Showing posts with label Vandals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vandals. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2025

CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 105th Edition. What's up with the rush on the White House?

It occurs to me that something is really odd about Trump rushing to start his vandalization project on the White House, and then expanding it to destroy the entire East Wing. . . . it's almost like he fears not being around to enjoy it.


Maybe he knows he's not going to be.

Maybe he fears that if he's not around the ugly garden shed won't be built.

Maybe he fears that's going to be so soon, he had to actually take steps that try to force its completion.

Why would that be?

Maybe Trump knows that he's on death's door, or maybe its something else.  Let's look at the possibilities.

Trump knows he's not long for the world.

There's been some speculation on this for other reasons.  

One could say he's acting weird, but he acted weird in his first term too.  He's been acting extra weird.  He's been talking a fair amount and expressing fears that he's going to Hell.  And well he should fear it.  For one thing:

Now someone approached him and said, “Teacher, what good must I do to gain eternal life?” 
He answered him, “Why do you ask me about the good? There is only One who is good.* If you wish to enter into life, keep the commandments.
He asked him, “Which ones?” And Jesus replied, “ ‘You shall not kill; you shall not commit adultery; you shall not steal; you shall not bear false witness; honor your father and your mother’; and ‘you shall love your neighbor as yourself.’” 
The young man said to him, “All of these I have observed. What do I still lack? 
Jesus said to him, “If you wish to be perfect, go, sell what you have and give to [the] poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come, follow me. 
When the young man heard this statement, he went away sad, for he had many possessions. 
Then Jesus said to his disciples, “Amen, I say to you, it will be hard for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of heaven. 
Again I say to you, it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for one who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.” 
When the disciples heard this, they were greatly astonished and said, “Who then can be saved?” 
Jesus looked at them and said, “For human beings this is impossible, but for God all things are possible.”

Based on the difficulty that implies, and it is not intended to be metaphorical, Trump should fear Hell.  He's been far from perfect.  He's a serial polygamist for one thing, and genuinely a bad person.  It appears to some extent he's trying to buy his way into Heaven with the thought that if he can secure peace in some war somewhere God will credit that and allow him to otherwise get a pass on his sins.  He keep seeking reassurance from those around him that will work.

That obsession suggests that he knows he's running out of time.

Trump wants to be remembered for amount to something.  He knows that much of his Presidency will be regarded as a fart in a windstorm.  So he's building his own monumental mausoleum, maybe.

And in doing so, time is short.  Either he'll be out of office in three years, and this is a project that for American construction would take longer than that, or he'll die before its built  He well knows that if a Democrat comes into office after him, under the original plan, no ballroom would be built.  He's taking steps, by destroying the entire wing, to make sure it has to be.

But even that won't.  It'll just assure that something has to be done.  

Trump knows that there's next to no chance of getting this monstrosity done in time.

I touched on that above, but there's every chance in the world that Trump leaves office, either at the expiration of his term, or being lead out while babbling in full dementia, and this project stops.  As he departs his last glimpse of the ballroom will be of a construction project with workmen likely picking up debris.

There's a good chance that the week thereafter the construction company has cleared out and the trackhoe is back with the same operator demolishing this worthless monument.

It's a natural instinct in most people to complete a project.

And it's a natural instinct to keep and use something, once it's built. . . except for Americans.

Trump's spent a lot of time in the orbit of the high and the mighty his whole life. Since his first legitimate term in office, and now in his second illegitimate one, he's had the opportunity to see monumental public buildings that are really old, quite frankly frequently gaudy.  He's not that smart of guy and he probably doesn't realize that the regimes that built such structures aren't always admired in later years, but he probably does appreciate that things Louis XIV built, or the Czars, are still being used.

The American track record isn't quite so good.  We take down buildings all the time, including our athletic civil temples that were constructed at great expense.  We usually get around to morning them long after they're gone.

Trump probably feels that if he can get this built, particular if the East Wing gets destroyed with it, it'll have to be built, and it'll have to stay when its built.  Like Justice Kennedy, he probably naively assumes that after he's out of office, and after he's dead and gone, people will forget that he was a putz, and love him.

People aren't going to love him.  He'll be remembered as the worst human being to ever occupy the Oval Office, and the building will come down.  A future Democratic President will take it down to make a point, if not out of spite.

