1/ EXPOSÉ: The Poisoned Legacy of Trump’s East Wing Demolition. A Vanity Project That Threatens the Soul of America, And Public Safety.
In the shadowed corridors of power, where history whispers and accountability falters, a story has unfolded that strikes at the heart of the American experiment. At a time where it’s easy to lose important stories to the constant noise news cycle, we need to amplify this one. On October 20, 2025, the East Wing of the White House, the people’s house, a symbol of democratic resilience, began its swift dismantling under President Donald J. Trump’s directive. What began as a $300 million, some would say vanity project, cloaked as a privately funded ballroom, has spiraled into a potential environmental and political catastrophe. While originally slated to preserve the historic building, a rash decision was suddenly made to level it. This, despite no congressional oversight, no permits being filed, and the public having not been informed. Over four frenetic days, the entire East Wing was demolished, and an estimated 50,000 cubic yards of earth, roughly 4,167 dump truck loads, were excavated and hauled to Hains Point, a public golf course in East Potomac Park, three miles south. The official line from Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt? “Clean fill” for terrain enhancement. The truth, buried beneath layers of haste and hubris, suggests a reckless dump of untested soil, possibly laden with asbestos, lead, and mercury amongst other toxic materials, threatening the health of 100,000 annual visitors, including children.
A Frenzy of Destruction-
This was no ordinary renovation. From October 20 to 23, crews razed the East Wing, its colonnade, theater, and first lady’s offices, under a breakneck schedule that defied reason. Eyewitnesses, captured by Washington Post drones, reported 50–100 trucks rumbling daily, hauling mixed rubble and soil in a blur of activity. The White House, leveraging a government shutdown now in its 24th day, claimed no permits were needed, with Trump aide Will Scharf, also NCPC chair, ruling demolition “exempt” from review. The National Trust for Historic Preservation’s October 21 plea for a pause went unheeded, with a stark violation of statutory oversight. Photos reveal workers spraying water, a nod to dust suppression, but no full PPE or segregated toxic piles. Testing? Impossible in this short timeline. EPA and OSHA protocols demand 1–6 weeks, yet the dirt was spread before labs could reasonably have tested, many of their staff furloughed by the shutdown.
A Pattern Rooted in the Past-
This is not Trump’s first dance with environmental shortcuts. The December 29, 1987, New York Times exposé on his Riverside South project in Manhattan laid bare a similar playbook. There, Trump planned to excavate 1.2 million cubic yards of contaminated rail yard soil, rushing it to landfills amid protests from Hudson Riverkeepers. He secured a variance, promising “controlled removal,” but tests showed toxins exceeding safe levels, risking groundwater pollution. The project stalled, costs soared by $100 million, yet no fines stuck. Fast-forward to 2025: Hains Point, a public park under NPS and congressional purview, becomes the latest dumping ground. The 1987 echo, speed over safety, regulatory dodge suggests a pattern, now amplified by a shutdown that cripples oversight until November, the latest projected estimate for the government shutdown to end. (1/2)
A... scoop? Multiple workers tell me that dirt from the demolition of the East Wing of the White House (to make way for Trump's new $200 million ballroom) is being trucked to the north end of the Hains Point golf course. It will then be used to create new terrain on the course.