this issue.
  17. Judge Gives Stark Warning to Trump’s DOJ Over His Slush Fund The judge responded to concerns that the DOJ could say one thing and then do another. A judge issued a stern warning to Donald Trump’s Department of Justice not to go back on its word that the president’s Jan. 6 slush fund was dead on arrival. The DOJ last month announced the creation of a $1.776 billion fund that would make secret payments to Capitol rioters and other Trump allies who say they were wrongly prosecuted by the Biden administration, without any legal or congressional oversight.The fund was created as part of a dubious “settlement agreement” arising from a $10 billion lawsuit Trump brought against the Internal Revenue Service over tax returns leaked to the press by an independent contractor. But Trump and his DOJ said they were abandoning the scheme after the fund was temporarily blocked by the courts—and after congressional Republicans staged a mutiny, refusing to pass Trump’s other priorities until the fund was axed. During a hearing in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, a federal judge warned the DOJ not to try to revive the moribund fund, The Washington Post reported. “Don’t play possum with this court,” Judge Richard Leon said. The DOJ’s so-called “Anti-Weaponization Fund” was the subject of at least five federal lawsuits, including one brought by the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW). On Wednesday, Leon denied CREW’s request for a temporary restraining order against the fund, saying the case appeared moot because acting attorney general Todd Blanche had testified before Congress last week that the fund had been abandoned, which DOJ officials have since repeated in court filings, according to the Post. CREW’s attorneys, however, argued that the DOJ still hadn’t rescinded Blanche’s May 18 memo establishing the fund, and Trump himself had refused to back Blanche’s congressional testimony that the fund had been scrapped. The plaintiffs in a separate case in Virginia made a similar argument on Wednesday, urging the court not to take the DOJ at its word because the department’s position could be temporary or unreliable. Leon said he would rule at a later date on CREW’s request for a preliminary injunction against the fund. In the meantime, he pointed out that while Trump can make statements about the fund for political benefit, DOJ lawyers could face sanctions for making misrepresentations in court filings. The DOJ’s lawyers assured the court, “Our briefs are assurances in writing. And those submissions are in court documents,” the Post reported. Separately, the judge in the Virginia case, Leonie Brinkema, ordered the government not to proceed with the fund until at least Friday, when she’s scheduled to hold a hearing. Judge Kathleen Williams, the judge overseeing the original IRS suit, also reopened the suit and ordered an investigation into whether the fund was “premised on deception.” Williams had questioned whether there was a valid dispute between Trump and the IRS, given that the president oversees the Treasury Department, and asked the parties to submit briefs on whether a real case or controversy existed. Rather than answer the court’s questions, Trump dropped the suit and—without informing the court of a settlement—struck a deal with his own DOJ. The move came after Trump himself said at a rally in December that he was in a “strange position” suing his own IRS, NPR reported. “I’ve gotta make a deal. I negotiate with myself,” he said. The Daily Beast has reached out to the White House for comment. https://www.thedailybeast.com/judge-gives-stark-warning-to-trumps-doj-over-his-anti-weaponization-slush-fund/?
