First Looks Inside Obama's New Presidential Center -- Look Familiar? | WLT Report Skip to main content
We may receive compensation from affiliate partners for some links on this site. Read our full Disclosure here.

First Looks Inside Obama’s New Presidential Center — Look Familiar?


Shoutout to my friend MJ Truth for this one…

The first looks inside the new Obama Presidential Center have recently been released and MJ asks if it reminds you of anything?

The resemblance could not be more clear — great find!

ADVERTISEMENT

First look inside at Obama’s Presidential Center — Remind you of anything?

Estimated at $850 million as of late 2025 (up from an initial $350 million projection in 2018). The foundation has raised over $1.1 billion since 2017 through private donations 🔻 Individuals – Oprah Winfrey – Michael Jordan (over $1 million) – Bill and Melinda Gates – Ken Griffin (Citadel CEO) – J.J. Abrams and Katie McGrath – John Doerr (venture capitalist) – Maya Soetoro-Ng (Obama’s half-sister) – David Plouffe (former Obama advisor) – Deval Patrick (former Massachusetts governor) – John Rogers and Michael Sacks (investment managers) – Thelma Golden (Studio Museum in Harlem director) – Julianna Smoot (former White House social secretary)

🔻 Foundations and Organizations: – Open Society Foundations (George Soros; over $1 million) – Kenneth C. Griffin Charitable Gift Fund – Agnes Gund – Reginald F. Lewis Family Foundation – Lloyd A. Fry Foundation – Robert R. McCormick Foundation

The building sits on 19.3 acres of public land in Jackson Park, leased for $10 over 99 years.

Meanwhile, it’s also ugly as hell on the outside!

More looks inside and out can be seen here:

And about that Vatican….

Why does the whole thing seem to be designed around Serpent imagery?

Really creepy!

Here was a prior report:

ADVERTISEMENT

EXPOSED: The Truth About The Inside of The Vatican

With Pope Francis now dead, I've been digging into the Catholics, the Vatican and the Pope all day....and it's incredible what I'm finding.

And I have to share it with all of you....

I have no doubt this will further anger the Catholics and I'll be flooded with hate mail and hate comments below, and that's ok.

I speak and print the truth and let the cards fall where they may.

It's more important to me that I get the truth out because I don't write articles based on popular opinion or trying not to offend, I write articles to get as much truth out to as many people as possible.

And besides, I'm used to the Catholics being mad at me.  They got super-duper mad when I told them they should stop praying to Mary (and pointed out that Mary cannot hear prayers anyway, so it's really silly in the first place):

Sorry Folks, Mary Cannot “Hear Your Prayers”

ADVERTISEMENT

They did not like that one bit.

And they might not like this either, but here it goes....

Have you ever seen the inside of the Pope's "Audience Hall" at the Vatican?

It's super creepy!

Let's start with this:

Here are those images full screen:

Città del Vaticano, Aula Nervi 08 05 2013 Concerto Straordinario in omaggio a Domenico Bartolucci in occasione dei suoi 96 anni. Orchestra Sinfonica del Festival di Pasqua diretta Boris Brott e Nicola Colabianchi. Coro dell'Accademia Vocale Romana diretto da Lorenzo Macrì. Cantanti: Nausicaa Policicchio, Chiara Taigi, Luca Canonici, Gabriella Sborgi, Armen Karapetyan ©Musacchio & Ianniello ******************************************************* NB la presente foto puo' essere utilizzata esclusivamente per l'avvenimento in oggetto o per pubblicazioni riguardanti la Fondazione Domenico Bartolucci *******************************************************

Can you see it?

The building looks unmistakably like a snake's head!

A giant serpent head!

ADVERTISEMENT

For a religion that starts with a snake tempting Eve in the Garden of Eden, which is almost universally attributed to be Satan, that's a very strange choice for archetecture!

And yes, all of those pictures are real.

I think the green and red ones really make it obvious....

The slitty-eyes on the sides, the two fangs in the middle of the mouth....

You know how sometimes these things are subliminal and you have to really hunt to find the serpent?

This thing is so blatant you have to really hunt to see an Audience Hall!  All I can see is a giant snake!

And sometimes it's not what you see but what you DON'T see.  Does anyone see any crosses in here?

I don't.

Not even one.

They got a big giant serpent but couldn't quite add even a single cross huh?

But that's not all....

Now let's look at the background behind the stage:

ADVERTISEMENT

Full size images:

This is titled: The Resurrection and it's by Pericle Fazzini.

You want to know what I'd call it?

Hellish.

It just LOOKS evil, doesn't it?

