Here are excerpts from an article in the April 1, Sun Sentinel, fittingly, April Fool’s Day.
Trump releases first depictions of Miami presidential library
By Douglas Hanks and Claire Heddles, The Miami Herald
President Donald Trump’s foundation released a teaser video for his proposed presidential library in downtown Miami on Monday, revealing plans for a skyscraper with a fully capitalized TRUMP emblazoned atop, a presidential jet in the lobby, an amphitheater where audiences will face a golden statue of the president and replicas of the White House, including the Rose Garden and a ballroom he’s building where the East Wing once stood.
Note: This apparently is not the Trump Foundation that was fined millions of dollars for misuse of charitable funds. It also is not the Trump Organization that was fined $1.6M for criminal tax fraud (CFO Allen Weisselberg was thrown under the bus and went to jail).
And it is not the civil fraud case for which the fine was $450 million+. And, of course, it doesn’t include the $80+ million (and rising) he was fined for sexual abuse and defamation.
There has been no announcement about whether there will be a separate roomfloor building of the library to list all of Trump’s crimes and fines.
The planned tower dwarfs all the surrounding Miami buildings in the rendering. The adjacent Freedom Tower — the former refugee center for Cuban asylum seekers and now a museum — appears about a quarter of the size of the Trump monument.
Because, as every MAGA knows, Trump’s lust for self-aggrandizement is far more important to America than some useless Freedom Tower.
“Miami deserves this building,” Eric Trump, the Trump son who pushed for Florida to give his father’s foundation the land and is helping design the building, said in a statement to the Miami Herald on Monday. “It will be a masterpiece, the likes of which have never been seen in Florida or really anywhere.”
That is true. The Ron DeSantis suck-up-to-Trump effort and the mindless MAGAs deserve the tasteless, monstrosity, especially since Trump has been so complimentary: “Ron DeSanctimonious,” “Dull,” “Lacking personality,” “Not charismatic,” and “Lockdown Ron.”
Trump plans a tower as tall, or nearly as tall, as anything around it in downtown Miami, overlooking Biscayne Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. He has not said what will occupy the upper floors.
In a text message Monday night, Eric Trump said people wouldn’t be living there. “No residential,” he said.
Well, OK, but maybe a penthouse for Trump and his family, another (private) floor for underage girls, and a jail cell for immigrant children?
A replica of Air Force One, the presidential plane, is the showcase piece of the lobby off of Biscayne Boulevard. The government of Qatar is donating to the United States a jet to be used as Air Force One, reportedly with permission for Trump to use the plane once he leaves the White House.
That will be Trump’s gift to his library, a regift for which he paid nothing and will have no use. The lobby might be renamed, The Quatar Room?
And now for the best part: Heroic, giant statues and photos of God Trump.
A goldenstatue of Trump with his fist raised stands on the stage of an auditorium inside the building. The video also has a hint of a Trump statue outside overlooking Biscayne Boulevard.
Trump’s image will be a feature of the exterior of the building, with jumbo video screens showing his face in the footage. The Freedom Tower will be dwarfed by the library tower, which would go up on a parking lot that Gov. Ron DeSantis arranged for its owner, the state-run Miami Dade College, to give away for free for the library.
“Arranged for” is the Trumpian suck-up way of saying “demanded, or else.”
Trump’s library will have a ballroom that appears to match renderings of the ballroom Trump is planning for the White House, on land where the east wing of the White House stood before the president had it demolished.
The Miami tower also features a replica Oval Office and a replica Rose Garden. That appears to include reproductions of at least some of the portraits of former presidents that Trump installed around the garden.
While the footage shows the miniportraits and plaques under them, it does not show whether that will include the derogatory comments Trump used for some predecessors — including representing former President Joe Biden with only an autopen.
A red-white-and-blue spire juts out skyward from the top of the building, above Trump’s name. The video also shows a massive American flag hanging down from the center of the tower.
It’s not immediately clear if the vision in the teaser is possible within the 2.6-acre lot the nonprofit foundation was given at no cost by Miami Dade Colle
The college initially transferred the land to the stthe project during a brief public meeting with no discussion or debate about its planned use. After a lawsuit accused the college’s board of trustees of violating Florida’s public transparency laws, the school took a new vote in December — clearing the way for the state to transfer the land.
Trump’s library foundation was granted nonprofit status during an extraordinarily quick approval process by the IRS.
