Typical Trump

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dales
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Typical Trump

Post by dales »



WASHINGTON — An hour before Dr. Anthony Fauci threw the first pitch at the season opener between the New York Yankees and the Washington Nationals, President Donald Trump stood on the briefing room stage at the White House and declared that he, too, had been invited to throw out his own opening pitch.

“Randy Levine is a great friend of mine from the Yankees,” Trump, referring to the president of the baseball team, told reporters Thursday as Fauci was preparing to take the mound. “And he asked me to throw out the first pitch, and I think I’m doing that on Aug. 15 at Yankee Stadium.”


There was one problem: Trump had not actually been invited on that day by the Yankees, according to one person with knowledge of Trump’s schedule. His announcement surprised both Yankees officials and the White House staff.


But Trump had been so annoyed by Fauci’s turn in the limelight, an official familiar with his reaction said, that he had directed his aides to call Yankees officials and make good on a longtime standing offer from Levine to throw out an opening pitch. But no date was ever finalized.

After the president’s announcement, White House aides scrambled to let the team know that he was actually booked on Aug. 15, although they have not said what he plans to do. Over the weekend, Trump officially canceled.

“Because of my strong focus on the China Virus, including scheduled meetings on Vaccines, our economy and much else, I won’t be able to be in New York to throw out the opening pitch for the @Yankees on August 15,” Trump wrote on Twitter on Sunday, using a racist name for the coronavirus. “We will make it later in the season!”

And so continues the tense relationship between Trump, a president who hates sharing media attention, and Fauci, a renowned infectious disease expert who does not mind the spotlight. He appeared this month in a spread in InStyle magazine, lounging (fully clothed) poolside.

To be sure, there are bigger problems on either man’s plate: Trump is struggling to explain his administration’s missteps on a pandemic that has killed more than 140,000 Americans. Fauci is trying to assert himself as a public health-minded voice of an administration that seems to have little interest in science and sometimes even less interest in him.


Both men are baseball fans. Trump grew up playing the sport, and Fauci, with his Washington Nationals-themed coronavirus mask, has nearly reached alternate mascot status. Both are ostensibly too busy to be bogged down with baseball rivalries, but this is not the first time Trump has made such a request to fend off a potential upstaging.

In April, the day before Vice President Mike Pence was to speak at the Air Force commencement ceremony in Colorado, Trump suddenly announced that he would be speaking at West Point. That was news to officials at West Point.

Last week, Fauci was determined to come to the Nationals mound prepared. Growing up in Brooklyn, he played shortstop on a local Catholic youth team. Days before the pitch Thursday, he went to Horace Mann, an elementary school in northwest Washington, to rehearse on the lawn.

“I pitched and pitched,” he said in an interview Monday. “I threw my arm out. I hadn’t thrown a baseball literally in decades. After I practiced, my arm was hanging around my feet.”

But he said he made a fatal error. Without a baseball field at the school to practice on, he had to measure 60 feet — the distance from a Major-League mound to home plate — himself, and accidentally came up about 20 feet short.

Once Fauci arrived on the mound at Nationals Park, he realized the vast expanse, and his visit went south. He cocked his arm back only slightly, crooked, and flung the ball diagonally into the grass, far from Sean Doolittle, the Nationals player assigned to catch the pitch.

“He looked to me like he was like 500 feet away. That made me throw it much harder than I had been practicing,” Fauci said. “I completely miscalculated the distance from the mound.”

Fauci said his invitation from the Nationals came weeks ago as a thank you from Ted Lerner’s family, which owns the team, after he advised them and club officials on the correct protocols for coronavirus testing and staying safe while playing.

Fauci’s broadcast appearances are generally controlled by the White House, but the appearance at Nationals Park did not have to go through the usual clearance process at the National Institutes of Health, which takes in his other news media and event requests.

Asked whether he had advice if Trump were able to confirm a date with the Yankees, Fauci said the president should be sure to “throw high” and with “a big loft.”

“The worst thing to do is bounce it like I did,” he said.

Off the baseball field, Fauci’s star turn has not gone over as well in the White House.

In past weeks, he has questioned senior administration officials about the effort to curb his television appearances and criticized other officials who have made disparaging remarks about him.

“I think they realize now that that was not a prudent thing to do, because it’s only reflecting negatively on them,” Fauci said this month of White House aides, including Peter Navarro, Trump’s trade adviser, who wrote an op-ed questioning Fauci’s credibility.


As the prominence of the coronavirus task force faded in recent weeks, Fauci was left out of a new group of White House officials that meets on the virus, led by Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, and Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the coronavirus response coordinator.

Your collective inability to acknowledge this obvious truth makes you all look like fools.


yrs,
rubato

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Econoline
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Re: Typical Trump

Post by Econoline »

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People who are wrong are just as sure they're right as people who are right. The only difference is, they're wrong.
God @The Tweet of God

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Long Run
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Re: Typical Trump

Post by Long Run »

Isn't the main reason Trump has not done the first pitch ritual because he knows there will be substantial boos? I'm pretty sure many teams would feel obligated to invite him (and maybe did), but both their interests are served by having Trump be too "busy" to make it.

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BoSoxGal
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Re: Typical Trump

Post by BoSoxGal »

There is a quote somewhere I just saw recently of him saying he doesn’t want to do it because he would need to wear a vest and it would make him look too heavy.

Here’s the quote - from last October:
Donald Trump said Thursday that he plans to attend Sunday's World Series game between the Washington Nationals and the Houston Astros, but shrugged off the idea of throwing out the ceremonial 'first pitch' before the contest starts because it would require a bullet-proof vest.

'I don’t know,' he mused during an Oval Office ceremony. 'They got to dress me up in a lot of heavy armor. I'll look too heavy. I don't like that.'
I think it’s partly he’s vain about how he’d look, but mostly he’s scared he’ll throw a shitty pitch and whether or not he does, he doesn’t want to get booed.
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring.
~ Carl Sagan

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Joe Guy
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Re: Typical Trump

Post by Joe Guy »

Trump shouldn't be concerned. His blubber would probably stop a bullet.

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Bicycle Bill
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Re: Typical Trump

Post by Bicycle Bill »

Joe Guy wrote:
Wed Jul 29, 2020 12:31 am
Trump shouldn't be concerned. His blubber would probably stop a bullet.
I volunteer to be the guy at the trigger when the time comes to test that theory!
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-"BB"-
Yes, I suppose I could agree with you ... but then we'd both be wrong, wouldn't we?

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