It looks like human beings being blown apart and disintegrated by an atom bomb if you ask me!

Here's more from ChatGPT:

The Paul VI Audience Hall (also known as the Hall of the Pontifical Audiences) is the Vatican building often said to resemble a snake's head — especially when viewed from certain interior and exterior angles.

Here’s why people say it looks like a snake:

  • Exterior roofline: When seen from above, the long, curved shape of the building and the slit-like skylight resemble the shape of a snake's head and eye.

  • Interior design: Inside, the two large stained-glass windows on either side resemble snake eyes, and the stage area can be interpreted as a mouth or fangs—especially with the bronze sculpture behind the pope's seat (The Resurrection by Pericle Fazzini), which some claim resembles a snake’s open mouth or tongue.

  • Symbolism theories: Some people tie these visual similarities to broader theories about hidden symbolism or alleged esoteric influences within certain Catholic art and architecture.

The Vatican itself has never officially acknowledged any such symbolism. The Paul VI Hall was designed by architect Pier Luigi Nervi and completed in 1971, with a focus on modern architectural style and practical acoustics for large papal audiences.

And now let's go to Glenn Beck who tells an incredible story of the time he was allowed to go into the Vatican Archives!

Watch here:

FULL TRANSCRIPT:

Glenn Beck:
Yesterday — uh, for Easter — by the way, Happy Easter, Stu.

Stu:
Happy Easter.

Glenn Beck:
Go ahead. Day after... a day after Easter. Yes. 364 days till the next one.

Stu:
Thank you very much.

ADVERTISEMENT

Glenn Beck:
Wow. How do you do that? Are you a mathematician?

Stu:
No, that’s right.

Glenn Beck:
Uh, JD Vance — JD Vance was with the Pope on Easter, and then the Pope dies. That’s all I’m going to say. I’m just going to leave it there. I’m just going to—you draw your own conclusions, America.

No, he had a good conversation apparently with the Pope, and the Pope died. He was, um, very, very sick in the hospital. He had pneumonia.

So we’re back to the... we’re back to voting for a new pope.

Now if I may, let me just tell you a story that I don’t think most in the media even understand. And if they do, they certainly won’t touch it.

But I was there — back in 2013. I think, Rob, what did we decide? It was '12 or '13, something like that. I was at the Vatican. I was supposed to meet with the Pope. I met instead with a bunch of the high advisers for the Pope.

And it was Pope Benedict at the time. And I just want to talk to you about what I learned there — and what we need to understand — on this last pope.

Because there was a quiet coup inside of the walls of the Vatican.

The first public victim of the deep state was not a president of the United States — it was the pope. Wasn’t a priest. Wasn’t a whistleblower. It was Pope Benedict.

Benedict wasn’t just a conservative — although he was a staunch conservative — he was absolutely immovable. He was elected in 2005.

ADVERTISEMENT

He stood for everything the modern world wanted the Church to abandon. He was moral. He had moral clarity. He was a traditionalist and a spiritual authority.

And my first realization that Pope Francis was going to be none of these things was when the media was talking — you know, they kept doing the white smoke and the black smoke — and they finally had, I don’t remember which it was, the white or the black smoke — and it came out and they knew they had a pope.

So they were waiting and they were speculating. Everybody on CNN and ABC — they were all speculating: who could it possibly be?

And they started to speculate, and they would say, “It’s probably this cardinal — oh, he’s a real hardliner. He’s going to be really bad,” blah blah blah blah blah.

Then they finally came up to this pope — I don’t remember what his real name is — but, you know, they mentioned him and they said, “We don’t know much about him.”

And within 10 minutes, everybody on every network started talking about how great he was going to be. He was practically Jesus.

And then when he was named Francis — “Oh see, he is Jesus. Or St. Francis. Take your pick.”

And I remember looking at you and saying, “Oh boy, we’re in trouble. They like him. This guy’s going to be a nightmare.”

So you had Benedict, who would not compromise on life — no surrender on marriage — no applause for, you know, the modern world.

And the globalists hated him. The media called him rigid. Progressives called him dangerous.

And the machine went to work behind closed doors, because that machine is in every government. And make no mistake — the Vatican is a government.

Scandal after scandal, corruption, abuse — all real problems, yes — but they were used to discredit this pope and destabilize his papacy.

And he refused to bend. And then suddenly, in 2013, he resigns.

Now I remember when this happened. Gang, let’s — let’s put this into what we now know.

I had horrible pain in my hands. I had a hard time moving them. I could barely work with them. I couldn’t write or type or anything. I tried everything.

Then I found Relief Factor. Relief Factor is a 100% drug-free supplement developed by doctors, and it’s safe to take daily.

