US Political News and Trump’s China visit

Mrs. AZ spent 28 years in the cattle industry. I am considering having her read and respond to you. You might learn something.
You know I am a 4th generation farmer from Kansas and a lot of my relative still have farm, both crops and cattle farm in the US, and my family had a 650 acre co-op farms in Kansas. I actually work for JBS (Premier Australian Meat Company) for a few years in Strategic Management because of my background in farming.

In case you are wondering, US Beef price high because of 2 different issues, firstly and most importantly, US is losing pastureland for herding, which mean losing herd number, field that allow livestock herding is disappearing in favor of real estate development, that come from 2 different factors, 1.) Average land price is high leading to US dependence of importation, Pastureland in the US cost about $2000/acre, comapre to Australia about A$6400/hectare (1 hectare = 2.47 acre), you are talking about US$1000 different per hectare, average farm is about 500 acres, which mean the different is about $250,000 per pasture, another reason is rancher number declining, weather factor (although not really concerning this price hike) also contributing to the higher price. That contribute to why US so depends on Meat Product import from overseas.


And it's simple, if cost of Beef is high before the offset of Beef import, what do you think will happen when you tariff that import? Only one of the two things can happen, either you eat less meat, or you pay a higher price, I don't think you need to hold a degree in economics to figure this out.

Please, do have your wife read these article and come back to me, yes, we probably will have a lot to talk about.
 
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The scale and distribution of protesters amongst the US states.


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I expect those states with agricultural background join the demonstrators after China imposed sanctions on US soybeans.
 

Demolition begins to replace White House East Wing with Trump’s ballroom​

OCT 20, 2025, 7:34 PM ET

Demolition of the White House East Wing began Monday as President Donald Trump adds a $200 million, 90,000-square-foot ballroom.

CNN observed an excavator tearing down portions of the East Wing, and close-up video and images captured areas of the roof torn down and an excavator tearing through the interior.

Renderings released earlier by the White House showed that the ballroom, which the administration has said will be funded by Trump and other private donors, would be built over this area. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt said over the summer that the “state ballroom” would occupy space housing the East Wing of the executive mansion, where first ladies have traditionally maintained offices.

The project fulfills a 15-year ambition by the president to construct an event space on the White House grounds that expands the building’s entertaining capacity — but also resembles the gilded spaces of his private clubs. The ballroom is just one part of Trump’s efforts to transform the buildings and grounds to his liking, which have included adding large flagpoles, paving over the Rose Garden, and decorating the Oval Office in gold.

“I am pleased to announce that ground has been broken on the White House grounds to build the new, big, beautiful White House Ballroom,” Trump posted on social media Monday evening. “Completely separate from the White House itself, the East Wing is being fully modernized as part of this process, and will be more beautiful than ever when it is complete!”

Trump also commented on the construction during an event celebrating LSU baseball teams in the White House’s East Room earlier Monday.

“You know, we’re building right behind us — we’re building a ballroom. They wanted a ballroom for 150 years, and I’m giving that honor to this wonderful place,” he said. “I didn’t know I’d be standing here right now, because right on the other side, you have a lot of construction going on, which you might hear periodically.”

Workers demolish the facade of the East Wing of the White House on October 20, 2025.

Workers demolish the facade of the East Wing of the White House on October 20, 2025.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Renderings provided by the White House depict a vast space with gold and crystal chandeliers, gilded Corinthian columns, a coffered ceiling with gold inlays, gold floor lamps and a checkered marble floor. Three walls of arched windows look out over the White House’s south grounds.

The new ballroom — which will maintain the “theme and architectural heritage” of the neoclassical executive mansion, the White House said — will have a seated capacity of 650 people, more than three times the space in the East Room, the largest event space in the White House.

At a recent dinner with high-dollar ballroom donors, Trump said the new space would be “in keeping” with the White House architecture. He said it will be “appropriate in color and in window shape.”

“There won’t be anything like it actually. … You know, a new thing is you build a super modern building next to an old-fashioned building, and I think that’s good, but I don’t have the courage to do that with the White House,” he said.

During the dinner, the president said he was told there were “zero zoning conditions” set for the project.

“I said, ‘How long will it take me?’” Trump recalled. “‘Sir, you can start tonight, you have no approvals.’ I said, ‘You gotta be kidding.’ They said, ‘Sir, this is the White House, you’re the president of the United States, you can do anything you want.’”

