Restored 3/15/22
THE GOLDEN BOY – It’s Much Bigger than TRUMP
PRINCE GEORGE AND THE ROCKINGHORSE
Bath time… then meet Obama: Prince George becomes star of Kensington Palace party after greeting the leader of the free world while wearing his monogrammed dressing gown and slippers Story and pics here and here |
Prince George Up past his Bedtime Meets President Obama |
The Symbolism of I Pet Goat II, Man’s Broken Heart & Prince’s Rocking Horse |
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InformedChristians’ video: Edge of Trafalgar |
I realize this video is almost 47 minutes long, but it is jam packed with excellent information you need to know. I hope you take the time to watch the whole thing. |
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This statue, found in Trafalgar Square, was unveiled during the 2012 Olympics by then Mayor of London Boris Johnson who is known as the Golden boy.
Elmgreen and Dragset’s ‘Powerless Structures, Fig. 101’ depicts a classically proportioned young boy atop a flat rocking horse.
The 4.1m high statue is the fifth contemporary artwork to adorn the empty plinth in the Fourth Plinth Project series, which has become an annual fixture in the London culture calendar and is considered a great honour for an artist.
Powerless Structures, Fig. 101 is a twist on a traditional equestrian portrait, the artists say, because instead of celebrating military victory and commemorating fame, it acknowledges the “heroism of growing up”.
“it praises the child’s spontaneity and its playful approach to life”.[16]
The following statues are all known as The Golden Boy. |
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Donald Trumps 66th floor penthouse exposes his idol – Apollo son of Zeus Amazing insight into Donald TRUMP Must see! HERE, HERE and HERE |
Age of Aquarius = Age of Homosexuality |
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Donald Trump’s 66th Floor Penthouse Exposes His Idol ‘Sun God’ Apollo, Son of Zeus
SCOTT FRANCES/OTTO
It is a home that gives 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue a run for its money.
Republican presidential candidate and billionaire businessman Donald Trump hopes to move into the White House, but his New York City penthouse may be difficult to kiss goodbye.
Trump Tower sits on Fifth Avenue and is home to The Donald’s business as well as his three-level, 66th floor penthouse. It boasts breathtaking views of Central Park and over-the-top decor – starting with the gold and diamond front door that greets visitors.
Inside is an almost literally dazzling scene: floor to ceiling marble, ceilings painted with scenes from the classical Greek myths – and some surprisingly homely touches.
The penthouse is currently home to Trump, his third wife Melania, 45, and their son Barron, 9. He also has four elder children, Donald Jr., Ivanka, Eric and Tiffany – with his daughter Ivanka set to hit the campaign trail for him soon.
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Lap of luxury: Donald and Melania Trump’s New York City penthouse is on the 66th floor of Trump Tower and features marble walls, floors and columns throughout. 24-carat gold accents like platters, lamps, vases and crown molding that outlines each room and tableau ceilings
Art of the deal-maker: Classical art dominates here with a bronze of Eros and Psyche, one of the great love Greek love stories, and Apollo led by Aurora – the Greek goddess of the dawn, suggesting Trump sees himself the mold of Apollo, Zeus’s son, and one of the most powerful of the gods. But there is also family time with on the far right a portrait which appears to show his father Fred Trump, and possibly his siblings. His father also features on the central table, while the choice of book is expensive – it is worth $15,000
Perfect symmetry: Candelabras, two candy bowls as well as a Vogue and Vanity Fair book are placed strategically on each coffee table. On the ceiling is another classical reference. The chairs are Louis XIV-inspired, in common with the apartment
The Midas Touch: Donald and Melania’s breakfast room is packed with intricate details including a gold rimmed glass of orange juice sitting on top of a gold tray, a gold-rimmed tea cop, and an antique clock. The furniture is also Louis XIV
All about the details: A fountain sits in back of the Trump’s sitting room behind a semi-circle, ivory couch. A crystal chandelier lights up its beauty as it is planted on the tableau ceiling above. It shows a scene of Greek – or Roman – gods and seems likely to be Apollo again, who is often portrayed crossing the heavens in his chariot
Melania’s office: A Louis Vuitton case of jewelry sits on couch as a reproduction of Renoir’s ‘La loge’ painting is hung from the wall above. The original is in the Courtald gallery in London. La loge means the theater box and some art historians argue that the woman represents a mistress rather than a wife being taken to the theater. Renior painted it aged 33, when he was in dire poverty, and it was exhibited in 1874 at the first Impressionist Exhibition in Paris. A rather more modern feature on her desk is colored pencils – possibly with her son in mind
Family affair: A side-table is covered in pictures of Trump, Melania, the couple together and (center, right), their son Barron
Ivanka Trump gives rare glimpse into her childhood room:
Grand jewels: Melania designs and sells a collection of watches, rings, bracelets and earrings for QVC that range in price from $10 to $162. They all feature her signature ‘M’. Here they are shown in her Louis Vuitton jewelry case that has a price tag of nearly $10,000. Her style mimics pieces that she herself owns such as the sun design flower earrings and a gold-linked watch. She often uses mother of pearl and pave-style crystal accents in her watches
The elegance and perfection of Trump’s penthouse was the creation of designer Angelo Donghia – also referred to as ‘the Saint Laurent of sofas’.