  18. Yesterday
  19. phkrause

    Sports, Entertainment, & Culture

    👋 Good morning! I still can't wrap my head around the Knicks' win last night. Unreal. In today's edition: A comeback for the ages in New York (and San Francisco!), World Cup kicks off, Mahomes signs historic extension, Serena's comeback on pause, new MLB metric, and more. Yahoo Sports AM is written by Kendall Baker and Jeff Tracy. Let's sports...   🚨 ICYMI HEADLINES ⚾️ Walk-off slam: The Giants staged the comeback of a lifetime against the Nationals on Wednesday, turning a 9-1 deficit entering the eighth inning into an 11-10 victory thanks to a walk-off grand slam from rookie Bryce Eldridge. The win snapped a 4,291-game losing streak (!!!) by teams down 8+ runs in the eighth inning or later. 🏈 Moneybags Mahomes: The Chiefs have added two years to Patrick Mahomes' existing contract, which will keep the two-time MVP in Kansas City through 2033 on a deal valued at $504.75 million — the NFL's first half-billion dollar contract. 🏀 All eyes on MSG: Monday's Knicks vs. Spurs game at Madison Square Garden was the most-watched NBA Finals Game 3 since Bulls vs. Jazz in 1998, averaging 23.8 million viewers (and peaking at 26.3 million) on ABC/ESPN. 🎾 Comeback stalled: Serena Williams' first tournament back has been cut short after her doubles partner, Victoria Mboko, injured her knee in Wednesday's singles match, forcing the pair to withdraw from today's quarterfinal at the Queen's Club Championships. 🏈 Sign of the times: USC is hiring a Director of AI to join its coaching staff, with last season's director of football analytics, Conor McQuiston, being elevated into the first-of-its-kind position. The exact parameters of the role are unknown at this time.   🏆 NBA FINALS THE GREATEST COMEBACK IN NBA HISTORY Karl-Anthony Towns celebrates after a victory he'll never forget. (Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) The Knicks pulled off a comeback for the ages on Wednesday night, rallying from a 29-point deficit to beat the Spurs, 107-106, and take a 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals. Absolutely incredible stuff. Dan Devine, Yahoo Sports: It can't be too easy to try to hype up a crowd that just watched the hometown team get absolutely decimated in the first half of an NBA Finals game. But that's why you pay professionals like the Wu-Tang Clan, you know? After the final song of their excellent set, as Wu-Tang exited the floor at Madison Square Garden, Method Man said, "Knicks in five, what y'all talking about?" In the moment, that optimism seemed wildly misplaced. The Knicks had spent most of the first half on tilt, unmoored, bereft of composure and answers against a Spurs team that was running them ragged. After giving up a Finals-record 14 first-half 3-pointers, missing eight free throws and logging as many turnovers as assists (seven), the Knicks went into intermission down by 27 points — the largest halftime deficit of any home team in NBA Finals history. The lead, and the gravity pulling the Knicks down from the soaring heights of taking a 2-0 lead on the road toward a crushing 2-2 tie without home-court advantage, seemed insurmountable. But through Wu-Tang, all things are possible. "Had to give 'em a little Wu-Tang prayer, nahmean?" Ghostface Killah told Yahoo Sports. God must be pretty into Wu-Tang. Wu-Tang Clan performs at halftime. (Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) What we witnessed in New York on Wednesday night was nothing short of the greatest comeback in NBA history. Oh, other teams have come back from larger deficits. The Jazz hold the regular-season record, trailing by 36 before beating the Nuggets in 1996. The Clippers have the playoff high-water mark, surging back from 31 down to knock off the Warriors in 2019. But this was Game 4 of the NBA Finals. This was the Knicks, after spending the last several days in vibe-shift hell, playing their worst basketball in months, watching their best chance to win a championship in three decades slip away. This was the Spurs, a bad-ass young team led by a once-in-a-lifetime game-changer whose time had evidently come, announcing their primacy and dominance by making their veteran opponents melt down and puke all over their shoes. This was history; when a De'Aaron Fox pull-up jumper pushed the lead to 29 a couple of minutes into the third quarter, it seemed like all that was left to decide was the final margin and just how early Knicks head Mike Brown would decide