Trump is banking on nobody tearing it down (which I suspect is a pretty bad bet).

See above.

Another view of the hideous monstrosity.

An interesting aspect of this is the NatCon one that was circulating before this piece of shit project started to advance.  

As we've noted before, Trump's real backers are members of the Dominionist New Apostolic Reformation, but within the NatCons are Catholic and Orthodox intellectuals who have become Illiberal Democrats.  Not too surprisingly, this same group has pretty strong architectural views.

They like architect James McCrery.

Some of these folks hang out at website called Rorate Caeli, which is actually a type of Mass, but which means "drop down, ye Heavens."  They really like James McCrery, and for good reason.  Here's their post on his getting the job of being garden shed architect:

McCrery, Architects of Catholic Beauty, chosen to renovate the White House

McCrery Architects, New Carmel, Wyoming


Those familiar with the architectural work of James McCrery know he is among the greats of the 20th and 21st centuries. 

McCrery Architects, St. Mary Help of Christians, North Carolina


Based on the Senate side of Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, he has designed, restored and enhanced numerous churches, schools, homes and other buildings — all in a classical style where the average man, woman and child responds “beautiful” upon seeing his work.



Now, Jim McCrery has designed what will be his legacy for generations of Americans: a new White House ballroom. President Donald Trump announced on Thursday $200 million in private funding (including Trump’s own money) will fund a ballroom next to the east wing of the White House that can accommodate 650 guests. This is needed, as the East Room of the White House (the largest for gatherings) seats around 200 people, so the custom has been to put up tents outside when a large dinner or event is hosted.


See the designs for yourself to appreciate them.



McCrery, who is celebrating his 60th birthday, completed a restoration and enhancement of Saint Mary Mother of God church near his DC studio, where the TLM existed from the mid-1980s until its suppression three years ago. From the cathedrals in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Raleigh, North Carolina, to Corpus Christi in the Diocese of Arlington, to the Newman Center in Lincoln, Nebraska, to the Carmelite monastery in Wyoming, the churches he designed are spectacular — no easy task in an age of modern codes, budget limitations and senior officials often advocating bland over beauty. McCrery’s name is synonymous with beauty.


Rorate congratulates Jim McCrery on this achievement and looks forward to the next three years of his project’s construction. And we commend President Trump for choosing traditional architecture, and developing a great relationship with such a fine architect. Who knows what others would have chosen to dump on the White House lawn! It is a time to be thankful for the partnership of McCrery and Trump on this project that will stand tall long after all of us depart this earth.

Rorate Caeli.

This is, quite frankly, part of what upsets me.  This thing is ugly and stupid.

It'd be ugly and stupid anywhere, but it'd make more sense in some places.  In Georgian England, for example, or in 18th Century France.  If you went back, an were honest with yourself, you'd think "well. . . this is ugly and stupid, but looks like belongs here" and then you'd go on to tell everyone, "wow, that's impressive.

The top two buildings are in fact impressive.  Why did they take this assignment?

Well, . . . on this, I'll be frank that I"m not so sure about the top building.

Wyoming isn't Medieval France or pre King Henry VIII the Vandal England, and I'm not really too sure that this fits the state too well.  There's been a fair amount of murmuring about it, which is slightly embarrassing for Wyoming Catholics.  We know we don't live in Medieval France.

I guess, however, that this is religious architecture and they are free to build what they wish.

Monumental public architecture belongs to the public, however.  The public doesn't want a gigantic gilded garden shed.

Worthless Democrats


One thing this has served to do is to illustrate how completely worthless the Democratic Party is.

If this was the party of 1975, or 1985, it would have rushed out on day one and filed an action for an injunction, which would have included a request for a TRO.  They would have gotten it.

More particularly, what they would have asked for is an injunction returning the White House to the status quo ante until the architectural commission in charge of these things had a chance to consider the matter.  That would have meant that Donny would have had to stop the construction and the structure repaired, on his dime, until the body could meet and make a ruling.

Yes, that body is going to say "go ahead", but that would have burned through about $10M of the vandalization money in advance, and delayed the project by at least a year.  Mobilization costs would have gone up, and Democrats would likely be back in power.  The thing would never have been built.

Instead they sat around and did nothing.

