
Background image source is Washington Post [1]. Story of Trump and Epstein statue at National Mall found here [2].
by Brian Shilhavy
Editor, Health Impact News
President Donald Trump and his Zionist Billionaires are funding a new addition to the White House that is being advertised as a “Ballroom”.
I am naming this new addition to the White House “Pedophile Palace” which is a true symbol of American Culture here in 2025, and it is in honor of Jeffrey Epstein and the Epstein financial system that runs the United States today.
[3]Image source [4]
It is also in keeping with the sexual scandals that have constantly been happening in the White House throughout its history, from the affairs between John F. Kennedy and Marilyn Monroe to the sexcapades of Bill Clinton with Monica Lewinsky to the homosexual prostitution rings that rocked the White House under Reagan and Bush to the Richard Nixon and Billy Graham child sex trafficking rings that led to Watergate [5].
According to reports in the media, Donald Trump is going to name the Ballroom after himself, but it really should be “The Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump White House Ballroom“, because it is the Jeffrey Epstein financial system that runs the U.S. and empowers the Zionist Billionaires who run it.
Besides Zionist Billionaire Donald Trump, here is a list of some of the other Billionaire donors funding Pedophile Palace that the White House released this week and published by CNN.
From crypto billionaires to cabinet members: What to know about the donors paying for Trump’s ballroom
Excerpts:
As demolition crews this week bulldozed the White House’s East Wing to replace it with a massive ballroom, President Donald Trump has emphasized that the dramatic changes will come at “zero cost to the American Taxpayer.”
Instead, the donors picking up the tab include some of the country’s biggest corporations, including many who have business before the federal government, along with many longtime supporters of the president, according to a CNN review of a donor list released by the Trump administration.
Trump has been recruiting donors for the construction project for months, showing off renderings and scale models to Oval Office visitors. Now estimated to cost $300 million, the work is being funded by private, tax-deductible donations routed through the nonprofit Trust for the National Mall.
The president has said he will personally pay for some of the project, but the White House hasn’t specified how much. At least one donation of $22 million from Google was made on “behalf” of Trump as part of a legal settlement over the president being banned from YouTube in 2021, court documents show.
The ballroom donors were feted at a White House dinner last week. Now that the demolition has begun, here’s who’s paying for the overhaul of the country’s most famous residence.
Adelson Family Foundation
Miriam Adelson, a billionaire who made her fortune in casinos alongside her late husband Sheldon and has been a major Trump donor, runs this philanthropic foundation. Trump awarded Adelson the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2018.
Miriam and Sheldon Adelson have been some of Trump’s top political donors since his first presidential bid, giving more than $30 million to pro-Trump PACs and his campaigns over the years. Miriam also gave $1 million to the president’s 2025 inaugural committee.
The foundation’s stated aim is to “strengthen the state of Israel and the Jewish people,” and Trump has publicly praised Adelson and her support of Israel. Adelson, who is the majority owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks, has also donated to lawmakers and PACs that support pro-gambling and sports betting legislation.
Altria Group
Previously known as Phillip Morris, tobacco giant Altria Group is the seller of Virginia Slims, Marlboro and Parliament cigarettes in the United States.
A subsidiary, Altria Client Services, LLC, gave $1 million to a Trump-associated PAC in May 2025, $1 million to the president’s 2025 inaugural committee and $500,000 to his 2017 inaugural committee.
Amazon
Amazon billionaire founder Jeff Bezos told the world he was “optimistic” about a second Trump presidency late last year, saying he appreciated his “energy” around reducing regulations.
Amazon gave $1 million to Trump’s 2025 inaugural committee and made an in-kind donation of almost $900,000 for digital services and advertising supporting the event. The company also gave about $58,000 to his 2017 inaugural committee.
Amazon Web Services – the company’s cloud computing platform – earned more than $500 million from federal contracts over the last three years, government data shows.
Apple
Apple CEO Tim Cook served on Trump’s American Workforce Policy Advisory Board during his first term. He attended the president’s 2025 inauguration along with other tech leaders, and this summer presented Trump with a customized 24-karat gold-and-glass statuette in the Oval Office while announcing plans to invest $100 billion in US jobs and suppliers.
The company secured a major win this summer, when smartphones were exempted from heavy tariffs levied on goods imported from India.
Coinbase
Coinbase, one of America’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges, was founded in 2012 by CEO Brian Armstrong. The corporation, which went public in 2021 with a valuation of about $100 billion, helps users buy, sell and store cryptocurrencies.
The Securities and Exchange Commission sued the company in 2023 for allegedly acting as an unregistered broker, but the Trump administration dropped the lawsuit earlier this year. Coinbase had said it was not in violation of any law.
Coinbase gave $1 million to Trump’s 2025 inaugural committee.
