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President Donald Trump had lunch with National Rifle Association leaders Wayne LaPierre and Chris Cox over the weekend, he said Monday.The President also said state governors should not be "afraid" of the NRA's lobbying power.The lunch was announced by the President during a meeting with governors at the White House Monday morning. The White House did not previously announce the meeting or provide a readout.Trump defended the NRA, saying the gun-rights group wants to act."There's no bigger fan of the 2nd Amendment than me and there's no bigger fan of the NRA, and these guys are great patriots they're great people, and they want to do something," the President said."They're going to do something -- and they're going to do it, I think, quickly -- I think they want to see it," he added.Trump told the governors not to be afraid of the NRA, but also said it was OK to fight them every once in a while."Don't worry about the NRA, they're on our side," Trump said. "Half of you are so afraid of the NRA, there's nothing to be afraid of.""And you know what, if they're not with you, we have to fight them every once in a while. That's OK. They're doing what they think is right," he added.Cox is the executive director of the NRA's lobbying arm, the NRA Institute for Legislative Action. LaPierre is the NRA's CEO. Trump said he also met with David Lehman of the NRA-ILA. 1389
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — An Oregon man who was rescued after five days stuck in deep snow with his dog is deeply grateful to his rescuers and embarrassed to have caused so much trouble, his aunt told The Associated Press on Monday.Jeremy Taylor's 4-wheel-drive vehicle got stuck Feb. 24 in snow on a U.S. Forest Service road as he headed to do some off-road driving in the wilderness outside the central Oregon city of Bend.As night fell, Taylor, 36, decided to sleep in his car with his Australian shepherd, Ally, and hike out the next day, his aunt, Denise Tremaine said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.Taylor fashioned some snowshoes from pieces of the roof rack he uses for his kayak and started off on Feb. 25. But after a mile (1.6 kilometers), Taylor had to turn around because the dog was sinking in the deep snow and could not continue.Taylor carried Ally back to the car and the two hunkered down there, sharing a sleeping bag to keep warm. Taylor had a full tank of gas and was able to blast the heat briefly when it got unbearably cold and ate a few packets of taco sauce he had with him, she said.He and the dog drank melted ice, but she said she does not think Taylor fed the dog hot sauce."That's his world right there, that dog. She goes everywhere with him," Tremaine said of the dog. "He would never, ever leave that dog in the car."Eventually, Tremaine said, heavy snow from more snowstorms made it impossible for Taylor to open his vehicle's door.At one point, he saw an airplane overhead and raced to push the snow off the car's roof so rescuers might see him, but it did not work. He did not have a cellphone with him or any emergency supplies, she added."He didn't take the provisions he should have. I gave him a little of that talk and I'm just glad he's alive, because I think there was a point there when he didn't think he was going to make it," she said.What Taylor did not know is that by Feb. 27, his friends had realized that the self-employed building contractor was missing. He had not shown up to work and no one had heard from him, so friends reported him missing.Search and rescue crews combed the forests outside Bend by snowmobile, airplane and drone and as word spread on social media, friends and acquaintances searched on their own using snowmobiles.On Friday afternoon, a snowmobiler found Taylor and he and his dog were brought out of the woods on a snowcat, a type of snow tractor, and they were reunited with family and friends.He returned home to find his roof was damaged from heavy snow and his water pipes were frozen, Tremaine said.On Monday, he headed back to work and ignored interview requests from TV bookers and messages to talk with public relations representatives for Taco Bell, among others, she said. He did not respond to a Facebook message from the AP seeking comment."Jeremy is very, very quiet and he doesn't want the limelight. He is just incredibly sorry and slightly embarrassed that so many people were out looking for him," Tremaine said.Over the years, many people have gotten stranded on Oregon's snowbound rural roads — and the outcome isn't always so good.In 2000, a 29-year-old man was discovered by snowmobilers clinging to life in his car, which was completely buried by snow in the Deschutes National Forest near Bend. Thomas Wade Truett had been stuck for 16 days in five feet (1.5 meters) of snow, surviving on orange juice and almond M&Ms. He had written a goodbye letter to his parents.Six years later, a family of four headed home to San Francisco from a Thanksgiving trip to Seattle and Portland missed a turn and wound up stranded for a week on a logging road after trying to take a short cut over a mountain range.The husband, James Kim, tried to hike for help and died after walking 20 miles (32 kilometers) in freezing temperatures. His wife and two young daughters were found alive in the car after a nine-day ordeal.A Montana man starved to death in 1994 after getting stuck on the same road in winter. 4020