The renowned designer became a powerhouse in the 70s and 80s working with A-list clients such as Ralph Lauren, Barbara Walters, Mary Tyler Moore, Liza Minelli, Neil Simon and Diana Ross.
He was said to have created total environments – using the philosophy ‘You should feel at all times that what is around you is attractive… and that you are attractive.’
Donghia received several awards throughout his lifetime including the Tommy Award for Fabric Design.
He died in 1985, age 50, and was posthumously inducted into the Interior Design Hall of Fame.
Donghia’s trademark featured attention to ceilings and ‘fat’ furniture.
When it came to creating the ultimate luxurious home for The Donald, he kept Louis XIV in mind while picking furniture and textiles.
Louis XIV led the absolute monarchy during France’s classical age, ruling from 1643 until 1715 – and was known for his aggressive foreign policy.
His political principles were not quite in line with democracy, as he ruled with complete control over the country and was known as The Sun King.
Whether he actually said ‘L’etat, c’est moi’ (I am the state) to the country’s parliament is doubtful, but the inspiration for a businessman who refers to his Trump companies as an ’empire’ is certainly.
The monarch was also known for his over-the-top decor. Louis XIV transformed his father’s modest hunting lodge and transformed it into Versailles, the largest palace the world had ever seen.
It was home to his court, the richest and most decadent of the era – and known, like Trump, for its gilt and its gold.
Designers took typical wood furniture and added shine to it – with gilt, bronze or solid silver, and it was all enhanced by lots of candlelight.
Much of his interior decorations showed off his political supremacy – for instance, the Hall of Mirrors was painted with depictions of various military victories he commanded.
That style is reflected in Trump’s grandiose penthouse with 24-carat gold accenting the tableau ceilings, crystal chandeliers and the desk sitting in Melania’s office.
In the breakfast room, a cup of tea and orange juice served in a gold rimmed glass sit neatly on a gold platter.
And the golden delight doesn’t stop there; there are lamps, vases, crown molding and even golden cherubs that help to complete the posh modern-day palace.
In the sitting room, a fountain sits behind one of the two semi-circled, ivory couches.
Vogue and Vanity Fair books are placed strategically on each table, two candy bowls and candelabras polish it off. Everything is in perfect symmetry.
The Trump family coat of arms, a family portrait and an individual picture of Donald’s late father Fred are proudly shown off in another sitting area inside of the penthouse.
The billionaire also has ‘GOAT: A Tribute to Muhammad Ali’. The book was limited to 1,000 individually numbered copies, each one signed by Muhammad Ali and Jeff Koons. Its estimated value is $15,000.
And it appears the Trumps have a taste for art and some rather risqué statues.
Sitting above the white marbled fireplace is Apollo, Zeus’s son, and one of the most powerful of the gods – being led in his Chariot by Aurora.
And on top of the mantle – Greek vases in Athenian style. They sit again, in perfect symmetry – and in height order with the other decor.
A statue of Eros & Psyche – one of the best love stories in classical mythology – towers over the picture of his father.
His 9-year-old son Barron also enjoys the finer things in life – placed right on the marble floor is a red Mercedes toy car along with a personalized license plate for the youngest Trump.
Donald developed Trump Tower, which was completed in 1983. It is home to not only the billionaire businessman but also to retail stores and other businesses.
He has used it as a platform for his presidential campaign, last week signing copies of his latest book in the lobby, and also holding a press conference there after signing an agreement not to run an independent campaign if he does not win the Republican nomination.
Celebrities like actor Bruce Willis and Portuguese professional soccer player Cristiano Ronaldo have also called it home.
Vanity: Louis XIV’s Hall of Mirrors in Versailles was painted with depictions of various military victories he commanded
Sweet escape: The Trump family often spend weekends and vacations at the resort in Palm Beach, Florida
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3303819/Inside-Donald-Trump-s-100m-penthouse-lots-marble-gold-rimmed-cups-son-s-toy-personalized-Mercedes-15-000-book-risqu-statues.html#ixzz3r8ysS7GF
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Inside Donald and Melania Trump’s Manhattan Apartment Mansion
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Take a look inside Donald Trump’s opulent Manhattan Penthouse. Located at the Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York, Donald and Melania Trump live on the top three floors of this grand penthouse with breathtaking views of Central Park and Manhattan.