Much of the public funds the foundation has raised thus far have been through highprofile settlements with media companies after Trump sued them. The foundation is planning to raise nearly $1 billion dollars over the next three years, while Trump is still in office, tax filings show.
There has been no public discussion about whether the Trump Library will contain floors and exhibits related to
The disastrous Iran war, the result of Trump’s unilateral end to the Iran nuclear deal, formally the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action
Those who do not understand economics tend to use the stick rather than the carrot; “Do this or you will be punished” rather than, “if you do this, you will be rewarded.”
Unfortunately, the punishment only harms the economy while helping no one. Here is a classic example from the Sun Sentinel:
Law to encourage economy causing construction delays amid national housing crisis
By Charlotte Kramon, Associated PressIt has a catchy name — Build America, Buy America — and the lauded goal of bringing manufacturing jobs back to the United States. But the law has spurred a bottleneck for affordable housing.Nearly everything from HVACs and lighting to sink hooks in affordable housing projects that get federal dollars must carry the Made in the USA label. But, developers say, numerous products do not, as they have long been imported from overseas markets with cheaper labor costs.
You might think lower prices would be good for America, but politicians don’t. They think in terms of votes, and because they and the working public don’t understand how economics works, they want to force two unnecessary and incompatible goals.
Make products cost millions of American consumers more so that
Thousands of American workers have jobs
See the problem? American workers ARE consumers, so each time the government “aids” a specific working group by forcing prices up, that group, and all other groups, pay more. Do that enough times, and you get inflation, which harms everyone.
It’s the classic “Rob Peter to pay Paul” scenario that union leaders and politicians love to brag about, and the public believes is beneficial.
Although builders can apply for waivers, the process has been at a near standstill as the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which has had its staff slashed by the Trump administration, has only greenlit a handful of projects.
The public has been trained to believe that government is oppressive and that “less is more.” It sounds so wise until the public needs the services that the government provides. Then suddenly, there is hand-wringing.
America is a large nation, and large nations require a substantial government. The chainsaw dismantling of federal departments by Trump/Musk idiocy has caused irreparable damage to our economy.
The waiver process has caused construction delays and hundreds of thousands of dollars in extra costs as the country faces an affordable housing crisis.“They need to be treating this like the fire that it is,” said Tyler Norod, president of Westbrook Development Corporation, which builds affordable housing in Maine. “We’ve sort of resigned ourselves that we’re just gonna build less units across the entire country during a housing crisis.”
Perfect. The political solution to the housing shortage is to build fewer houses.
President Joe Biden signed the Build America, Buy America Act as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act in 2021, building on longstanding efforts to boost American manufacturing at a time when the U.S. economy was emerging from the pandemic-era recession.
Known as BABA, it applies to infrastructure projects funded by federal agencies, not justaffordable housing.
Get it? The government is funding infrastructure projects. This not only pumps growth dollars into the economy, but also funds projects that the private sector would not find profitable.
So far, so good. However, the government imposes restrictions on these projects to ensure that fewer growth dollars are injected into the economy and to prevent the private sector from profiting. What the right hand giveth, the left hand taketh away.
Denver developer Julie Hoebel says she has spent over $60,000 just on a consultant to call suppliers to try to find American-made materials, not to mention the additional labor costs involved. But the waivers she submitted to HUD in November for around 125 materials in an 85-unit building haven’t been approved.
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“If they take much longer then we’ll come to a standstill,” she said. HUD is taking at least six months to approve many waivers. Even BABA advocates agree HUD must grant waivers more quickly and give the industry clearer instructions on how to prepare them, which they note other federal agencies are doing.
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HUD did not address questions from The Associated Press about waiver delays. In a statement, it said it’s committed to “ensuring that federal spending supports America’s industrial base” while “closely monitoring how compliance with these policies impact costs for builders.”
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And blah, blah, blah. Because of the Trump/Musk chainsaw, HUD has neither the time nor the personnel to do its job. It barely has time and personnel to issue platitudes like “ensuring . . .” and “closely monitoring . . .”
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Asked in January about whether the delays and cost increases mean affordable housing should be exempt from BABA rules, HUD Secretary Scott Turner said the agency was said the agency was looking into the issue, but did not provide details.
Yes, it’s the old “looking into it” line, aka the “I don’t care so long as I get paid” line.
The law itself isn’t the problem, supporters say. Unions representing the steel and manufacturing industries say taxpayer dollars should fund American-made materials and suppliers will adjust to meet demand for products that aren’t available.