This all points to an existential crisis within the Democratic Party.  Most Democrats are actually center left, politically, but over the last fifteen or so years the party has been captured by its hardcore left wingers that will not compromise on anything, and so the party has glaciated.  The left wingers in the Democratic Party are every bit as nutty, if not more so, than the hard right of the Republican Party.

We need new parties.

McCrery

I noted earlier that I had placed some home in the design in that James McCrery was responsible for it.

I've lost that hope.  

The more I look at it, it's just flat out gaudy and ugly.  It's interesting to note that McCrery, who was one of the people that Donny did the roof top tour with recently, has been taking some flak. 

Apparently McCrery wasn't always a classicist.  And people interviewed about him recently haven't been all that kind.  For example, Robert Livesey, who was chair of the Ohio State architecture department from 1983 to 1991 when McCrery was a student wrote recently in an email that “to be honest, I do not have a real memory of Jim. My sense was that he was a good design student which is why Eisenman hired him,  Unfortunately, his work does not have the presence of real classical architecture, or even of people who were also after the classical, like Palladio, or later Hawksmoor.”

Eisenman refers to Peter Eisenman, who was a professor at Ohio State and who took McCrery under his wing and later employed him.  Eisenman is not a classicist and has called his former underlings design "bonkers", adding "putting a portico at the end of a long facade and not in the center is what one might say is untutored.”

Pretty harsh.  In fairness, Eisenman and McCrery seem to have had a falling out some time ago, and McCrery seems to have become very identified with his Faith in regard to his architectural projects, which leads a person to wonder why he'd want to take on a giant civil structure like this.  Frankly, Eisenman's criticism seems pretty valid to me.

Rats


One potentially good thing about this is that it might make a lot of rats homeless.  Apparently the White House is full of them, in the walls.

No big surprise.

Rats being rats, however, they're probably just moving into the house itself.

What should reconstruction look like?

One thing that this brings up is what should reconstruction look like.  The White House grounds are already pretty crowded without this monstrosity. Frankly, a pretty good argument can be made that the East and West Wings detract from the original appearance of the structure.  Maybe this presents an opportunity just to take them out, although apparently that would create an office space problem.

The donors

Here's who is paying for this abomination:

Altria Group, Inc.

Amazon

Apple

Booz Allen Hamilton

Caterpillar, Inc.

Coinbase

Comcast Corporation

J. Pepe and Emilia Fanjul

Hard Rock International

Google

HP Inc.

Lockheed Martin

Meta Platforms

Micron Technology

Microsoft

NextEra Energy, Inc.

Palantir Technologies Inc.

Ripple

Reynolds American

T-Mobile

Tether America

Union Pacific Railroad

Adelson Family Foundation

Stefan E. Brodie

Betty Wold Johnson Foundation

Charles and Marissa Cascarilla

Edward and Shari Glazer

Harold Hamm

Benjamin Leon Jr.

The Lutnick Family

The Laura & Isaac Perlmutter Foundation

Stephen A. Schwarzman

Konstantin Sokolov

Kelly Loeffler and Jeff Sprecher

Paolo Tiramani

Cameron Winklevoss

Tyler Winklevoss

Some of these you know, and some of their products you use everyday.  Microsoft, for example, is pretty hard to avoid. 

Some can be easily avoided.  I'll never eat in another Hard Rock Cafe again, ever, which of course will be an easy thing for me to do.

Last edition:

CliffsNotes of the Zeitgeist, 104th Edition. Mike Johnson, toady, and other matters.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Lex Anteinternet: The Vandals.

Lex Anteinternet: The Vandals.: American democracy has several great weaknesses, the primary one being that Americans believe that we have a "two party system". W...

The direct vandalism today was done by a Washington area demolition company that's been business for over 80 years.

Not too surprisingly, nobody had really taken much note in them until today, but apparently today they received it to their surprise, in spades.

What to make of that?

Well, people are really angry.

They probably shouldn't have taken the job, but then, things shouldn't be taken out on them either. 

Genuinely surprised is Donald Trump and his administration, which is trying to downplay the entire event.

The Trump illegitimate regime is losing popularity, and this likely won't help.  Trump has always had abysmal approval ratings and its getting worse.  Still, there's a year to go until the midterm elections and the GOP is hard at work trying to gerrymander their way into surviving them.  If they don't, much of this will come go a screeching halt in January, 2027.

That's a long ways off.