J. Pepe and Emilia Fanjul
Jose “Pepe” Fanjul and his wife Emilia are part of a Cuban-American family that owns a massive sugar conglomerate. The Biden administration had previously blocked a company partially owned by the Fanjul family from shipping sugar to the US over allegations of forced labor practices, which the company denied.
The Trump administration lifted that block in March.
The couple have given more than $3 million to Trump’s campaigns and associated PACs going back to 2016.
In July, Trump announced he persuaded Coca-Cola to release Coke made with cane sugar instead of high-fructose corn syrup – a move that could benefit the sugar industry. The US government has long supported the domestic sugar industry and boosted prices. Brazil, the largest exporter of sugar to the US, was hit by a 50% tariff in July.
Google and its parent company Alphabet have joined Trump administration initiatives to promote AI education, and CEO Sundar Pichai praised the administration’s investments in AI at a White House event last month.
Google-owned YouTube agreed to pay $22 million towards Trump’s ballroom project as part of an agreement settling legal claims brought by Trump over his removal from the video platform.
Among other deals, the company was awarded a contract in July worth up to $200 million related to AI capabilities at the Department of Defense.
Harold G. Hamm
Harold Hamm is the billionaire founder of Continental Resources, a natural gas and petroleum production company based in Oklahoma City. Considered a pioneer in hydraulic fracking, Hamm is one of the richest oil men in America and among the richest men in the world, according to Forbes.
In his second term, the Trump administration has significantly curbed environmental regulations and opened up more oil and gas production on federal lands – all issues Hamm supports and reportedly pushed for in 2024.
Hard Rock International
Hard Rock International is owned by the Seminole Tribe of Florida and includes a global chain of theme-bar restaurants, casinos, hotels and museums. Hard Rock International in 2017 purchased an Atlantic City, New Jersey, casino that was once owned by Trump. It re-opened the following year as Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Atlantic City.
Hard Rock’s board chairman Jim Allen had previously served as vice president of operations at the Trump Organization, Trump’s business and real estate conglomerate. He also serves as the CEO of Seminole Gaming.
The Laura & Isaac Perlmutter Foundation
Isaac Perlmutter sold Marvel Entertainment to The Walt Disney Company in 2009. Perlmutter and his wife, Laura, have supported healthcare and education initiatives through their foundation, including a more than $50 million donation to NYU’s Langone Medical Center earmarked for cancer research.
The couple have given more than $23 million to Trump’s campaigns and supporting Super PACs since 2016.
(Editor’s note: Learn more about Isaac Perlmutter and his Jewish ties to Pfizer and how they used Marvel to promote the COIVD-19 injections: Trump Claims he could “Easily” be Israeli PM – Is this why Pfizer Received First COVID Vaccine Authorization in U.S. and Exclusive Rights in Israel [6]?)
Lockheed Martin
The Pentagon’s largest aerospace and defense contractor, Lockheed Martin projects more than $74 billion in sales this year. In a statement about its ballroom donation, a spokesperson for the company said it is “grateful for the opportunity to help bring the President’s vision to reality and make this addition to the People’s House, a powerful symbol of the American ideals we work to defend every day.”
They earned more than $40 billion from federal contracts over the last year, according to government data.
The Lutnick Family
Howard Lutnick joined the Trump administration as Secretary of Commerce after decades as CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services firm. Lutnick handed the reins of the company to his 27-year-old son, and his other son also works at Cantor.
Howard Lutnick gave a total of more than $9 million to a pro-Trump Super PAC, Trump’s 2020 and 2024 presidential campaigns and associated fundraising committees.
Since Lutnick’s appointment, he has focused on implementing Trump’s tariff strategy. Lutnick, who has said he is heavily invested in cryptocurrency, has also pushed for pro-crypto policies during his tenure.
Meta
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg once banned President Trump from Facebook and Instagram, and the president once threatened him with criminal investigations. But since the 2024 election, Zuckerberg has taken steps to endear himself to the president and his MAGA supporters.
Earlier this year, the social media giant ditched its fact checkers and named Dana White, the Ultimate Fighting Championship president and a Trump ally, to its board. Zuckerberg also dined with Trump at Mar-a-Lago.
The General Services Administration approved Meta’s AI model for use across government in September. The company is also helping to develop military products.
Microsoft
Microsoft has been somewhat quieter than other tech firms about its support of President Trump and his administration. CEO Satya Nadella didn’t sit front row during Trump’s inauguration, unlike Meta’s Zuckerberg, Amazon’s Bezos and Google’s Pichai.
Nadella has met with Trump, including attending a tech dinner at the White House last month, shortly before the president called for the company to fire a former Biden official who serves as its chief of global affairs.
Microsoft was paid roughly $1.4 billion from federal contracts over the last three years, government data shows.
