Show me proof. The only quote I can find that supports this, with no corroborating evidence, is this from the Financial Times - and if you know anything about the Financial Times (look up their "Editorial Stance" on Wikipedia) that should give you pause right away:
Sitting across from Donald Trump in the Oval Office, my eyes are drawn to a little red button on a box that sits on his desk. “This isn’t the nuclear button, is it?” I joke, pointing. “No, no, everyone thinks it is,” Trump says on cue, before leaning over and pressing it to order some Cokes. “Everyone does get a little nervous when I press that button.”
That does even not imply that it's a Button for Ordering Coke. It implies it's an intercom for staff. So even if you believe what this FT reporter says - and I don't - it doesn't even say what the MSM says it does.
It's a button for summoning the Secret Service.
Show me proof. The only quote I can find that supports this, with no corroborating evidence, is this from the Financial Times - and if you know anything about the Financial Times (look up their "Editorial Stance" on Wikipedia) that should give you pause right away:
That does even not imply that it's a Button for Ordering Coke. It implies it's an intercom for staff. So even if you believe what this FT reporter says - and I don't - it doesn't even say what the MSM says it does.