Biden refuses for 5th day to discuss ‘benign’ UFOs shootdown

WASHINGTON — President Biden went a fifth consecutive day Wednesday without discussing his unprecedented decision to order the shootdown of three unidentified objects over North American airspace — one day after his official flack praised him as “the best communicator that we have in the White House.”

Biden, 80, took no reporter questions Wednesday and didn’t mention the incidents while speaking at his only public event of the day, in which he delivered well-worn spin on the economy to Maryland union members.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre also didn’t hold a briefing or gaggle Wednesday — after Biden’s avoidance of questions on the shootdowns was the main topic of her briefing Tuesday.

“We are sharing as much information as we can, as — as possible,” Jean-Pierre said at one point. “And — but we do want to make sure that the Americans — American people understand that there’s no need to panic. The President took this action, as I mentioned earlier, because the objects were indeed flying at low — lower elevation and they were in civilian airspace. And we wanted to make sure that we protected that airspace. But, again, you know, we want to also make sure that the Americans are not — do not panic during this time.”


Joe Biden refused to speak about his shootdowns of benign UFOs for the fifth day.
AFP via Getty Images

Biden, who declined to sit for a traditional Super Bowl interview with Fox News, hasn’t said anything about scrambling fighter jets to shoot down likely innocuous objects since Friday, when he said the takedown of an object near Alaska’s coast “was a success.”

Biden ordered additional shootdowns of objects Saturday over Canada’s Yukon territory and Sunday over Lake Huron — with an initial $450,000 missile missing the latter target, requiring a second shot.

White House spokespeople didn’t respond Wednesday to The Post’s request for comment on Biden’s silence.

Critics question whether Biden ordered the spate of missions as an overreaction after being stung by criticism of his decision to allow a Chinese spy balloon to hover over sensitive US facilities from Alaska to South Carolina before ordering its downing off the Atlantic coast on Feb. 4.

Authorities in the US and Canada haven’t found any debris from the three other objects.

Biden, whose family has extensive business interests in China, barely mentioned the spy balloon incident at all during his Feb. 7 State of the Union address to Congress — despite blanket coverage of the incident by news outlets. Much of that balloon’s debris has since been recovered by the US military.


Balloon struck by missile.
Biden took no reporter questions and didn’t mention the incidents at his only public event of the day.
AP

Although Biden has not recently addressed the balloon or the UFOs, Vice President Kamala Harris said in an interview published Wednesday by Politico that the spy balloon shouldn’t have negative effects on the diplomatic relationship with China. “I don’t think so, no,” Harris said.

Legislators from both parties, including senators who received a classified briefing Tuesday, are calling on Biden to address the public after the bizarre incidents

“I think the public needs and deserves to know more. A lot of what we’ve been told are facts that the American people could know and should know, without any harm to our national security,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said after the briefing. “I’ve urged repeatedly that on this topic and others, the administration could be more forthcoming.”

“My phone is ringing off the wall and we got a president of the United States who is not saying anything,” agreed Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.). “Get out there and tell the people we’re in good shape, we know what’s going on and let’s go on with our lives. But for some reason we have no leadership right now.”


Karine Jean-Pierre said that Biden had no reason to be embarrassed about the shootdowns.
Getty Images

New York Times reporter Michael Shear pointedly asked Jean-Pierre on Tuesday if Biden was “embarrassed” about the likelihood that he ordered the military to down innocuous objects — after the press secretary conceded that “the intelligence community is considering as a leading explanation that these could be tied to commercial or research entities and benign.”

“The National Weather Service website says that weather balloons are released around the world at 900 locations twice a day every single day of the year, including 92 released by the National Weather Service in the US, that they fly for at least two hours a day, drift as far as 125 miles… and rise up to 100,000 feet above the ground,” Shear noted.

“If it turns out, as it looks like, that the president and [Canadian Prime Minister Justin] Trudeau sent top gun fighters to blow weather balloons out of the sky, does the president regret that and is he embarrassed by that?”

Jean-Pierre attempted to side-step the question, with Shear pressing her: “Is the president embarrassed by that — the idea that he would take hundreds of thousands of dollars of equipment —”

“I don’t think the president should be embarrassed, right, by the fact that he took action to make sure that our our airspace — civilian airspace was safe,” Jean-Pierre finally said.

Near the end of the briefing, the press secretary was asked if the White House felt Biden was more or less adept in certain settings, such as set-piece addresses or press conferences.

“I will tell you this,” Jean-Pierre responded. “The president is the best communicator that we have in the White House.”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Forget classified docs, show us the real haul of Biden’s records in Delaware

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre has repeatedly assured the public that President Biden is committed in the classified-document scandal to move forward in “a very transparent way.” Putting aside the refusal to share any information beyond a desire to be fully transparent, Biden has one major test awaiting him on his pledge: his senatorial records.

There has been much discussion of a classified document being found in his personal library in Wilmington, but there is a huge library of Biden documents sitting in the University of Delaware. The university is sitting on Biden documents due to a cynical 2012 arrangement made by Biden when he was vice president and contemplating a run for the presidency.

The president effectively locked away his records by giving them to the university, which has claimed for a decade that it is still working to organize and catalog the documents. He has refused to allow the public or the press to see the documents. With the recent reports that Biden may have included classified information in notebooks found at his residence, the status of the University of Delaware documents is becoming more and more untenable for the White House.