The Trump apartment, decorated in 24K gold and marble, was designed by Angelo Donghia in Louis XIV style.
The stunning penthouse apartment is the epitome of elegance and perfection.
Via: Refinery29, Photographed by Sam Horine
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All of Donald Trump’s Houses, in Photos
From Palm Beach’s Mar-a-Lago to Seven Springs in Bedford, New York, here are all of the president’s own properties.
According to an ongoing analysis by NBC News, President Donald Trump has now spent more than a year’s worth of days at a Trump property since taking office. This amounts to nearly a third of his 3.5-year-long presidency.
Just last week, when his younger brother Robert Trump was hospitalized, the president visited him on Friday, August 14th, at Manhattan’s New York-Presbyterian. On Saturday, August 15th, Robert Trump passed away—earlier that day, the president was photographed playing golf at his Bedminster, NJ club. (While it’s widely known that Trump plays a lot of golf—not even a pandemic could stop him from hitting the links—it has been harder to track this activity as his administration often tries to conceals his golf outings.)
Moving into the White House in 2017 granted him access to Camp David as a country retreat, but Trump already had an array of impressive properties at his disposal. And judging by all the trips he’s taken to them as president—costing taxpayers millions in the process—he clearly prefers his own places to a government-issued one.
Here’s a survey of Trump’s personal real estate portfolio.
Trump Tower Penthouse, New York City
Trump’s New York City residence is a gilded, three-level penthouse 66 stories up at the top of Trump Tower, his skyscraper at 725 Fifth Avenue. (Barron, his 14-year-old son, reportedly has a floor all to himself.) His offices were also in the building, so living and working at the same address was not new to him when he moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. The White House decor might be a bit subdued though, since the penthouse was modeled after the Palace of Versailles, with rococo decor and a profuse amount of gold.
Trump took Forbes on a tour of the penthouse during the presidential election and told the publication that it was the “best apartment ever built” and bragged about its 33,000-square-foot size and estimated value of at least $200 million. The trouble is, according to Forbes, “those comments were typical Trump: boastful and inaccurate.” The residence is actually 10,996 square feet and worth an estimated $54 million.
Check it out in the video tour, from an old episode of The Apprentice, below.
In May 2019, Bloomberg reported that Trump Tower had become one of the least desirable condos in New York City for its association with the president. Not only are protests a frequent sighting by the entrance, but in July of this year, the city painted “Black Lives Matter” in giant block letters on the street in front of the building. Mayor Bill de Blasio, who was there for the occasion, said, “Black lives matter in our city, and Black lives matter in the United States of America. Let’s show Donald Trump what he does not understand. Let’s paint it right in front of his building for him.”
Mar-a-Lago, Palm Beach
It comes as no surprise that Mar-a-Lago is where the president has spent most of his 378 days at a personal property (he has so far spent 133 days there). In 2014, Trump proclaimed that the 128-room mansion built by cereal heiress Marjorie Merriweather Post in 1927, is “the great estate of Palm Beach.” He has also taken to calling it the “Winter White House,” despite the fact that it is not a publicly owned or maintained building and is something of a security nightmare. Nevertheless, he has used the private club for official business, such as when he hosted President Xi Jinping of China in 2017 for a two-day summit.
Interestingly, Post had always wanted Mar-a-Lago to become a public property. She donated it to the U.S. government upon her death, but in 1980 it was returned to Post’s daughters because of the $1 million in annual maintenance costs. Trump bought the 17-acre property for $5 million in 1985 and turned it into a private club ten years later, adding a 20,000-square foot ballroom with $7 million of golf leaf and spending $100,000 on four gold-plated sinks.
Today, the privilege of hobnobbing with Trump as a member reportedly involves a $200,000 (up from the pre-election rate of $100,000) initiation fee plus yearly dues of $14,000 and annual food minimum of $2,000. Trump made $15.6 million from the club in 2014.
In 2017, the Government Accountability Office tried to accurately calculate how much the president’s frequent Mar-a-Lago visits were costing taxpayers but failed to get the full picture because the White House declined to provide more information. They did conclude, however, that four trips the president had taken to Mar-a-Lago over one month in 2017 had cost at least $13.6 million.
In addition to Mar-a-Lago, the president has three additional homes in Palm Beach that are collectively worth $25 million.
