SOFT NEWS Redecorated White House

Bumblepuff

Has No Life - Lives on TB
ford%20feet%20desk.jpg


President Gerald Ford propped his right foot upon his desk to relieve
the pain from a twisted ankle sprain he just received after stumbling
over a chair in the room and crashing hard upon the floor, fortunately
cushioned underneath by a female aide, but not so fortunate for her,
which is why he had to make an emergency call for medical assistance.
 

jba48

Veteran Member
NCSusan, thanks for sharing the pictures. I think it's great to be able to see the differences.

But, I'm sorry, it is pure bullshit to say how that office is styled reflects the actions of the president. Good God. Ridiculous! And I can't recall who posted the very African-themed picture, but, geez, prejudiced much? Is that what all this fuss is about? Because -- GASP -- he may have tastes that reflect African American heritage? Personally, I find that offensive.

I love that everyone previously got all pissed off at Obama for having his feet on his desk. And then, lo and behold, it seems every single president has done so. Oh, and probably every man and woman in this country who has a desk has done that at one point or another.

This thread is petty. And, yes, I'm posting on it, and, yes, I must be in a bad mood. But to see people judging someone because of how they decorate their damn office and making the leap that somehow shows their attitudes towards Americans is RIDICULOUS. You can base that assumption on their actions!!! (And God knows, we have enough to judge Obama on without resorting to decorating tips.)

And, no, I'm not a Democrat, nor a Republican. I hate everything to do with politics, and I thought both George Bushes sucked, Clinton sucked, I even thought Reagan sucked (although I thought he was eloquent and genuinely a nice person.) None of them give a damn for the people of this country. They only care about their politics, as do all career politicians.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I first formed an opinion of Obama's decorating tastes when he embarrassed us all by sending back the bust of Prime Minister Churchill.

First impressions are important.
 

Bumblepuff

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Me too.........thinking this is next.........



After months of eager anticipation, Sheikh Ballahwallah finally moved into
the restored White House, formerly the residence of Presidents of the
United States, but now a luxury mansion for the Sheikh's occasional visits
to Washingon, D.C. on personal business. Sheikh Ballahwallah considers his
new crib to be superior in every aspect to area hotels because here he has
a private helicopter pad and plenty of open space to let his camels graze.
Due to President Obama's new Executive Order allowing him to relocate to
a safer environment where he has had built the magnificent Black House,
the most awesome palace of presidential power and eighth wonder of the
modern world, in contrast the old drab drafty White House was sold to the
highest bidder excluding Jews and others antagonistic to the Islamic faith.
Because President Obama was instrumental in helping the Saudi ruler win
the bid, a special wing will remain open for visits from Barry and his family
including First Pooch Bo who has been granted freedom to piddle, may
Mohammed constrain his bladder. Sheikh Ballahwallah is very pleased with
construction progress and has many further renovations planned such as
removing some turf and importing choice Arabian sand with installation of
palm trees and other vegetation indigenous to the Middle East, all protected
by a bioterrestrial dome. Because only 80% of the multimillion dollar funding
was paid by new public taxes, the remaining funds were donated by private
organizations dedicated to making America the Muslim nation Allah always
intended it to be. This huge renovation has stimulated the local economy
and allowed more Islamic families to build, buy and rent homes in the area.
Consequently, increases in random bomb blasts, fly-infested food stalls and
wandering goats have made the area feel almost like back home in Iraq. A
special pet project which has President Obama's approval will require razing
numerous historical buildings and other national landmarks to make way for
a deluxe golf course situated to the east of the Sheikh's shack. This crucial
landscaping is planned so that if Sheikh Ballahwallah is out golfing when the
call to prayer is heard loudly from a nearby minaret or incoming on his mobile
ringtone, he can prostrate himself on a carefully manicured putting green to
pray to Allah for more blessings and special mercy so he can sink his putt
under par. Although the public press is barred from entering the Sheikh's
residence, most unsubstantiated rumors about fantastically luxuriant interior
decorations and displays are probably true. More updates will be published if
visitors can be bribed to take clandestine photos inside with hidden cameras.
 

Bumblepuff

Has No Life - Lives on TB
troll.jpg


Realizing the height of stormy excitement was nearing, Winky stood
buck naked against a boulder at the shoreline on the New England
coast, prepared for full frontal ferocity of Hurricane Earl. Peering out
at the tempest tossed waves, Winky saw panic among the ocean's
denizens such as Spongebog Screwpaints screaming while poisonous
jellyfish stung him repeatedly and Patrickets Starfoosh moaning as his
arms were pulled apart by ravenous white sharks. Winky knew human
inhabitants had already evacuated to safety, so he was the only one
present to witness firsthand the destructive power of Hurricane Earl.
Winky also knew that although he might be hit by monstrous crashing
dashing waves, he would survive through it, not due to his bravery or
perseverance, but because he had superglued his back to the boulder.
 