White House communications director Steven Cheung on Monday shared a screenshot from Smithsonian Magazine of construction at the White House during the 1950s, in response to what he called “pearl clutching” after images of the demolition surfaced.

The photo he posted was taken during the Truman administration, when the White House underwent a complete reconstruction after engineers discovered it was “structurally weak and in danger of collapse,” according to the White House Historical Association.

“Construction has always been a part of the evolution of the White House,” Cheung wrote on X. “Losers who are quick to criticize need to stop their pearl clutching and understand the building needs to be modernized. Otherwise you’re just living in the past.”
 

Trump’s wrecking crew starts East Wing demolition for White House ballroom: ‘More damage than the British did in 1814’​

Andrew Feinberg
Tue, October 21, 2025 at 9:44 p.m. GMT+8

The White House has started tearing down parts of the East Wing to make way for construction of President Donald Trump’s planned $250m ballroom.

Demolition crews on Monday began work on ripping up the facade of the East Wing facing the Treasury Department, a part of the building that housed the White House’s calligraphy office and the entrance that has long been used by visitors arriving for special events or tours.

Trump confirmed the demolition work during an event with the NCAA and NAIA baseball championship teams from Louisiana State University and its Shreveport, Louisiana satellite campus.

He said the new ballroom would be “a lot of fun” and noted that the construction had “started today.”

“You know, we’re building right behind us. We’re building a ballroom. They’ve wanted a ballroom for 150 years, and I’m giving that honor to this wonderful place,” he said.

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Heavy machinery tears down a section of the East Wing of the White House as construction begins on President Donald Trump's $250m planned ballroom (AFP via Getty)
A model of the ballroom is depicted on the left side of this scale model of the White House complex (AP)

A model of the ballroom is depicted on the left side of this scale model of the White House complex (AP)

The president appeared to suggest that the new ballroom would be connected to the main White House residence through what he described as a “knockout panel” in the East Room.

The East Wing, which was built in 1902 and given a second floor under then-president Franklin Roosevelt in 1942, has traditionally housed the Office of the First Lady and other parts of the White House, including the White House Travel Office and the White House Military Office.

It also sits atop the Presidential Emergency Operations Center, the Second World War-era bomb shelter constructed for Roosevelt that was famously used by then-vice president Dick Cheney during the September 11, 2001 terror attacks on New York and Washington.

The demolition of the decades-old structure, which is the newest building on the 18-acre White House complex, appears to violate President Trump’s pledge that the massive new event space he has commissioned would not “interfere” with the existing buildings.

The ballroom will hold 650 seated people, a big increase from the current 200-person seated capacity of the East Room (White House)

The ballroom will hold 650 seated people, a big increase from the current 200-person seated capacity of the East Room (White House)

But White House officials have also suggested separately that the new ballroom would replace the East Wing and have justified the move by noting that it “has been renovated and changed many times,” including the 1942 renovation that added the second floor and the bomb shelter to the building.

Last week, the president told donors at a fundraising dinner for the ballroom that the project had been fully financed, including with donations from a slew of companies including Apple, Amazon, Lockheed Martin and Coinbase.

He has said the new ballroom will seat as many as 650 people — more than three times the capacity of the East Room.

News of the demolition work was met with scorn from some liberal commentators.

One such pundit, legal writer Marcy Wheeler, compared the destruction of the East Wing facade to the damage done by British troops under command of Major General Robert Ross, who ordered the burning of both the White House residence and the Capitol during the War of 1812.

“First Trump’s mob attacked the Capitol for the first time since 1812. And now Trump is doing more damage to the White House than the British did in 1814,” she said.

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Former CNN anchor Jim Acosta also weighed in, writing: “So any president can just start destroying portions of the White House? Is that how this works?”

Heavy machinery tears down a section of the East Wing of the White House as construction begins on Trump’s ballroom (AFP via Getty)

Heavy machinery tears down a section of the East Wing of the White House as construction begins on Trump’s ballroom (AFP via Getty)

While new construction of federal buildings must be vetted by the National Capital Planning Commission board, the Trump-appointed head of that panel said in September that the demolition work falls outside the board’s jurisdiction and can proceed without the need for approval.

Will Scharf, who also serves as the White House Staff Secretary, said during a NCPC meeting last month that the board lacks authority over demolition or site preparation efforts.

“What we deal with is essentially construction, vertical build,” he said.

 
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