Happy to as long as it is a good faith discussion.
If you want it to be a good faith discussion, then you should probably come prepared to explain why private funding of a public facility -- especially the WH! - is a good thing?
Because the law normally doesn't allow it. Not just our law, either. As far as I know, no western government allows private actors to fund public projects without express authorization from the legislature or Parliament.
Now, maybe you think that's dumb. But since every country does it, and it's never been controversial, obviously the prohibition has some merit. And if you can't address that merit, then you can't have a conversation.
The starting point for every policy discussion is the rationale for the policy being discussed. Here, let me show you about tariffs. It is obvious that the tariffs have raised prices and hurt consumers. Does that make them idiotic? NO. Because maybe they accomplish something more valuable. For instance, onshoring jobs. So when I criticize the tariffs, I have to address that rationale. Which happens to be easy -- Trump's tariffs do nothing to onshore jobs because they are ill-suited for the task. If you want factories to be built here (either domestically or foreign countries) you have to make it appealing. That means you'd want cheap steel, cheap aluminum, cheap energy.
To lure business, you'd want tariffs (Trump's policy) and, say, lots of renewable energy that can come online quickly. And that's the problem. Tariffs aren't magic. They can't create jobs without support. And nobody in this administration provides that support. Indeed, they are undermining that support. They are tariffing the steel, closing the wind farms, defunding solar power, etc.
Get it? If you can't explain -- in your own words, to demonstrate understanding -- why the private ballroom should be ordinarily disallowed, then you're not having a serious conversation. After that, you can tell us your reasons why that general rule doesn't apply here.