Flippper

Time Traveler
Bumblepuff? I had to look. Yep, sure 'nuf we have one now.

I liked the Klinton first term rug. Love the Bush hardwood floor. Rugs in the DC komplex are incredible; luxurious works of art, I'd love to get them when they are phased out...
 

Jeff Allen

Producer
Bumblepuff is killing me here...LOL

As for the Oval Office, I had put off looking here for a few days...but am pleasently surprised to find a room I feel is very tasteful, and a rug that is significantly better.

Of course this is just my OPINION...LOL

First time I've agreed with President Obama I think....

J
 

sy32478

Veteran Member
Hate FDR but love that recontruction of his office. Next is W who I don't hate, but have few positive comments for. Clinton's looks like what it is, a whorehouse.

Obama's ? Well - it does look too informal and not up to the standards of the office. Then again . . .
 

NC Susan

Deceased
Ooops Obama got it WRONG

http://www.delawareonline.com/article/201009080345/OPINION16/100907031

A mistake has been made in the Oval Office makeover that goes beyond the beige.
President Barack Obama’s new presidential rug seemed beyond reproach, with quotations from Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. woven along its curved edge.

“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” According to media reports, this quote keeping Obama company on his wheat-colored carpet is from King.

Except it’s not a King quote. The words belong to a long-gone Bostonian champion of social progress. His roots in the republic ran so deep that his grandfather commanded the Minutemen at the Battle of Lexington.
For the record, Theodore Parker is your man, President Obama. Unless you’re fascinated by antebellum American reformers, you may not know of the lyrically gifted Parker, an abolitionist, Unitarian minister and Transcendentalist thinker who foresaw the end of slavery, though he did not live to see emancipation. He died at age 49 in 1860, on the eve of the Civil War.
A century later, during the civil rights movement, King, an admirer of Parker, quoted the Bostonian’s lofty prophecy during marches and speeches. Often he’d ask in a refrain, “How long? Not long.” He would finish in a flourish: “Not long, because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice.”
King made no secret of the author of this idea. As a Baptist preacher on the front lines of racial justice, he regarded Parker, a religious leader, as a kindred spirit.
Yet somehow a mistake was made and magnified in our culture to the point that a New England antebellum abolitionist’s words have been enshrined in the Oval Office while attributed to a major 20th-century figure. That is a shame, because the slain civil rights leader and Nobel Peace Prize laureate was so eloquent in his own right.
Obama, who is known for his rhetorical skills, is likely to feel the slight to King — and Parker.
My investigation into this error led me to David Remnick’s biography of Obama, “The Bridge,” published this year. Early in the narrative, Remnick, the editor of the New Yorker, presents this as “Barack Obama’s favorite quotation.” It appears that neither Remnick nor Obama has traced the language to its true source.

Parker said in 1853: “I do not pretend to understand the moral universe; the arc is a long one. ... But from what I see I am sure it bends toward justice.”
The president is at minimum well-served by Parker’s presence in the room. Parker embodied the early 19th-century reformer’s passionate zeal for taking on several social causes at once. Many of these reformers were Unitarians or Quakers; some were Transcendentalists. Most courageously, as early as the 1830s, they opposed the laws on slavery and eventually harbored fugitives in the Underground Railroad network of safe houses. Without 30 years of a movement agitating and petitioning for slave emancipation, Lincoln could not have ended slavery with the stroke of a pen in the midst of war. Parker was in the vanguard that laid the social and intellectual groundwork.
The familiar quote from Lincoln woven into Obama’s rug is “government of the people, by the people and for the people,” the well-known utterance from the close of his Gettysburg Address in 1863.
Funny that in 1850, Parker wrote, “A democracy — that is a government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people.”
Theodore Parker, Oval Office wordmeister for the ages.



Theodore Parker, Oval Office wordmeister for the ages.







Jamie Stiehm, a journalist, is writing a book on the life of Lucretia Mott, a 19th-century abolitionist and women’s rights leader.
 

NC Susan

Deceased
September 04, 2010

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/09/smartest_president_in_history.html

Smartest President in History Botches Oval Office Rug Quote

By Thomas Lifson

Woven into the new presidential seal rug adorning the Oval Office is a misattributed quotation, offering us a perfect metaphor for the Obama presidency. Jamie Stiehm reports in the Washington Post:

"The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." According to media reports, this quote keeping Obama company on his wheat-colored carpet is from King.

Except it's not a King quote. The words belong to a long-gone Bostonian champion of social progress. His roots in the republic ran so deep that his grandfather commanded the Minutemen at the Battle of Lexington.