to pull his starters to start getting ready for Game 5 back in Texas. And against most teams, things probably would've played out that way. But not these Knicks. The game-winner: O.G. Anunoby tipped in a missed 3-pointer in the final seconds to lift the Knicks to victory. "Right hand of God," said Karl-Anthony Towns postgame. "That has to be the most iconic shot in the history of New York basketball," added head coach Mike Brown. Further reading: Epic collapse leaves Wemby, Spurs searching for answers The 10 wildest numbers from the Knicks' historic comeback De'Aaron Fox's gaffe in final seconds helps give Game 4 away   ⚽️ THE BEAUTIFUL GAME THE WORLD CUP HAS ARRIVED (Yahoo Sports) At long last, our wait is over. The 2026 World Cup is finally here. Bigger than ever: This year's tournament features a record 48 teams playing a record 104 matches across a record 39 days in a record three countries. The U.S. will host 78 of those matches across 11 cities, while Mexico (three cities) and Canada (two cities) will host 13 each. The field: Teams are split into 12 groups, and some are more stacked than others, as you can see below. To wit, seven groups (C, E, F, H, I, K, L) have multiple teams ranked higher in our power rankings than any in Groups A, B and D. But hey, that's why they play the games. Group A: Mexico (20), South Korea (22), Czechia (28), South Africa (37) Group B: Switzerland (18), Bosnia and Herzegovina (30), Canada (33), Qatar (45) Group 😄 Brazil (6), Morocco (11), Haiti (39), Scotland (40) Group 😧 USA (19), Turkey (21), Paraguay (27), Australia (34) Group E: Germany (7), Ecuador (13), Ivory Coast (26), Curaçao (42) Group F: Netherlands (8), Japan (17), Sweden (29), Tunisia (35) Group G: Belgium (9), Iran (23), Egypt (31), New Zealand (44) Group H: Spain (2), Uruguay (14), Saudi Arabia (38), Cape Verde (41) Group I: France (1), Senegal (12), Norway (16), Iraq (47) Group J: Argentina (3), Austria (25), Algeria (32), Jordan (48) Group K: Portugal (5), Colombia (10), DR Congo (43), Uzbekistan (46) Group L: England (4), Croatia (15), Ghana (24), Panama (36) Format and schedule: The Group Stage (June 11-27) will whittle the field down to 32 countries, with the top two teams in each group and the eight best third-place teams advancing to the Round of 32 (June 28-July 3). Then comes the Round of 16 (July 4-7), Quarterfinals (July 9-11), Semifinals (July 14-15) and Final (July 19). (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports) At a glance: Best teams: Spain has the best odds to win it all (+450), followed by France (+500), England (+700), Portugal (+800), Argentina (+900), Brazil (+900), Germany (+1400), Netherlands (+2000), Belgium (+3300) and Norway (+3300). Best players: Lamine Yamal (Spain), Kylian Mbappé (France), Harry Kane (England), Ousmane Dembélé (France), Erling Haaland (Norway), Vinícius Júnior (Brazil) and Achraf Hakimi (Morocco) are among the most notable names to watch. Best games: Brazil vs. Morocco (June 13), Netherlands vs. Japan (June 14), England vs. Croatia (June 17), Turkey vs. USA (June 25), Norway vs. France (June 26), Uruguay vs. Spain (June 26) and Colombia vs. Portugal (June 27) are among the biggest group stage matches. Predictions: Who gets the Golden Ball and Golden Boot, biggest disappointments, championship picks and more The action starts today, with Mexico hosting South Africa in the opener (3pm ET, Fox), and South Korea taking on Czechia this evening (10pm, FS1).   ⚾️ SWING AND MISS NEW METRIC: WHIFF DISTANCE Behold, the biggest swing-and-miss on record, courtesy of Clayton Kershaw. (Baseball Savant) "He missed that by a mile!" is a popular phrase uttered by baseball viewers and broadcasters alike to describe a particularly egregious swing-and-miss. Well, we can now measure exactly how big that hyperbolic "mile" actually is. New metric: "Miss Distance" and "Swing Timing" are now available at MLB's Baseball Savant. The data, tracked since the 2023 All-Star Game, tells you how much any given pitch misses a bat by across three dimensions: above or below, inside or outside, and early or late. By the numbers: The average miss comes by three inches, and no pitchers induce bigger misses across their entire arsenal than Yankees reliever Fernando Cruz and Padres closer Mason Miller (7.0 inches). Miller stands alone with the filthiest individual pitch, though: His slider misses bats by an average of 10.7 inches, which helps explain his sterling 0.94 ERA. Some of the other best pitches by