Palantir
Founded in 2003 by Peter Thiel and several associates, the data analytics firm provides services for several government agencies, including Department of Homeland Security, the Internal Revenue Service and the Army. Thiel has been a longtime supporter of the Republican Party, a friend of Vice President JD Vance and an early supporter of President Trump.
Earlier this year, CNN reported that the Department of Government Efficiency, then run by Thiel ally Elon Musk, was using Palantir to build a database to speed up immigration enforcement.
Palantir inked a deal with the Army in July worth up to $10 billion over the next decade.
Stephen A. Schwarzman
Stephen A. Schwarzman is a GOP megadonor and the co-founder of global investment firm Blackstone. He served as the chairman of a business advisory council during Trump’s first term. Schwarzman announced in 2022 that he would not back Trump for a second term, but reversed course in 2024, citing concern with the rise of antisemitism in the US.
He gave more than $4 million to pro-Trump political groups and Trump’s campaigns since 2017.
What are “Ballrooms” and What is Their History in the United States?

Crystal LaBeija, the original Mother of House of LaBeija, and Nicole backstage during the 1967 Miss All-America Camp Beauty Pageant at Town Hall in New York. Photo: Lewis Allen Collection/Harry Ransom Center/The University of Texas Austin. Source [8].
Here is a brief description of the history of “Ballroom Dancing” from FredAstaire.com [9]:
The History of Ballroom Dancing: From Royal Courts to Global Stages
Ballroom dancing has long been a symbol of grace, elegance, and connection. While today it is celebrated on international stages and in local studios alike, the roots of ballroom dance trace back several centuries, reflecting cultural traditions, social hierarchies, and artistic evolution.
Origins of Ballroom Dancing
The word ballroom comes from the Latin ballare, meaning “to dance.” Its earliest forms emerged in the 15th century during the Renaissance period in Europe, particularly in Italy and France. These dances were often performed in royal courts and aristocratic circles, where elaborate events showcased refined movement and etiquette.
By the 16th and 17th centuries, court dances such as the minuet, pavane, and allemande became staples of social gatherings in France and England. They were highly structured, emphasizing posture, precision, and partnership — the foundation of ballroom as we know it today.
The Growth of Social and Competitive Ballroom
In the 19th century, ballroom dancing began to shift from the courts to wider society. The waltz, originating in Austria and Germany, broke ground as one of the first dances to feature couples holding each other in a closed position — a dramatic and somewhat scandalous change at the time.
Its popularity quickly spread across Europe and to America. By the early 20th century, ballroom dancing had become both a social pastime and a professional art form. (Source [9].)
Here are two articles about the history of Ballroom culture in the United States since the 19th Century.
The Ballroom Scene, The Vibrant Queer Subculture Known For Its Underground Drag Balls
In 1967, a Black drag queen named Crystal LaBeija lost a competition at the Miss All-America Camp Beauty Pageant. In a famous scene shown in the documentary The Queen (1968), she furiously laments that she only lost because of her race, snapping:
“I have the right to show my color, darling.”
LaBeija felt that there wasn’t room for her in white queer spaces — so she created her own. And with that, modern ballroom culture was born.
Though drag competitions had existed in one form or another for over a century, LaBeija established the first modern ballroom house in New York City, the House of LaBeija, inviting other people of color to attend elaborate “balls” and compete in different categories. Soon, many other houses followed, hosting balls of their own.
During these balls, the members of different house “families” would dress up and compete for prizes in various categories, seeking to out-pose each other. Not only did this create an electric cultural scene in cities across the country, but ballroom culture provided a home for marginalized people and a way for them to express themselves.
The Early Roots Of Ballroom Culture
Though the modern ballroom scene took off in the 1970s, its roots go back much farther. Before the Civil War, enslaved Black people would sometimes pantomime white slaveholders at balls, creating exaggerated dance movements as a subtle form of resistance.
After the war, in the 1860s, the Hamilton Lodge No. 710 in Harlem began throwing a charity masquerade gala called the Annual Odd Fellows Ball, which featured performers in drag who competed for prizes. According to Rolling Stone, one 1886 New York paper called it “the event of the season.” Thousands of people were turned away from the 1929 ball, and the 1936 ball drew a crowd of 8,000.
In his autobiography, Langston Hughes described these events as the “strangest and gaudiest of Harlem spectacles.” Hughes described how the balls featured “males in flowing gowns and feathered headdresses and females in tuxedoes [sic] and box-back suits.”
The balls provided an interracial space for drag queens, gay people, and other gender nonconforming people to embrace their identities. (Full article [10].)
Here is another article about Ballroom culture in the United States by Vogue [8]:
From Underground Subculture to Global Phenomenon: An Oral History of Ballroom Within Mainstream Culture
Over the last 40-odd years, the world has taken an almost voyeuristic interest in ballroom culture.