Yes, that actually is the solution, but for one word: “taxpayer.” Let’s be as clear as possible, here.
FEDERAL TAXPAYERS DO NOT FUND FEDERAL SPENDING.
While state and local governments are funded by taxpayer dollars, the Monetarily Sovereign federal government is funded by dollars it creates at the touch of a computer key — a completely different system.
The federal government neither needs nor uses taxpayers’ dollars.
If the federal government wished, it could spend an additional trillion, or ten trillion, or a hundred trillion dollars tomorrow, and it wouldn’t cost you, the taxpayer, one cent.
So the slightly restated, real solution is: use FEDERALdollars to help fund American-made materials. That would:
Add growth dollars to the economy,
Support American workers,
Not penalize American consumers, and
Help assure that houses get built in America
“You’ve got a system in place that leans heavily on using imported materials to make a better profit,” said Scott Paul, president of the Alliance for American Manufacturing.
“I don’t know if that serves the public good.”
Mr. Paul, what doesn’t serve the public good is forcing millions of American consumers to pay more for thousands of American jobs, when paying is the government’s unique and unlimited ability
Until the public learns what Monetary Sovereignty means, the American people will continue to be abused by economic misstatements coming from thought leaders.
In earlier posts, we have discussed concepts like “self,” “qualia,” and “free will.” We claimed they are illusions created by our brain/body thinking mechanism — very convincing illusions, but scientifically invalid.
The March 14th issue of New Scientist Magazine contained an article that bears on this subject. The opening line of the article captures a major shift in thinking about Alzheimer’s disease:
Alzheimer’s may start outside the brain. Inflammation in organs like the skin, lungs, and gut during midlife may trigger Alzheimer’s disease in later years.
“Alzheimer’s disease has long been viewed as something that originates inside the brain. But an in-depth genomic analysis suggests it may initially be triggered by inflammation in distant organs such as the skin—perhaps decades before a person’s memory starts to decline.
This radical reframing of the condition may explain why Alzheimer’s drugs have been disappointing to date, because they act too late in the disease progression.”
Thinking Isn’t Only in Your Brain — It’s in Your Entire Body
One of our most basic assumptions about thinking is wrong. Thinking does not begin and end in the brain. The whole body thinks. We may imagine the brain as the command center. But the entire body is a vast network of continuous two-way communication.
Immune signals rise and fall; Hormones circulate and alter behavior; The gut communicates with the brain; The skin constantly senses and reports. Signals are always moving—back and forth, across the entire organism.
What we call “thinking” is not located in one organ. It is the ongoing pattern of responses across the whole system.
Instead of “the brain thinks,” consider: stimulus → organized response → integrated response → ongoing chain.
This thinking applies to the entire body. The brain is a major hub, yes—but it is not the origin of thought. It is part of a larger process.
An Alzheimer’s patient may not realize how deeply the disease has altered his thinking; his perceptions are distorted; his conclusions may be wrong. His memory is unreliable.
Yet he still feels: “I am thinking. I am deciding.” From the inside, the process still feels like control. Like all of us, he believes he has free will.
We also do not perceive the mechanisms behind our thoughts, nor do we see the countless signals shaping every belief. Do not experience the lifelong accumulation of stimuli driving our responses.
Yet we too conclude: “I am in control. I have free will.”
If inflammation in the skin can begin altering thought decades before symptoms appear, then the same principle applies more broadly: Our thoughts are the result of processes we neither see nor control.
Hit your thumb with a hammer. Eat an orange. Have a conversation. Experience a loss. Each event alters the system—chemically, electrically, structurally.
Years later, you may hold a belief, make a decision, or express a preference without the slightest awareness of the chain of events that produced it.
The illusion of self and free will
From this perspective, the “self” is not a controller. It is the ultimate illusion — the story the system tells about its own activity. It’s a useful story—but still just a story.
Just as an Alzheimer’s patient cannot see how inflammation has reshaped his thinking, a healthy person cannot see how a lifetime of stimuli has shaped his. The difference is not in kind, but in visibility.
In the same way, the feeling of control does not prove the existence of a controller. The bottom line: Everything responds to stimuli. In living systems, those responses become organized, integrated, and continuous over time.
What we call thought, belief, desire, and self are patterns within that process. The Alzheimer’s patient shows us what happens when the system breaks down. The rest of us experience how convincing the system is when it holds together.
