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Trump swaps out Resolute Desk in the Oval Office days after Elon Musk’s son X appeared to wipe booger on it

The White House has ensured that the public is thwarting lasting change.

President Trump has made the iconic determined desk removed from the oval office last week after Elon Musk's 4-year-old son X appeared to pick up his nose and rubbed the desk I ordered.


Elon Musk's 4-year-old son X appeared to wipe out bears with the iconic Oval Office Resolute Desk last week while his father and President Trump were questioned by reporters. Reuters

Young muskion and budding nose archaeologists were tinkering with their full name xæa-12, and sometimes wandering around when he appeared in an oval office with his father and Trump. Government Efficiency Bureau, or Doge.

At some point tot – That mom is pop star Grimes – Famously used by John F. Kennedy in 1961 after swinging his fingers in his nostrils and later used by presidents such as Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, Joe Biden At first glance, it looks like you've wiped out the prize money on the desk. Office.


Clinton from Resolute Desk
The desk was first used by John F. Kennedy in 1961, and later became presidents such as Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and Joe Biden. AFP/Getty Images

Trump, a known jermaphobe, revealed on Thursday in the Truth Social Post that the determined desk was temporarily replaced by a C&O desk.

“This desk, “C&O,” is very well known and used by President George H.W. Bush and others, but is temporarily installed in the White House, but is lightly compensated by Resolute Desk. . It's a very important job. ” Trump wrote.

“This is a beautiful, but temporary alternative!”

C&O stands for Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and was originally built for the owners of the company. It was first used in the 1975 Oval Office Study and was donated to the White House in 1987 by the railway company GSX.

The Resolute Desk is perhaps the most famous and famous desk that adorns an oval office, built from the ruins of the British Arctic Explorer, and in 1880 Queen Victoria presented it to President Rutherford B. Hayes.

This post was contacted the White House for comments.

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