miss distance are Astros reliever AJ Blubaugh's sweeper (9.7), Reds starter Andrew Abbott's curve (9.3), Dodgers reliever Blake Treinen's sweeper (8.3) and Cruz's splitter (8.0). As you might expect, not all pitches are created equal. Offspeed and breaking pitches like forkballs (5.8), slurves (5.6) and sweepers (5.0) miss bats by the most, while four-seamers (1.0), sinkers (1.4) and cutters (2.1) miss by the least. Why does this matter? Missing by an inch yields the same result as missing by a foot, but the data shows that pitchers who miss bats by the greatest distance also tend to be most successful in other metrics. Makes sense; if you're elite at fooling hitters, the contact they eventually make is unlikely to be very good. Worth a watch: Here are the 10 most extreme whiffs on record, led by a vintage Clayton Kershaw curveball thrown last year, which landed well in front of the plate and missed Mets infielder Ronny Mauricio's bat by 57.5 inches (almost five feet!).   📺 VIEWING GUIDE WATCHLIST: THURSDAY, JUNE 11 An aerial view of Estadio Azteca, aka Mexico City Stadium. (Hector Vivas/Getty Images) ⚽️ World Cup, Day 1 It all starts today, with tournament co-host Mexico vs. South Africa in Mexico City (3pm ET, Fox), and South Korea vs. Czechia in Guadalajara (10pm, FS1). Third time's the charm: Estadio Azteca (which will be called Mexico City Stadium for the duration of the tournament) is the first stadium ever to host three World Cup openers after also earning that honor in 1970 and 1986. 🏒 Stanley Cup Final, Game 5 The Hurricanes host the Golden Knights tonight (8pm, ABC) in the latest installment of a thrilling Cup Final. With the series knotted up, it's now a race to two wins. Historic performances: Mitch Marner (Vegas) is the fifth player in the last 106 years to record eight or more points in his first four career Cup Final games, and Jordan Staal (Carolina) is the fourth player in the expansion era to score a goal in each of the first four games of a Cup Final. More to watch: 🏀 WNBA: Sky at Fever (7pm, Prime); Mercury at Wings (9pm, Prime) … The season reached its quarter-point this week. Who are the winners and losers so far? ⛳️ PGA: Canadian Open (7am, ESPN+; 3pm, Golf) … World No. 4 Matt Fitzpatrick headlines the field at TPC Toronto, one week out from the U.S. Open. ⛳️ LPGA: Dow Championship (11am, Golf) … World No. 1 Nelly Korda headlines the tour's lone team event at Michigan's Midland Country Club. ⚾️ MLB: Mariners at Orioles (7pm, ESPN) … Bryan Woo (3.74 ERA, 1.00 WHIP) starts for Seattle (36-33), which has won 11 of 15 to climb into first place in the AL West. 👟 NCAA Track & Field: Championships (8pm, ESPN2) … Day 2 of 4 at historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Got plans tonight? Gametime is the best place to score last-minute tickets to the events in your city.   ⚽️ FLASHBACK WORLD CUP TRIVIA A goal is scored during the 1930 World Cup Final. (Keystone/Getty Images) The 23rd FIFA World Cup kicks off today in North America, 96 years after the inaugural event was held in 1930 in South America. Question: Who won that first tournament? Hint: They were also the host. Answer at the bottom.   ⚽️ WHO YA GOT? MAKE YOUR PICKS The world's biggest soccer tournament has arrived! Pick your group stage winners now in 2026 Soccer Pick 'Em from Yahoo Sports and FOX One. How to play: Make picks each round, earn points for correct predictions and climb the leaderboard. You can play solo against the field, create a private group with friends to compete for bragging rights, or join a public group to play with other fans. Most popular picks so far… (Yahoo Sports)   Trivia answer: Uruguay (over Argentina in the Final)
  20. phkrause

    Extreme Weather

    Midwest storms Storms swept through the Midwest on Wednesday, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of customers and causing more than 1,000 flight delays or cancellations at Chicago airports. Local officials warned residents that conditions were expected to intensify and could bring tornadoes, severe thunderstorms, damaging winds and flash flooding. See the latest. El Nino is here and scientists fear it’ll be big, bad and costly with heat, floods, droughts, fires WASHINGTON (AP) — El Nino, Nature’s chaotic climate agent, has formed in a warmed-up Pacific Ocean and is expected to grow to historic strength, meteorologists announced Thursday. https://apnews.com/article/el-nino-climate-change-flood-drought-damage-7eafacd2bcf04ade9d7f555dfd488178?
