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I just can't let this go. There's a gentleman out here that said they can renovate the White House as long as there wasn't little beams or stress beams in the way, that kind of thing. I just wanted to point out a couple of things real quick. Okay. The White House is registered with the National Register of Historic Places which is the NRHP. It was designated as part of the President Park in 1966 under the National Historic Preservation Act. And the NRHP covers the White House, the executive residence, the east and the west wings and the surrounding grounds. And then on top of that, the local Washington DC statute, the District of Columbia Historic Landmarks, they put it under historical preservation also under the commission of fine arts, CFA and the National Park Service, NPS. So basically, they got to go through, do five things to make everything right. Or four, let's put it that way. The National Historic Reset. They got to preserve and replicate all visible historic fabrics. In review of section 106, the public and integrity consultations, follow the security of interior standards for design, materials and proportions and fully document and effect portions before and after construction. Or in other words, they have to, even when they even do the demolition on that building, they have to preserve all the materials there and reuse them and put everything back exactly the way it was. And they got to go through all these commissions and they got to get special permissions and they got to put out plans and everything else. But yet, none of that was really done. Some of the stuff got started, none of it got completed and they just bulldozed the damn thing down to the ground. So it's more than just if there's an I-beam in place, there's a lot more to preserving something that historical. Summer threes everybody. KB0MAI. 1
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