It made a real impact for me and so many others. Try their 3-week quick start now — $19.95 at relieffactor.com.

We now know who replaced him. We now have seen the deep state in governments all across the world.

We’ve seen people being voted for and the deep state didn’t like them, so they say, “No, not him.” We’ve seen them throw people into jail.

Okay. So by 2013, he resigns — and he’s the first pope in 600 years to resign. And it’s because he was too frail. He was too tired.

Biden wasn’t. But Benedict was.

Okay. And yet — he lived for nearly 10 years. He lived. He wrote. He was speaking. He was warning.

He stayed in the Vatican — inside the walls. He stayed in the Vatican. He wore white. He signed his name Pope Emeritus.

That’s not retirement. That’s him not really resigning. That’s resistance. That’s what that was.

And into that void came Pope Francis.

Okay. Immediately, everything about the Church changed. There was global applause. “Oh my gosh — climate change sermons!”

Remember those? They were great.

Doctrinal ambiguity — to the point where Catholics were like, “Wait a minute — what is he saying here?”

Suddenly the Church is less about salvation, more about sustainability. And collective salvation.

Less moral compass — more moral relativism.

And it seemed as though the fix was in.

Now even members of some press overseas were saying this was a coup.

Apparently Benedict left a box. It’s called a “white box,” full of scandal files. And it was not a gift to Pope Francis.

It was a warning. He knew. He saw it coming.

So it wasn’t a resignation. It was a removal from office. A soft coup by the progressive faction inside the Church — who was eager to align Rome with Davos.

And make no mistake — Davos was there. The UN was there. You know, all the global priorities of the UN and Davos were there.

That have nothing to do with God. But now the Church was aligned with all of it.

I remember going — as I said, we were supposed to meet with the pope — and I went and I met with several cardinals. I think the good cardinals.

And I saw stuff that I had never seen before. It was amazing.

I saw the Church as political and spiritual at the same time.

I’m a former Catholic, so I respect the Catholic Church. I also — you know, I’m no dummy.

It is a political organization. I think most churches can, you know, go that direction.

But especially one that’s — you know, what — 2,000 years old? 1,900 years old? I think it could probably go awry from time to time.

And go political. Because that’s what it was for a very long time.

And I remember seeing the guy who I think was in charge. Is Jason out there? See if Jason can come in for a second.

There was a guy — Jason was with me. Can you — Rob, can you open up one of those mics? Do you know...

RELATED:

Catholics Believe You Are Not Saved

Catholics Believe You Are Not Saved

Happy Sunday folks!

Catholics believe you are not saved....

....at least, that is, if you're a non-Catholic Christian.

To put that into context, there are an estimated 2.3 billion Christians on Earth right now, and 55-60% are estimated to be Catholic, with 40-45% being non-Catholic (Protestant, etc.).

So call it roughy 1 billion people who are Christians but not Catholic.

And the Catholic Church believes and teaches you are not saved.

That's not my opinion, that's something I'm learning from the Catholics!  Crazy stuff, I had no idea this is what they believed or taught, but it seems to be the case.

Perhaps I should back up and explain a little bit.....

And I'll start with a disclaimer: I have nothing against the Catholics.  They don't seem to like me very much, but I have always considered them to be brothers and sisters in Christ, branches on the same Christian tree.  But I'm now finding out that may not have been reciprocal.  So I print this more to show you what I am learning about their beliefs based on what they explicitly tell me and on what I then research and verify.  None of this is printed to be mean-spirited or divisive.  Certainly there is no disrespect intended.  It's just the truth of what I have been told from the Catholics themselves.  And that's our mission here, to shine light on truth, and today's light is being shined on what the Catholics believe about non-Catholic Christians.  Not my opinion, we're simply investigating what they actually teach and believe.

It all started when I saw a video of a Priest online saying it was perfectly fine and normal to pray to Mary because.....and I'm quoting him....."sometimes Jesus just gets too busy, so you have to dial up his mom!"

I covered that fully in this article if you want more on that topic:

Catholics Give Most Absurd Reason Yet For “Praying To Mary”

But that article led to 275 comments and dozens of emails from Catholics telling me I was wrong.

They told me it's good and right to pray to Mary.

In fact, they also think it's good and right to pray to Angels.

From what I understand about their comments they also believe it's good and right to pray to "Saints" or to "all the Saints" in Heaven.  As best I can tell, those are two different groups of people, the first being people who the Catholic Church has literally given "Saint" status here on Earth, and the second group essentially being all the Believers who are now in Heaven.