For the record, Theodore Parker is your man, President Obama. Unless you're fascinated by antebellum American reformers, you may not know of the lyrically gifted Parker, an abolitionist, Unitarian minister and Transcendentalist thinker who foresaw the end of slavery, though he did not live to see emancipation. He died at age 49 in 1860, on the eve of the Civil War.

A century later, during the civil rights movement, King, an admirer of Parker, quoted the Bostonian's lofty prophecy during marches and speeches.
Apparently, Obama himself believed the quotation to be from King. Stiehm writes,
My investigation into this error led me to David Remnick's biography of Obama, "The Bridge," published this year. Early in the narrative, Remnick, the editor of the New Yorker, presents this as "Barack Obama's favorite quotation." It appears that neither Remnick nor Obama has traced the language to its true source.
The error perfectly encapsulates the shallowness of Barack Obama's intellect and his lack of rigor. Obama is a man who accumulated academic credentials while giving no evidence whatsoever of achieving any depth. He was the only president of the Harvard Law Review to graduate without penning a signed article in that esteemed journal. His academic transcripts remain under lock and key, as do his academic papers.

For the sort of people like David Brooks of the New York Times, who are impressed by fancy degrees and a sharp crease in the trousers, Obama may appear to be the smartest-ever occupant of the Oval Office. But, as the old joke goes, deep down, he is shallow. Underfoot, literally, there is woven into his background a prominent vein of phoniness.

For some reason or other, Obama has been able to skate through academia and politics without ever being seriously challenged to prove his depth. A simple veneer of glibness has been enough to win the accolades of the liberal intelligentsia. But now that he has actual responsibilities -- including relatively trivial ones like custodianship of the inner sanctum of the presidency -- his lack of substance keeps showing up in visible, embarrassing, and troubling ways.

The ultimate irony is this: Obama's idol, Martin Luther King, had a long pattern of plagiarism, something airbrushed out of his story by the forces of political correctness but well-recognized by scholars of his written work. Clayborne Carson, the dean of King scholars and director of the King Papers Project at Stanford, acknowledges, "instances of textual appropriation can be seen in his earliest extant writings as well as his dissertation. The pattern is also noticeable in his speeches and sermons throughout his career."

There is no evidence that King attempted to claim authorship of the quotation woven into the Oval Office rug so far as I know. Responsibility for this act of appropriation appears to lie on the presidential shoulders. Obama has his own pattern of appropriating things -- such as the money due to bondholders of GM and Chrysler, which he gave to the UAW, which he found more deserving, no matter what the laws of bankruptcy said about senior creditors.

When governments screw up postage stamps, the results become far more valuable to collectors, as in the case of the most expensive 20th-century U.S. postage stamp, the "inverted Jenny."

050604_jennystamp_hmed_7a.grid-6x2.jpg


In a similar way, the botched Oval Office rug becomes a precious symbol of the Obama presidency, based on an image fabricated out of symbols rather than substance and misappropriating valuable elements of America's history. The only question remaining is whether or not President Obama will choose to keep the rug in his office.

If the president keeps it, it instantly becomes the most interesting facet of that hallowed space, the first thing any visitor will want to (discreetly, with a quick downward glance) check out and silently chuckle about. Can you imagine the mirth that a visiting head of state would experience?

But if the president decides to excise the embarrassing carpet, what does he do with it? If he burns it, then the flames become a symbol of his failed presidency. If he auctions it off, as he should, it would fetch an enormous price -- enough to help reduce the deficit, or pay for some more fancy clothes and shoes for Michelle -- but then become an everlasting symbol of his ignorance.

As in so many other aspects of his presidency, Barack Obama has put himself into a no-win situation. Fortunately, the victims this time do not include the entire American people, but only Obama's image and the private donors who putatively paid for the rug.
 

etc

Inactive
I see. Joe Six-Pack on the streets is starving and is trying to decide between paying the electric bill or gas for the car and the elites are changing expensive carpets.
Showing how disconnected they are from the sheep, eating caviar and drinking champagne while the sheep starve.

Realize when TSHTF, it will for the JSP only, not for the elites. No matter what happens, they will come out on top, in their bunkers and private islands.
 

Freeholder

This too shall pass.
I actually don't think the new decorating job is all that bad. However, I'm interested in the two pictures that flank the desk...did anyone else notice those same two pictures flanking Clinton's desk in one of the pictures? I can't see them well enough to tell what they are -- anyone have any better shots of them?

Kathleen
 

Topusaret

Deceased
I actually don't think the new decorating job is all that bad. However, I'm interested in the two pictures that flank the desk...did anyone else notice those same two pictures flanking Clinton's desk in one of the pictures? I can't see them well enough to tell what they are -- anyone have any better shots of them?

Kathleen

The one on the right looks like Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square, London:

http://golondon.about.com/od/thingstodoinlondon/ss/trafalgarsquare_2.htm

Can't tell about the one on the left.
 
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