AS if we need it, this is confirmation NOT MY pres drumpf / trump is a no class ass. From Politico Europe.....
White House posts AI image of Trump as pope

The White House on Saturday posted an AI-generated image of U.S. President Donald Trump depicted as the leader of the Catholic Church, a couple of days after he jokingly said “I’d like to be pope.”
The picture, which was first posted by Trump on his social media network Truth Social and later shared by the White House on X, depicts Trump in papal attire with a large crucifix hanging around his neck, while sitting on the coronation chair and pointing with his index finger.
The Catholic Church is currently searching for a new spiritual leader after the death of Pope Francis earlier this month, with cardinals set to enter the Sistine Chapel on May 7 to begin the process of electing the next pontiff.
Trump attended the funeral of Pope Francis in Rome last week, in what was his first foreign trip during his second term as U.S. president.
Francis has often been painted as Trump’s ultimate foil — a man with immense power who adopted the posture of a humble servant, lived simply and embraced the most marginalized members of society. But alt right groups are attempting a takeover of the conclave charged with deciding on the next pope.
When asked who should succeed Francis, Trump told a reporter on Tuesday: “I have no preference,” after joking that “I’d like to be pope.” Trump said he himself would be his “number one choice.” He then added: “I must say, we have a cardinal that happens to be out of a place called New York who’s very good.”
The AI-generated picture has been met with some amusement as well as criticism, with a large swath of social media users seeing it as a clear insult to the just-deceased pontiff.
“I love Trump but find his Pope meme disrespectful and insulting,” a user named Oklahoma Gamgee, wrote in a reaction on X. “God will not be mocked. Not a wise decision.”
Catholic leaders recoil from Trump’s pope post
“It’s sad both for the White House and for the president,” one cardinal said. “I mean, he makes themselves ridiculous, right?”
“This is an image that offends believers, insults institutions and shows that the leader of the global right enjoys being a clown,” former Italian prime minister Matteo Renzi wrote in a social media post Saturday.
The pope is the spiritual leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics. The image, shared late Friday by both Trump and the White House, drew quick condemnation.
“There is nothing clever or funny about this image, Mr. President,” the New York State Catholic Conference said in a social media post. “We just buried our beloved Pope Francis and the cardinals are about to enter a solemn conclave to elect a new successor of St. Peter. Do not mock us.”
The conference is the public policy voice of the state’s Catholic bishops, who include Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, who has long been friendly with Trump and delivered a prayer at his second inauguration.
“I hope he didn’t have anything to do with that,” Dolan said Sunday before celebrating Mass in Rome, according to the Catholic News Service. “It wasn’t good. The Italians say, ‘brutta figura,’” meaning it makes a “bad impression.”
“The Bible tells us, ‘Make no mistake: God is not mocked’ (Galatians 6:7),” wrote the Rev. Thomas Paprocki, the bishop of Springfield, Illinois. “The Pope is the Vicar of Christ. By publishing a picture of himself masquerading as the Pope, President Trump mocks God, the Catholic Church, and the Papacy....”
Not all Catholics agreed; among some, Trump is more popular than was Francis. New York Post columnist Charles Gasparino said he didn’t find the post offensive.
“Guaranteed most Catholics would say ‘No,’” he wrote on social media. “In fact they (we) probably respect Trump more than the socialist Pope.”
Trump and his supporters continue to rewrite norms in religious morality.
At his direction, high-level Cabinet members met last month to discuss rooting out “anti-Christian bias” in the federal government. The plan has sparked concerns among some members of Congress and religious-freedom advocates, who say it lacks evidence for its purpose.
“Everyone has the right to religious freedom, not just the select few who practice this administration’s preferred brand of Christianity,” the ACLU posted on social media.
Christians, who make up about 62 percent of the country, by far the largest faith group, are split on how Trump is doing his job, according to a new Pew Research poll: 51 percent disapprove; 48 approve. He enjoys strongest support among White evangelicals, the core of his base, at 72 percent. Fifty-eight percent of Catholics disapprove of Trump, while 42 percent approve. Support is much lower among Latino Catholics.
More than a third of Trump’s Cabinet appointees are Catholic. They include Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Vance, asked by anti-Trump conservative writer Bill Kristol about the post on social media, deflected.
“As a general rule, I’m fine with people telling jokes and not fine with people starting stupid wars that kill thousands of my countrymen.” Kristol advocated for the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.
Some Church officials didn’t engage. The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops declined to comment Sunday. Asked about the Trump image during a Saturday news conference, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni twice refused comment. He politely, albeit awkwardly, smiled it away.
Kathleen Sprows Cummings, a historian of U.S. Catholicism at Notre Dame, said Trump’s post reflects the support and trust that Trump enjoys among millions of Catholics.
“It makes sense in Trumpworld. He has been empowered by Catholics,” she said. “This might be new levels of audacity and disrespect, but many American Catholics have ceded a great deal of power and moral authority to the current president. Whether that makes sense to others, it’s true.”
She noted that the post came at a time of uncertainty in the Church, with the seat of the pope vacant and some U.S. Catholics critical of Francis for his emphasis on mercy.
“So they trust Trump more than the pope. It’s mind-boggling but part of the reality.”
Cummings said the post marks the dramatic shift in U.S. history from a time just a half-century ago, when Catholic politicians had to emphasize that they would be loyal first to the United States, not the pope.
“It’s almost absurdist to get to this point so quickly,” she said. “Now [some Catholics] are insanely loyal to the president to the point that they think this is a great idea despite the clear disrespect.”
Italian social critic Marco Belpoliti, writing in La Repubblica, said, “We must recognize [that] the American President [has a] pathological megalomania, a form of innocence that goes beyond all the rules, conventions, and the necessary grace that the office he holds would require of him.”
Italian senator Enrico Borghi suggested an ulterior motive on Sky News: “That photo montage not only offends millions of faithful, but is also an attempt at very serious interference in the conclave that is about to open.”

Michelle Boorstein has been a religion reporter since 2006. She has covered the shifting blend of religion and politics under four U.S. presidents, chronicled the rise of secularism in the United States, and broken financial and sexual scandals from the synagogue down the street to the Mormon Church in Utah to the Vatican.

Anthony Faiola is Rome Bureau Chief for The Washington Post. Since joining the paper in 1994, he has served as bureau chief in Miami, Berlin, London, Tokyo, Buenos Aires and New York and additionally worked as roving correspondent at large.
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