Screenshot: The White House
The Trump administration added a “Major Events Timeline” to the White House website that includes scandals alongside traditional White House construction milestones, including Bill Clinton’s affair with Monica Lewinsky and his impeachment, Obama hosting members of the Muslim Brotherhood in 2012, cocaine discovered in the West Wing in 2023 during Biden’s presidency, and Biden’s recognition of Transgender Day of Visibility on Easter Sunday, the holiest day of the year for Christians.
The Clinton entry states: “President Bill Clinton’s affair with intern Monica Lewinsky was exposed, leading to White House perjury investigations. The Oval Office trysts fueled impeachment for obstruction.”
The timeline includes a photo of Clinton with his arm around Lewinsky, an image of Hunter Biden in a bathtub, and references to Hunter Biden as an “admitted drug user” with speculation that the cocaine found in the White House may have been his.
All of the claims made in the timeline are true. Biden really did hold a transgender event at the White House on Easter Sunday, which included nearly naked trans performers.
The Muslim Brotherhood did visit Obama at the White House, and the group has been designated a terrorist organization by several countries, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, and Russia.
The suppression of the Hunter Biden laptop scandal, including collusion between Democrats, the media, and social media, was one of the major events of the past decade and underscores the dangerous precedents set during the 2020 election and the COVID pandemic for restrictions on freedom of speech and how media can work together with politicians to push agendas, including false narratives creating COVID hysteria, climate crisis mania, Russiagate, and claims that U.S. citizens have been deported by ICE.
Some media outlets attacked Trump for omitting January 6 from the timeline, but that event took place at the Capitol, and the timeline only pertains to the White House.
The other events, such as Bill Clinton’s affair, Obama welcoming a designated terrorist organization, and the discovery of cocaine, all occurred at the White House.
The timeline also documents changes Trump has made to the White House that have sparked outrage among liberals.
People who, until three weeks ago, had no opinion on the size of the White House ballroom or whether the presidential patio should be slightly larger are now calling for Trump’s removal from office.
The controversial White House renovations under President Trump included a new East Wing ballroom, a redesigned Rose Garden, added flagpoles, gold accents in the Oval Office, removal of the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden, and a Presidential Walk of Fame. For some reason, the ballroom has triggered people the most. rose
You know who else had a ballroom? Hitler (and nearly every other head of state who has ever lived).
In 2025, President Trump launched six major renovation projects at the White House, all privately funded with no taxpayer money involved.
Donations flowed through the Trust for the National Mall, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, with Trump’s 2024 campaign finance director Meredith O’Rourke leading the donor effort.
The list of 37 corporate and individual donors included Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Meta, Lockheed Martin, Palantir, and Coinbase, with Alphabet contributing as part of a lawsuit settlement.
The media are claiming that the East Wing demolition to accommodate the new ballroom destroyed the Jackie Kennedy Rose Garden, which is untrue.
The Rose Garden, located near the West Wing, was not affected by the demolition.
Earlier in 2025, Trump paved over part of the Kennedy-era lawn to create a patio area with tables and umbrellas, replacing it with a marble surface inspired by his Mar-a-Lago Beach Club, complete with yellow-and-white striped umbrellas and a Bang & Olufsen speaker system controlled from his iPad. He renamed the area the “Rose Garden Club.”
The demolition of the East Wing destroyed at least six trees, including two magnolias that commemorated Presidents Harding and Roosevelt.
Along the West Wing Colonnade, Trump created a “Presidential Walk of Fame” featuring gold-framed portraits of all U.S. presidents except Joe Biden, whose frame displays an image of an autopen signing his name—a reference to Biden’s cognitive decline.
Other changes included two 88-foot flagpoles that Trump personally paid for and extensive gold detailing throughout the Oval Office, featuring gilded mirrors, gold medallions, Rococo accents, and decorative cherubs from Mar-a-Lago.
He also removed the historic Swedish ivy originally gifted to President Kennedy and tripled the number of paintings in the room.
Social media users called Trump a fascist for installing tall flagpoles with large American flags in front of the White House.
However, every U.S. government building displays the national flag, so it seems logical to have prominent flagpoles at the White House.
The bottom line is that liberals hate Trump enough to disparage the country itself. Obviously, people who kneel during the national anthem would oppose it.
Media reports accused Trump of bypassing approval procedures by starting demolition without authorization from the National Capital Planning Commission (NCPC). However, NCPC Chair Will Scharf clarified that the commission’s jurisdiction applies only to vertical construction, not demolition or site preparation. The White House will submit plans once building begins.
All renovations were privately financed through Trump’s personal contributions and donations to the Trust for the National Mall. No taxpayer money was used for any of the projects.
The post Trump’s White House Time — Hilarious, True, and Triggering appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.