  21. phkrause

    Middle East War

    Iran war The latest exchange of attacks between the US and Iran is testing an already fragile ceasefire. It comes as President Trump on Wednesday warned of further strikes if a deal is not reached, adding that the US military could again target critical infrastructure in the region. Read more. CONTEXT: Why a frustrated Trump is turning to bombs to force Iran's hand
  22. Law enforcement relied too heavily on AI, falsely arrested a suspect, ACLU argues A Fort Myers man and the ACLU of Florida are suing Jacksonville Beach for relying too heavily on an artificial intelligence program that fingered him as a suspect in a now-dropped 2023 child luring investigation. https://floridaphoenix.com/2026/06/10/law-enforcement-relied-too-heavily-on-ai-falsely-arrested-a-suspect-aclu-argues/? Feds order a Florida power plant to keep burning dirty coal Walt Disney World is supposed to be the Happiest Place on Earth. It’s certainly the most popular tourist destination. Fifty million people, some from Florida but most from elsewhere, flock to the rodent-themed amusement park every year to spend big bucks seeking a good time. https://floridaphoenix.com/2026/06/11/feds-order-a-florida-power-plant-to-keep-burning-dirty-coal/? Florida Supreme Court rejects emergency petition to stop DeSantis’ redistricted congressional map Gov. Ron DeSantis’ recently redistricted congressional map that could net Republicans up to four additional seats this fall will remain in place after the Florida Supreme Court rejected an emergency petition to stop the map from taking effect on Wednesday. https://floridaphoenix.com/briefs/florida-supreme-court-rejects-emergency-petition-to-stop-desantis-redistricted-congressional-map/? UF trustees unanimous in backing former Alabama president Stuart Bell gained unanimous support from University of Florida trustees Wednesday, moving him a step closer to becoming permanent president in Gainesville, the first to hold that post since summer 2024. https://floridaphoenix.com/2026/06/10/uf-trustees-unanimous-in-backing-former-alabama-president/?
  23. This week, the SBC goes hard right while PCUSA and Adventists drift to the left. Catholic Church is consistent. The post Everybody’s Wrong, and Rome Is Filling Up appeared first on ReligiousLiberty.TV. View the full article
  24. Trump’s ‘Secret Mission’ Story Gets Humiliating Reality Check The president claimed a covert nighttime operation was keeping oil flowing past Iran—but it was already public knowledge. Donald Trump’s dramatic Oval Office boast about a covert nighttime operation sneaking oil out from under Iran’s nose turned out to be anything but secret. The president made the claim Wednesday morning, telling reporters he had been quietly steering oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz—and that Iran was only finding out about it at that very moment. “I can say it now. Something you didn’t know,” Trump, 79, boasted. “Do you know we’ve been taking out millions of barrels of oil? Nobody knows it. You know who doesn’t know about it? Iran — until right now.” That may well have been the case, but only if the Iranians don’t read The New York Times, which had reported on the exact same operation nearly 11 days earlier, on May 31. According to a senior U.S. military official, who spoke to the Times on condition of anonymity, Trump was describing an American effort to guide commercial vessels through the narrow waterway. While the ships have been switching off their transponders to avoid detection, the operation was far from secret—U.S. Central Command had already shepherded around 70 commercial ships through the strait before the Times first reported it. That number has since climbed to more than 200. Trump also described the maneuver in overly dramatic terms. “We took out, the other night, 22 ships, late at night, with no lights, because they don’t have any radar, because we blasted the crap out of it,” he said. Later that day, on social media, he claimed the operation had put more than 100 million barrels of oil onto the open market—a figure that could not be independently verified. U.S. officials have declined to specify what types of vessels made the crossings or the exact routes taken, though one official indicated at least some traffic avoided the Iranian coastline. Shipping analysts say the guided crossings appear to follow routes closer to Oman. Before the war, around 3,000 ships passed through the Strait of Hormuz each month. The episode comes as the conflict with Iran spirals. As the Daily Beast reported Wednesday, Trump issued an ominous threat against Tehran on Truth Social the same day—warning Iran would “pay the price” for failing to agree to a peace deal—after both countries exchanged fire following Iran’s shooting down of a U.S. Army Apache helicopter near the strait on Monday. Trump also told Fox News reporter Trey Yingst he is “getting close to ordering new strikes against Iranian power plants and bridges.” CNN analysis found Trump has claimed on at least 38 occasions since the April 7 ceasefire that the war would end any day now. The Daily Beast has contacted the White House for comment. https://www.thedailybeast.com/trumps-iran-war-secret-mission-story-gets-humiliating-reality-check/? ps:Pathetic!!!!!