You may feelthat you have free will, but consider these familiar stimuli, many of which you may have experienced.
Lack of sleep: One bad night and people become irritable, pessimistic, and impulsive. The same person, same “self,” produces different conclusions about life. A rested brain plans long-term. A tired brain seeks immediate relief. Hunger: Low blood sugar leads to anger, impatience, and poor decisions. Eat a sandwich, and suddenly the world looks reasonable again. Caffeine: A cup of coffee can increase focus, confidence, and even risk-taking. The “you” before and after caffeine is measurably different. Gut bacteria can have a profound influence on your thinking. Certain gut bacteria are linked to depression and anxiety. Change the gut, and mood can change. Gut microbes influence what you want to eat — sugar, fat, and specific foods. You think you want it. Your gut may be nudging you. It’s one reason why dieting can be so difficult. Fecal transplant studies show that transferring gut bacteria from one animal to another can transfer anxiety levels, boldness vs. caution, and even social behavior. Same brain structure. Different gut → different behavior. Pain: A headache or back pain narrows attention and reduces patience. Chronic pain sufferers often develop different outlooks on life. Prescription drugs: Antidepressants, anti-anxiety meds, and even blood pressure drugs can alter mood, motivation, and decision-making. Hormones:Testosterone, estrogen, and cortisol all affect aggression, attraction, stress response, and confidence. Illness and inflammation Even a mild infectioncan cause “brain fog,” fatigue, and pessimism. The immune system is quietly rewriting your thinking. Noise:Your concentration drops, errors increase, and frustration rises. Heat and cold:Extreme heat increases aggression and reduces cognitive performance. Cold slows thinking and reaction time. Lighting:Dim light can reduce alertness; bright light can improve mood and focus. Brain states → different “selves.” Time of day: Morning vs. late-night thinking can be radically different. Ideas that seem brilliant at 2 AM often look foolish at 8 AM. Stress:Under stress, the brain shifts toward quick, survival-oriented thinking — less nuance, more certainty, more error. Peer pressure: People say things they know are wrong just to fit in with a group. Authority influence: If a “trusted expert” says it, people believe it — even when it conflicts with their own experience. Repetition (the “illusion of truth” ): Hear something often enough, and it begins to feel true. Consider the thought processes of people who watch Fox News vs. people who listen to public radio. Optical illusions:You see something that is not there — and you cannot “decide” to see correctly. Advertising and framing:The same information, framed differently, leads to different decisions. Every salesperson knows this. Childhood experiences:Early rewards and punishments shape adult beliefs and preferences. Trauma:A single event can permanently alter risk perception, trust, and emotional reactions. Habits: Repeated actions become automatic responses — what feels like “choice” is often just rehearsal.
Then, there are all the diseases that affect our thinking. In addition to the aforementioned Alzheimer’s, we have”
Other Neurological diseases affecting memory, judgment, and personality — all change progressively. The person does not choose confusion. It is imposed. Parkinson’sdisease is known mainly for movement problems, but it also causes depression, apathy, and impaired decision-making. Stroke: A small area of brain damage can eliminate speech, alter personality, and change emotional responses Mental illnesses cause depression and anxiety disorders. (harmless situations feel dangerous, bipolar disorder (the same person cycles between grand certainty (“I can do anything”) and deep despair; A urinary tract infection can cause confusion, hallucinations, and personality changes. Encephalitis/brain infections can rapidly alter cognition, behavior, and identity. Hormonal and metabolic diseases: Thyroid disorders (hypothyroidism leads to sluggish thinking, depression) (hyperthyroidism leads to anxiety, agitation)
Every one of these examples shows the same thing: Change the inputs, change the body, and you change the thoughts. If microbes in your intestines can alter your mood, influence your cravings, and change your stress response, then the idea of a self-contained, independent “thinker” is wrong.
You often might say: “That wasn’t really me — it was the caffeine,” or “That wasn’t my belief — it was the lack of sleep.”
If alcohol can change judgment, hunger can change temperament, noise can change reasoning, hormones can change desire, and inflammation can change cognition, then what we call “free will” is simply the name we give to decisions whose real causes we don’t recognize.
You may think you have free will — we all experience that feeling — but it is just nature’s illusion.
What are commonly termed “consciousness” and “free will” are nothing more than stimuli that lead to responses, which in turn lead to more stimuli/responses, in an endless chain. There is no magic. It’s all physics. It’s all stimulus → organized response → integrated response → ongoing chain.