When it comes, Trump needs to be held to account. Some of this appears to be illegal.  Trump today has claimed he's entitled to $230,000,000 from the DOJ for being investigated.  Here he's acting without legal authority, maybe, to the tune of $250,000,000.  He should be sued for damages.

And this monstrosity will come down.  The question is how rapidly.  It would be best if it came down following January 2027, but it's more likely that it will be at the beginning of the next President's term.  Chance are this giant garden shed won't even be all up by then.

Chances are also good that Trump will have died of old age, or be so demented by that time as to have no idea what's going on.  People hoping for Trump to suffer retribution for his actions are going to be disappointed.  He's already advancing into senility and will be quite far gone by the second half of his term, if he doesn't expire prior to that time.  

The people who will have to suffer damage to their reputations will be people like Thune, Barrasso, and Johnson.  That process is well under way.

Having been attached to this will be a stink that will not wash off for some, however. The architect in particular, who has done fine work in the past, will not look good.  Donors like Google and Lockheed are going to have a lot of explaining to do as well.  The utter corruption of the Corporate Capitalist system has been fully exposed, but that will be very hard to address.

The Vandals.

American democracy has several great weaknesses, the primary one being that Americans believe that we have a "two party system".

We don't.  We've just allowed two parties to take over and even fund their party elections, the primaries, with government funds, and tolerate the creation of bogus Congressional roles, such "Senate Majority Leader".

That needs reform desperately.

Amongst other weaknesses, however, is that Americans believe that we have a free enterprise economic system. We don't. We have corporate capitalism which allows businesses to escape the implications of their actions through the corporate business form.

Americans believe so strongly in "free enterprise" that they basically never vote with their wallets.  They'll let businesses absolutely screw them and keep supporting them.  On the rare occasions in which they actually will vote with their wallets and boycott a product it's when its something trivial and otherwise readily available, as in when sales of Bud Light dropped off over a transgender personality advertising it.

Lots of companies brew beer.

I note this as the illegitimate occupant of the White House, who has no real authority, is having the East Wing of the  White House destroyed for on oversized garden shed, aka, a ballroom.

The White House doesn't need a ballroom.  This isn't 1875.  What Donald Trump wants is something overblown and gaudy, which is his brand, so that hopefully people remember him after he departs this Earth for his final reward. It's much the same motivation that has him angling for the Nobel Peace Prize.  He's hoping to be remembered as a serious person, rather than as a real estate developer/serial polygamist.

Before we move on, we should note that the White House was originally designed as a house, and its been modified continually.  Frankly, it ought to flat out stop. The constant monkeying with the structure only encourages this sort of baloney, and the building isn't getting any better looking over time.  The East Wing only dates back to 1942 and to some degree was built as a cover for the construction of a bomb shelter underneath it.  I suppose you can argue the bomb shelter was a good addition, but this just goes on and on.

The West Wing has been modified a great deal over time, but basically dates back to 1902.  Theodore Roosevelt was President then, and his large family was busting at the seams of the White House.

This is different, however.

The West Wing was built as office space.  Basically it's an office space annexation. The East Wing, as noted, was originally added to cover the construction of a bomb shelter.  In later years, offices for correspondence, calligraphers and the social secretary were placed in the East Wing. It became the offices of the First Lady, with the First Lady requiring offices a fairly dubious proposition, quite frankly.

Trump wasn't supposed to really touch the East Wing Structure but a Volvo bucket is out destroying part of the facade now. The new structure will be, of course, a garden shed. . .um a ballroom.

Adding offices made sense.  Adding a bomb shelter in 1942 made sense, after all, German rocket technology brought the ICBM within reach during  World War Two and submarine launched aircraft actually did made land strikes on the West Coast during the war.

A ballroom, however, is a superficial structure for somebody who likes to entertain.

Trump is a superficial person who has been spending a lot of his time at the golf course.

Trump can't molest the structure unless the forces of capitalism dutifully line up to give him his dream. There was never any doubt that they would.  So, have you wondered who the Vandal hired by the illegitimate occupant of the White House/Real Estate Developer/Serial Polygamist to design and construct a giant garden shed is?

Well, wonder no more:

President Trump Hires National Civic Art Society Board Member to Design New White House Ballroom

James McCrery, a classical architect who is a co-founder of the National Civic Art Society and a member of our Board of Directors, has been chosen by President Donald Trump to design a new ballroom at the White House.