  25. Trump Hit With Blistering Filing in Epstein Lawsuit The Wall Street Journal has responded to the president’s latest attempt to sue the publication over his Epstein birthday letter. The Wall Street Journal asked a judge to dismiss Donald Trump’s $10 billion lawsuit against the paper “once and for all” in a blistering court filing accusing the president of attempting to “subvert” the First Amendment with his Epstein-related suit. The Journal published a bombshell report in July 2025 alleging that Trump had sent a graphic 50th birthday letter to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein that was included in a book compiled by Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell in 2003. Trump denied writing the letter and sued the Journal and its Rupert Murdoch-controlled parent company for $10 billion for defamation, only to have the case thrown out in April for coming “nowhere close” to pleading actual malice, the standard required for a public figure to bring a successful suit. The court, however, left the door open for Trump to file an amended complaint, which the Journal has now responded to in a scathing motion to dismiss. The filing argues that the new complaint “does not remedy any of the defects identified in the Court’s dismissal order” and in fact “compounds them” by recycling allegations already rejected by the court. “This Court held once that Plaintiff failed to state a defamation claim against Defendants. The [amended complaint] only bolsters the conclusion that he can never do so,” it adds. To show actual malice, Trump’s must prove the Journal knowingly published a false statement that harmed his reputation, or published the statement with a reckless disregard for the truth. The article never said that Trump personally crafted the letter to Epstein—just that a bawdy letter “bearing Trump’s name” appeared in the birthday book, a fact that was confirmed when Congress released a letter from the Epstein estate that was identical to the one published by the Journal, the filing argues. The letter shows an imagined conversation between Trump and Epstein framed by a doodle of a nude woman or girl, with Trump’s infamous Sharpie signature appearing where the pubic hair would be. The filing also notes that the article reported on Trump’s “well-documented relationship with Epstein” and the fact that the two men were socializing around the time the book was compiled, as evidenced by Trump’s own 2002 interview with New York magazine in which he said he’d known Epstein for 15 years and considered him a “terrific guy.” And the amended complaint “re-packages” allegations previously rejected by the court that the Journal did not investigate the story before publishing, and that its article included “glaring omissions”—even though most of the information that was supposedly omitted does in fact appear in the piece, along with evidence of the journalists’ investigative efforts, the filing argues. The filing stresses that the article included the president’s insistence that he later had a falling-out with Epstein and banned him from his Mar-a-Lago club prior to the disgraced financier’s 2008 guilty plea for soliciting prostitution from minors. Epstein died in 2019 in a Manhattan jail while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, with law enforcement ruling the death a suicide. Trump’s complaints argued that the Journal had failed to reach out to Maxwell, the only living person besides Trump who could verify the article’s details, or had interviewed her and “intentionally failed” to report on her comments. In fact, the article explicitly states that Maxwell—who is serving a 20-year prison sentence for her role in Epstein’s crimes—didn’t respond to a letter requesting an interview. Her attorney provided a published statement saying she was focused on her appeal. After the article appeared, Maxwell told then-Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche that she did not remember Trump submitting a letter for Epstein’s 50th birthday book. The amended complaint claimed those comments should have been included in the article—even though they were made a week after its publication. The amended complaint also claims the Journal failed to include “any denial from President Trump as to whether he signed the letter,” despite the article dedicating three paragraphs to Trump’s insistence that the letter was a “fake thing” and that, “This is not me.” Despite having “every opportunity” to plead a defamation case against the Journal, the case “remains groundless,” the filing argued. It asked for the suit to be dismissed without prejudice, meaning it can’t be amended, and to be awarded attorneys’ fees and costs under Florida’s anti-SLAPP laws protecting against frivolous lawsuits aimed at suppressing constitutional free speech on a public issue. A spokesperson for Trump’s legal team told the Daily Beast in a statement: “President Trump has filed a powerhouse lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal and all of the other Defendants. The President will continue to hold those who mislead the American People with Fake News and smears accountable for their actions.” https://www.thedailybeast.com/donald-trump-hit-with-blistering-filing-in-wall-street-journal-epstein-birthday-card-lawsuit/?