University ‘lockbox’

The University of Delaware has been used for years to shield potentially embarrassing documents from public review for the Biden family, including allegations that the president engaged in sexual harassment or assault as a member of the Senate. The university effectively agreed to serve as a type of lock box for the Bidens to prevent a review of his senatorial records as he ran for higher office.


The University of Delaware has been used for years to store documents from the public regarding the Biden family.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

At great public cost, the university has fought efforts by the media and the public to allow access to the documents. It is a troubling position for any institution of higher education to fight access to historical materials . . . for years.

Now, however, there is growing concern that the files may not only include incriminating information on past sexual-assault allegations but actual classified information. There is already confirmation that Biden removed classified information from the Senate more than 14 years ago. It now appears he also may have transferred classified information from briefings and documents to his notebooks. That raises the question of whether such information is contained in the notebooks and papers housed at the university.

If President Biden is ready to embrace transparency, he can start by finally dropping his opposition to any review of his senatorial documents. At a minimum, the FBI should request access to determine if his violation of classified rules extends to this mountain of material given to the university.

No way to secure files

For decades, I have written and testified on why public servants should not be able to claim records from public service. This work includes a work on presidential papers published by Cornell in 2003 where I traced the flawed arguments of public servants that such documents are entirely their property.


The university has Biden documents from a 2012 arrangement he made when he was vice president and contemplating a run for the presidency.
Getty Images/ Alex Wong

Biden is the poster boy for how the claim of private ownership can run against principles of good government and the public interest. Biden became hugely wealthy while in public service as did his family. The Bidens have long been accused of open influence peddling to garner millions of dollars and choice jobs or contracts for family members. These documents could shed light on that corrupt history.

More importantly, the university is now actively involved in stopping inquiries into whether Biden may have assaulted a staff member or engaged in a pattern of sexual harassment of female staffers. It could also be shielding classified information from being located.

The “very transparent way” should also extend to other matters of great public interest. Even if Biden is not willing to give the public and press general access to these records, he should be willing to allow an independent third party to remove any documents related to matters of great public interest, including allegations of sexual misconduct and influence peddling.


White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre says the president will continue being transparent with the document scandal.
Chris Kleponis – Pool via CNP / MEGA

Biden has yet to come up with a plausible reason why he is using the University of Delaware to prevent review of the documents. Indeed, the University of Delaware continues to expend public funds by making technical arguments against access while ignoring questions about the use of an academic institution to shield potentially embarrassing records.

Of course, the FBI does not need permission. They have ample reason to demand access in light of the president’s serial violations. Indeed, past discoveries form a perfect overlaid map of where the president has lived or worked in the past decade. Yet although there is new interest in searching his other residence, there has been little discussion of the largest trove of documents sitting in the bowels of the University of Delaware.

Presumably, this is one question that Jean-Pierre could actually answer. If the president is truly striving to be “very transparent,” he should be able to tell the University of Delaware that his records should be open to outside review. Otherwise, Biden’s pledge is being nothing but transparently dishonest.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

El Paso’s migrant state of emergency a taste of what nation faces as Biden shrugs at border crisis

Oscar Leeser, the Democratic mayor of El Paso, has bent over backward not to “embarrass” the head of his party, President Joe Biden. 

As migrants poured across the border, unmetered and unvetted, he quietly grappled with the strain on the city’s resources. He provided the shelter and food the federal government wouldn’t. He struck private deals with Mayor Eric Adams to alleviate the crush, busing some people to New York. 

Even as the City Council begged him to point out what was happening, he refused. He insisted he’d been told by the Biden administration that if he was patient, they would help. This went on for months.

On Saturday, Leeser’s patience finally broke.

He declared a state of emergency, admitting what had been obvious for nearly two years: The border is out of control, and President Biden isn’t doing anything about it.

Actually, it’s even worse than that. Biden actively has punished Democrats like Leeser and Adams, giving them hardly any aid, refusing to acknowledge what’s happening, deflecting any blame. In other words, he gaslighted them. An astounding 53,000 people crossed the border into El Paso in October alone. Asked if he would visit the border, Biden said “there are more important things going on.” 

Adams reached his breaking point a week before Leeser, imploring, “No one has helped us. No one. We have not gotten a dime from anyone. That has to stop. We need help.”

Migrants crossing the Rio Grande river into El Paso from Mexico on December 18, 2022.
James Keivom for New York Post

Leeser: “We have hundreds and hundreds on the street and that’s not the way we treat our people.”

Meanwhile, White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre said on Thursday: “What Americans should know is that the president has done the work to deal with what we’re seeing at the border since day one” — a complete and total lie.

She threw in a few weak jabs at the usual suspects — ex-President Donald Trump, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — which no one is buying. How can Republicans be to blame for a border that Biden has controlled for two years? Biden JUST. DOESN’T. CARE.

In two days the health directive used to turn back some border-crossers, Title 42, will lapse. In El Paso, it’s expected that 6,000 will cross per day, double what it has been. Biden will be in Delaware, reminiscing about the time he invented Christmas and his uncle won the Nobel Peace Prize. And nothing will be done to actually enforce our immigration laws. The taxpayers of El Paso and New York City will shoulder a burden for which no one voted. 

Oscar Leeser has declared a state of emergency for his city. Who will declare one for the nation?

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version