According to the administration, “The White House State Ballroom will be a much-needed and exquisite addition of approximately 90,000 total square feet of ornately designed and carefully crafted space, with a seated capacity of 650 people — a significant increase from the 200-person seated capacity in the East Room of the White House.”

McCrery, who is principal and founder of McCrery Architects in Washington, D.C., is associate professor at the Catholic University of America's School of Architecture. He was a commissioner on the U.S. Commission of Fine Arts, appointed by President Trump during his first term. McCrery served alongside NCAS President Justin Shubow, who was chairman of the Commission.

According  to Shubow, “The National Civic Art Society is ecstatic that President Trump selected James McCrery to design the new White  House ballroom. McCrery is one of the best architects in America, and he will  honor and respect one of the most beloved classical buildings in the United  States. Our organization has no doubt he’ll design a beautiful, fitting  addition. It was President Theodore Roosevelt who personally chose Beaux-Arts architect Charles  McKim to renovate the White House in his time. President Trump has made an  equally wise decision in hiring McCrery.”

Announcement from the National Civil Art Society.

The National Civil Art Society is an organization that sponsors the view that public buildings should be in a classic style.  It's a worthwhile goal, as there sure are a lot of ugly public buildings around.  And the architects firm, McCrery Architects, based on their website, designs a lot of nice classical buildings.  Frankly, choosing them was a really good move for a really bad building.  Things could have been a lot worse.

So should we rejoice?

Well, no, 

McCrery clearly has a lot of talent, as do the people on his staff, but this is still a huge oversized shed that looks ugly.  No matter, it'll go down on his resume, unless it turns out to be a national embarrassment, in which case it will be removed from his resume.

He's designed some beautiful buildings, including the Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Knoxville, TN.  To go from that, to this . . what a waste.

The contractor for the abomination is heavy contractor Clark Construction, whose website declares "Building What Matters".

M'eh.

This structure doesn't matter.

It is, however, no doubt a major contract.  Nobody could blame them for bidding on it, as that's what they do.

Engineering was done by AECOM, whose website declares; "AECOM is the trusted global infrastructure leader committed to delivering a better world.".  

Well, this structure and the project makes the world just a little bit worse.  No matter, it's probably a big contract.

Funding for the project is not public.  The $200,000,000 to $250,000,0000 vandalization will cost is going to be born by Real Estate Developer Donald Trump and donors.  Donors include Google, Lockheed Martin, Palantir, Booz Allen Hamilton, and NextEra Energy, but there are a lot more.  Lockheed Martin is chipping in $10,000,000.

And there's the real question.  

Blogger, which this is published on, is a Google thing.  Google itself is darned near impossible to avoid, so even though I think they're chipping in is inexcusable, I'll continue to use Google's products, making me just as hypocritical as can be.  I don't buy anything from Lockheed, and I'm not a shareholder, but if I was I'd write in and complain.  

Why would outfits like these chip in?  Well, they're making a bet that King Donald will love them, or at least not hate them.  That's why.  And frankly, if some future administration wanted to build to whack it down, which will occur, and put up a Trump Hall of Shame, they'd contribute to that.

The overall shame, however, is that this is public property.  It's being vandalized.  And nobody can apparently do anything about it.

When this era is over, the country needs major reform.  Part of that reform needs to be an effort to reign the Oval Office into reason.  Another part needs to be to kick the dead asses in Congress back to work and require them to do their actual jobs.

As a final note, Hitler was fond of monumental projects too, planning on building a monumental Berlin after the Second World War.  Franco had the monumental Valley of the Fallen built, which at least commemorates something.  Fascist Italy had a bunch of monumental structures built, and of course Mussolini was in power for quite some time.  The Soviets had Lenin stuff in a mausoleum, the latter of which provides an idea.

Seeing as a modern White House doesn't need a ballroom, and given that Trump is really old and will pass from natural causes in the foreseeable future anyhow, perhaps AECOM can design this structure with hydraulic jacks and wheels so when that day comes this can just be jacked up, hooked up, and wheeled down the highway to Mar A Lago, which it can serve as the Trump Mausoleum and library (I serious doubt Trump has very many books that he's actually read, so the size won't be a problem).  Probably Google, Lockheed Martin, Palantir, Booz Allen Hamilton, and NextEra Energy will be willing to pay for it.