I covered many of the 275 comments and emails in this post here:

The Catholics Are BIG TIME Mad At Me…

Today I don't want to rehash the Pray to Mary/Saints/Angels topic, because we've already covered that.

But I want to discuss something else that arose during that debate...

I started to pick up on something that was kind of subtly boiling right under the surface, and it was basically this idea that Catholics do not believe that non-Catholic Christians are saved.  You know, that group of 1 billion Christians I talked about earlier today.

I asked one (very nice and sweet) reader who was emailing with me if I was picking up on that correctly, is that truly what you believe?

I've redacted her personal information for privacy purposes, but here was her response, see #1 below:

I've had 30-some years on the face of this Earth and I had never known this before!

I knew Protestants and other non-Catholic Christians had some differences with the Catholics, but I always thought they were minor and that we all considered ourselves Christians!

The Protestants believe that, but now I have come to learn the Catholics don't.

Wow!

And I'm not trying to put words in their mouth, this is what they all kept telling me in the Comments and emails.

ADVERTISEMENT

But then I decided to dig a little deeper and I had a chat with ChatGPT about this to see if I was off-base in what I was hearing.

This is where it really gets fascinating....

I asked ChatGPT straight up:  "Do Catholics believe non-catholic Christians go to heaven?"

Simple and direct question, right?

Here's what it told me:

The Catholic Church does not teach that only Catholics can go to heaven. Instead, it acknowledges that non-Catholic Christians can be saved, though it sees the fullness of truth and means of salvation as being within the Catholic Church.

1. Official Catholic Teaching on Salvation

The Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC) teaches:

  • Salvation Comes Through Christ Alone

    • CCC 846: “Outside the Church there is no salvation.”
    • However, this does not mean that only formal Catholics are saved—it means that all salvation comes through Jesus Christ and the Church He established.
  • Non-Catholic Christians Can Be Saved

    • CCC 847: “Those who, through no fault of their own, do not know the Gospel of Christ or His Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere heart and, moved by grace, try in their actions to do His will as they know it through the dictates of their conscience—those too may achieve eternal salvation.”
  • Baptism Unites All Christians

    • CCC 1271: The Catholic Church recognizes that baptized non-Catholic Christians are part of the Body of Christ and share a real, though imperfect, communion with the Catholic Church.

2. Vatican II: Recognizing Other Christians

The Second Vatican Council (1962-65) clarified that non-Catholic Christians:

  • Are truly Christians if they have a valid baptism (Trinitarian baptism: “In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit”).
  • Can be saved because they are connected to Christ, even if they are not in full communion with the Catholic Church.
  • Have elements of truth and sanctification in their churches (though the Catholic Church sees itself as the fullest expression of Christianity).

3. What About Protestant Christians?

  • The Church recognizes Protestant Christians as separated brethren who have real faith in Christ.
  • Many Protestant denominations have valid baptisms, and the Church believes God’s grace works in them.
  • However, Protestants lack full communion with the Catholic Church, meaning they do not receive the Eucharist in the Catholic way and do not accept Catholic teachings on authority, sacraments, etc.
  • The Church hopes for unity with all Christians under one faith.

4. Can Non-Christians Go to Heaven?

  • The Catholic Church does not teach universalism (the idea that everyone is automatically saved).
  • However, it acknowledges that God’s mercy is greater than human understanding.
  • CCC 1260: Those who seek truth and goodness, even if they don’t explicitly know Christ, may be saved through God's grace.
  • This applies to people who never heard the Gospel but lived according to their conscience.

5. Summary: Do Non-Catholic Christians Go to Heaven?

Yes, they can, because salvation is through Christ, not Catholic membership alone.
Baptized Christians are part of Christ’s Body, even if not Catholic.
God’s mercy extends to those who genuinely seek Him.
✔ The Catholic Church still sees fullness of truth in Catholicism and encourages all to be united under one Church.

Wow, that was a lot to take in!

In general, I have always found the more mental gymnastics you have to go through to defend your position, the more likely you are to be further away from the truth.

It's like in business, they say if you can't explain your pitch in 30 seconds (an Elevator Pitch) it's not good enough and not simple enough.

The truth can run very deep, but it's also usually also easy to understand on the surface too.

Anyway, I was a bit confused because ChatGPT seemed to be talking out of both sides of it's mouth.

So I followed up with this question:  "It sounds to me like CCC1260 applies more to people who have never heard the gospel at all, and not really to Protestants."

The response here was also fascinating:



 

Join the conversation!

Please share your thoughts about this article below. We value your opinions, and would love to see you add to the discussion!

Leave a comment
Thanks for sharing!