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First of all, you haven't described it. You have simply made an analogy, but not described the thing itself. Also, your analogy just talks about why:
Before and After become exceedingly silly propositions when dealing with time dimensions which exist as part of a universe.
So, you haven't actually described the before or after themselves, other than saying that they are silly.
Also, you are trying to describe the idea of a lack of causality through the use of causality which is simply impossible. You said that when we turn the block with the bands on it, the bands become sideways or backwards, but that has only been proved here in our world of causality. Without cause and effect, the turning of the block would have no effect on the bands, nor would it have on the block itself as there is no cause and effect. Without cause and effect, no matter what you do (cause) nothing will happen (effect).
You also talk about
a timeless, spaceless non-universe
in which there is a cube. A cube cannot exist in a spaceless universe because, as a three dimensional object, it takes up space. You also say that
Your block may be next to an entirely foreign thing, like a table or book. It could be floating in space.
A table and space (to float in) both take up space as well and therefore create a paradox in your spaceless universe that you want to make an analogy for.
But now to get back to my point. While I completely agree with you alway that trying to think about a universe (if it is even that) without causality is a completely preposterous and silly idea, your analogy didn't describe what one would be like. Even in your analogy, you used things such as tables, cubes and space which contradict the idea of a spaceless non-universe and also turned the block which itself requires causality. While I completely agree with your final point that it is silly to think about, your analogy further proved what I was saying in that the human brain is incapable of separating itself from a few core concepts, such as that of causality, and therefore incapable of imagining or describing a world without these concepts.