  26. Trump, 79, Sets Alarming Medical Record as Health Concerns Mount A top doctor called the revelation “extraordinary.” Records-obsessed Donald Trump has a new one to add to the list, but it’s not so flattering. The president, who turns 80 on Sunday, spent three hours at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, on May 26. He emerged after being pricked and prodded by some 22 specialists, an apparent record. A Washington Post analysis of public statements by the president’s personal medical team found that was nearly double the number of physicians involved in his last physical. Last year’s check-up saw him examined by a comparatively meager 14 doctors. The figure of 22 is also the highest number of specialists present at a single examination of a president, the Post reported. Another record for Trump. “It is an extraordinary number,” said Jonathan Reiner, who served as cardiologist for Dick Cheney, the late vice president, and keeps a watchful eye on Trump’s health on CNN. “What specialties do they represent? Why so many?” The White House replied to the Post’s findings by declaring, “The involvement of multiple specialists reflects a comprehensive, multidisciplinary evaluation consistent with best practices for executive-level medical care.” “We have nothing to hide,” a White House official added. But it was Reiner who sounded the alarm before the check-up at Walter Reed, Trump’s fourth medical evaluation of his second term. “This White House just doesn’t seem to want to acknowledge any physical ailment, but older people develop medical issues, and the president is almost 80 years old,” he told The Washington Post the day before the visit. “There just seems to be a lack of candor from the White House.” Indeed, after the check-up, Trump crowed that he was in “perfect” health. “Just finished my 6 month physical at Walter Reed Military Medical Center,” Trump wrote on Truth Social that afternoon. “Everything checked out PERFECTLY. Thank you to the great Doctors and Staff! Heading back to the White House.” His personal physician, U.S. Navy Captain Sean Barbabella, said Trump “remains in excellent health, demonstrating strong cardiac, pulmonary, neurological, and overall physical function.” Notably, Trump called the trip his “6 month physical,” while Barbarella described it on official documents as his “annual physical examination.” The optics don’t match the brags. Trump has a seemingly permanent bruise on the back of his right hand. The White House blamed it on excessive hand-shaking, then one emerged on his other hand. He has a litany of other issues, too. He often displays a wonky walk, skin issues, leg-dragging, cankles, a propensity for anger, and impromptu naps, and his freewheeling, often seemingly nonsensical rants don’t paint a picture of the “perfect” health that he and the White House claim. An April poll conducted by Washington Post/ABC News/Ipsos found that fewer than half of U.S. adults believe Trump has the mental sharpness or physical health to serve effectively as president. “I think concern for the president’s physical health is probably at an all-time high, and I think advanced physical age is the No. 1 concern,” said Dr. Jeffrey Kuhlman, who served as a White House physician for more than a decade under Presidents Barack Obama, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton. The White House insisted to the Daily Beast that the aging president remains in “excellent health.” “President Trump’s sharpness, unmatched energy, and historic accessibility stand in stark contrast to what we saw during the last administration when Democrats and the legacy media intentionally covered up Joe Biden’s serious mental and physical decline from the American people,” spokesman Davis Ingle said. “President Trump is the sharpest and most accessible president in American history who is working nonstop to solve problems and deliver on his promises, and he remains in excellent health.” https://www.thedailybeast.com/trump-79-sets-alarming-medical-record-as-health-concerns-mount/?
  27. phkrause

    Recalls

    Honda recalls more than 880,000 cars due to a problem with rear suspension components Honda is recalling more than 800,000 vehicles because rear suspension components may fail and cause drivers to lose control, increasing the chances of a crash or injury. https://apnews.com/article/honda-acura-recall-safety-nhtsa-b435e89c8961bc3874652b8a6402f2ca?
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