You’ve seen its houses and heroes represented on television (My House, Pose, Legendary), in films (Paris Is Burning, How Do I Look?, Kiki) and music videos (Jody Watley’s “Still a Thrill,” Queen Latifah’s “Come to My House,” Madonna’s “Vogue”), and perhaps even during Beyoncé’s Renaissance world tour.
Yet for its sprawling—and historically Black, brown, and queer—community, ballroom is more than a passing fancy.
“Ballroom has something to say,” says Michael Roberson, a community leader, advocate, activist, and professor,
“and to teach the world about what it means to be human in the struggle for freedom in the face of catastrophe.”
Since the beginning, it has straddled the line between the visible and invisible; between discrimination and aspiration.
Ballroom’s roots reach back to the Antebellum South, when enslaved people would pantomime their masters at dances.
Then, in the early 20th century, came the Hamilton Lodge Ball [11] and Fun-Makers Ball [12] in Harlem, spaces where drag queens, gay folk, and gender nonconforming people—before such a label existed—
“got together for a grand jamboree of dancing, love making, display, rivalry, drinking and advertisement,” as the playwright Abram Hill put it [13] in 1939.
Yet their growing popularity meant increased scrutiny.
“The new City authorities didn’t think much of this ‘horrible’ gala of men posing as women,” Hill continued.
“The new District Attorney of the City of New York brought an end to the Hamilton Lodge Ball in 1937, much to the dissatisfaction of the boys-in-the-gowns.”
Still, other balls proliferated throughout Manhattan (and beyond), marching on through Prohibition and the onset of the Great Depression, before they started to fracture along racial lines.
It was at that point, in the late 1960s, that drag queens Crystal LaBeija and Lottie LaBeija—having grown tired of anti-Black bias—established the House of LaBeija, and began hosting balls of their own.
From then on emerged the system that we know today, with ball contestants walking in different categories and battling it out for prizes—and filmmakers, musicians, and fashion designers mining the scene for inspiration.
Through the four chapters in this story—compiled from close to 40 hours of interviews—celebrated members of the ballroom community, and a handful of those who witnessed its brilliance, tell the story of how a queer, underground subculture became a global phenomenon. (Full article [8].)
The Vogue article states that Ballrooms are: “spaces where drag queens, gay folk, and gender nonconforming people—before such a label existed— got together for a grand jamboree of dancing, love making, display, rivalry, drinking and advertisement.”
In other words huge sexual orgies where anything goes.
How appropriate that this will now be the legacy of Donald Trump’s Pedophile Palace, which should be dedicated to Jeffrey Epstein, and all the Conservative Zionist Christians who support him and his pedophile Billionaires.
A flag of Israel and a large Christian Cross should be present in there somewhere. I wonder if popular national Evangelical Pastors and Christian leaders who support Trump such as Pastor Robert Jeffress, Pastor John Hagee, Franklin Graham, Mike Huckabee, etc. will be there to bless the dedication and opening of Pedophile Palace?
Having lost all sensitivity, they have given themselves over to sensuality so as to indulge in every kind of impurity, with a continual lust for more.
You, however, did not come to know Christ that way.
Surely you heard of him and were taught in him in accordance with the truth that is in Jesus.
You were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self, which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; to be made new in the attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness. (Ephesians 4:19-24)
Related:
American Christianity is Becoming More Satanic Every Day as Christians Tolerate Pedophiles [6]
Comment on this article at HealthImpactNews.com. [14]
This article was written by Human Superior Intelligence (HSI)
[15]
See Also:
Understand the Times We are Currently Living Through
Our Duty to Shine the Light into the Darkness and Expose the Evil [17]
Christian Teaching on Sex and Marriage vs. The Actual Biblical Teaching [18]
The United States of America is Cursed for Rejecting the Gospel of Jesus Christ [19]
Exposing the Christian Zionism Cult [20]
The Bewitching of America with the Evil Eye and the Mark of the Beast [21]
Jesus Christ’s Opposition to the Jewish State: Lessons for Today [22]
Insider Exposes Freemasonry as the World’s Oldest Secret Religion and the Luciferian Plans for The New World Order [23]

Identifying the Luciferian Globalists Implementing the New World Order – Who are the “Jews”? [24]
The Brain Myth: Your Intellect and Thoughts Originate in Your Heart, Not Your Brain [25]
Fact Check: “Christianity” and the Christian Religion is NOT Found in the Bible – The Person Jesus Christ Is [26]
The Seal and Mark of God is Far More Important than the “Mark of the Beast” – Are You Prepared for What’s Coming? [27]
The Satanic Roots to Modern Medicine – The Image of the Beast? [28]
Medicine: Idolatry in the Twenty First Century – 10-Year-Old Article More Relevant Today than the Day it was Written [29]
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