Pope Francis has declared that the death penalty is never admissible and that the Catholic Church will work towards its abolition around the world, the Vatican formally announced Thursday.The change, which has been added to the Catechism of the Catholic Church, makes official a position that the Pope has articulated since he became pontiff.The Church now teaches that "the death penalty is inadmissible because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person" and states that it will "work with determination towards its abolition worldwide," the Vatican said.The Catholic Church's teaching on the death penalty has been slowly evolving since the time of Pope John Paul II, who served from 1978 to 2005.In his Christmas message in 1998, he wished "the world the consensus concerning the need for urgent and adequate measures ... to end the death penalty."His successor Benedict XVI, in a document published in November 2011, called on society's leaders "to make every effort to eliminate the death penalty."Francis then wrote in a letter to the President of the International Commission Against the Death Penalty in March 2015 that "today capital punishment is unacceptable, however serious the condemned's crime may have been."He added that the death penalty "entails cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment" and said it was to be rejected "due to the defective selectivity of the criminal justice system and in the face of the possibility of judicial error."Vatican spokesman Greg Burke told CNN that the change was important but should not come as a surprise."It was expected for a long time starting with John Paul II," he said. "He had a document, the Gospel of Life, in which he said it is essentially the conditions with which were once considered okay for allowing the death penalty, have basically disappeared."The key point here is really human dignity, the Pope is saying that no matter how grievous the crime, someone never loses his or her human dignity. One of the rationales for the death penalty in Catholic teachings historically was to protect society."Obviously, the state still has that obligation, that is not being taken away here, but they can do that in other ways." 2215
POWAY, Calif. (KGTV) — The former Stoneridge Country Club in Poway is finally about to get cleaned up.It appears voters have approved new housing on the land, which has turned into a beat-up, overgrown mess.But that's not what Kevin McNamara, managing partner of The Farm in Poway, sees."I think the plan is beautiful. It's going to be a great place to live. It will be a great addition to North Poway," McNamara said.McNamara is celebrating the apparent passage of Measure P, which approves changing the zoning on the old golf course to allow for more housing.The current owner of the land, Michael Schlesinger of Beverly Hills, also wanted to build homes at Stoneridge. But voters defeated his plan in 2017. The next day, Schlesinger shut down the long-running club.McNamara thought he could come up with a better plan, and he thought he knew how to get Poway voters on board. He negotiated an option with Schlesinger to buy the land if voters said yes.He put the whole plan together before getting the concept on the ballot."They thought I was nuts because it's a million dollars. This was a big bet," McNamara said.He called his gamble The Farm in Poway. He first showed ABC 10News the plan in 2018: 160 homes, along with features like community gardens, trails, a club, and a butterfly farm.McNamara spent nearly two years meeting with every Poway resident he could to convince them it was the right use of the land."I thought it would be real close. I was confident, but I thought it would be close. I had no idea it would be a total blowout," said McNamara.Now, he says, it's time to go to work. And the first step is keeping a promise he made to the neighbors."Next Thursday, we start the cleanup. We're going to mow it, the whole place. We're going to clean out all the dead shrubs, the broken trees. We're going to do a real thorough cleanup," McNamara said.He expects to officially take over the property next spring and have the first homes ready for families to move in by the end of 2022. 2010
POTRERO, Calif. (KGTV) – A man died after saving his son when the boat they were on capsized, according to San Diego County sheriff’s officials.The incident happened at around 9:30 p.m. Wednesday off Saxon Road in Potrero, officials said.10News learned a man and his 11-year-old son were on a boat looking for frogs when the vessel capsized, sending them into the water.The man was able to save his son by putting him back into the boat, but officials said the man drowned.Officials said the man was pronounced dead at the scene. 537
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