Trump National Golf Club, Bedminster Township, New Jersey
Arguably the president’s second favorite retreat after Mar-a-Lago, the Trump National has been dubbed the “Summer White House.” He has also taken to calling his trips there “working vacations.”
While the main house of the Bedminster, New Jersey, property is a private club open to members (at a reported cost of $350,000), the Trump family owns cottages on the property. Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner got married there in 2009, and they won an application to expand their cottage by 2,200 square feet in 2015.
Trump loves the area so much he once wanted to be buried there. (He has since allegedly switched his intended resting place to Florida.)
In 2018, it was revealed that Trump staffers received member discounts (of up to 70%) at the club’s pro shop—reportedly Ivanka’s idea—alarming the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics, a government ethics watchdog in D.C.
Seven Springs, Bedford, New York
As one of Trump’s more under-the-radar residences, Seven Springs has 60 rooms—15 of which are bedrooms—in addition to a bowling alley and three pools. He reportedly paid $7.5 million for the property in 1996 and planned to turn it into a golf course but it has remained a private house to this day (probably because of vehement opposition to the plan from local residents). Today the property is worth $24 million, according to Forbes.
Bedford is about 45 miles north of New York City, and the Trump family seems to use the 50,000-square-foot house, built in 1919 by former Federal Reserve Chairman and Washington Post publisher Eugene Meyer (he was the father of Katharine Graham), as a weekend and summer getaway. Trump reportedly, and perhaps unwittingly, allowed the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi to stay in a tent there during the United Nations General Assembly meeting in 2009 when no hotels would allow Gaddafi as a guest.
Here’s another video tour to check out:
Trump Winery, Charlottesville, Virginia
Trump Winery has a long and strange history (read all about it here). To summarize, Trump paid the “bargain-basement price of $8.5 million on a deal that could ultimately be worth $170 million,” netting him 1,100 Virginia acres, including the vineyards and winemaking operation “that had been meticulously cultivated by its previous owner, Patricia Kluge (who defaulted on her loans, after which the property was seized by Bank of America). He installed his second-oldest son, Eric, as president of the nascent Trump Winery.
Today, the 23,000-square-foot, 45-room main building, Ablemarle House, is part of the Trump Hotels brand (a recent search showed rates starting at $299 per night). And while Trump said at an August 15 press conference that he owns “one of the largest wineries in the United States,” the winery’s website itself states that it “is a registered trade name of Eric Trump Wine Manufacturing LLC, which is not owned, managed or affiliated with Donald J. Trump, The Trump Organization or any of their affiliates” (head here for more on that claim).
Elsewhere in the state, Trump owns two homes in Sterling, Virginia (close to the Trump National Washington D.C. golf club) that are worth $1.5 million.
Le Château des Palmiers, St. Martin
President Trump put this walled Caribbean compound on the market in the spring of 2017 with a reported listing price of $28 million, which was soon dropped to $16.9 million. Le Château des Palmiers, which Trump bought in 2013 and has used primarily as a rental property, includes nine bedrooms and 12 full bathrooms. There are two villas, in addition to pool cabanas and an estate manager’s house, on the five-acre estate.
The property also features “a huge heated pool, an open air and air conditioned fitness center, a tennis court, and covered outdoor bar, [and] billiards and dining areas,” according to the original listing.
Rental prices reportedly start at $6,000 per night in the low season for the smaller of the two villas and go up to $28,000 during the winter holiday season.
There is no information on whether the property has since sold, but it is still on the Trump Organization’s website and Forbes estimated it to be worth $13 million in October 2019.
Where It All Began: Donald Trump’s Childhood Home in Queens, New York
The 2,500-square-foot house, which the president’s father built in 1940, was, for a short while, available to rent for $725 a night on Airbnb.
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Who Is Donald J. Trump? Do You Really Want To Know?
I find it very intriguing that these two gentlemen happened to be key players on the scene as the NWO introduced these new Temples of Baal. Don’t you??
SON OF ZEUS
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APPOLLO THE SUN GOD Trump a “GOLDEN BOY” at 33 |
These two gentlemen are symbols. They were both very strategically in place at the time of the raising of the ARCH of BAAL. Symbolically they represent the raising of APOLLYON/NIMROD. No, neither one of these men is the ANTICHRIST, but they are part of the Magick Working that is happening right now, around the world. The Devil knows his time is at hand and he is VERY BUSY preparing the way for his grand entrance.
Even though Trump was not physically present at the raising in NY, NY, it took place in “his town”. Not to worry, they had another fair-haired boy to do the honors, IDA executive director Roger Michel.
NASA’s Abaddon, Apollyon, I mean Apollo Program Celebrates 50 Years of Duping the World!
Please, click to continue to Part 5.
also see: The Other Golden Boy