DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Trump Is Making the 250th Small

June 25, 2026
in News
Trump Is Making the 250th Small

Most Americans seem to understand that the Fourth of July is about something bigger than ourselves. It is about celebrating our democracy and our role as citizens—as equals—in it. George Washington understood what that meant. In his last will and testament, he described himself as “a citizen of the United States, and lately president of the same.” He cherished being an American citizen—a title he and the other American revolutionaries helped to create—holding that status even more dear than the temporary honor of the presidency.

If only Donald Trump understood any of this.

Tonight, Trump made a brief appearance at the Great American State Fair in Washington, D.C., which was supposed to be a 250th birthday celebration for the greatest democracy in human history. He treated it instead as a kind of MAGA mini-rally.

From the start, the  event seemed, at least on television, to have something of a deflated air about it, perhaps because the entertainment lineup was thin. Multiple artists canceled their their participation once they realized that Trump would use the evening for a partisan spectacle rather than a civic celebration. Various musical and choral units of the U.S. armed forces picked up the slack, and some military jets, including a B2 bomber, flew over the crowd, which was nice.

Then Trump delivered a short speech, and managed to bring everything down to his level. Which is to say, a presidential moment that could have been celebratory and grand became, like the character of the man himself, very small.

After dashing off some boilerplate phrases about American history, Trump went for division, grievance, and self-congratulation. He trotted out the usual rally phrases: The United States was once a dead country, everyone was laughing at us, we’re the hottest country in the world, and so on. He took a reality-challenged victory lap on Iran—even as the Iranians, earlier today, told him to pound sand about nuclear inspections. He assured the American people that he would stop “transgender mutilization” and not allow men to play in women’s sports. DEI, Critical Race Theory, the Gulf of America—all the usual red-meat issues from his rallies made appearances.

As one might expect at a celebration of democracy, he also mentioned a random program he likes: making interest on loans for the purchase of American cars tax-deductible. He castigated his predecessors for their shortcomings, and especially for their neglect of the capital. He even found time to rail about the supposed vandals that wrecked the Reflecting Pool. Washington, he said, was now the safest, prettiest, cleanest city in America—all because of him.

Trump did try at various points to read what his speechwriters probably thought were elevated reflections on America and its triumphs. He reeled off hackneyed references to railroads and skyscrapers, name-checked various U.S. military victories, and dropped a bizarre reference to “the storied alleys of Boston,” whatever that meant. (I lived in Boston. I know some of those alleys. “Storied” is not a word that comes to mind.)

To the extent Trump’s appearance was about anything besides Trump, it was about a kind of vulgar nationalism. Trump cannot comprehend patriotism, the love of one’s country. Instead he defaults to nationalism, the sour and hostile glorification of one’s own nation over everyone else’s. He does this because he views the world the way he apparently has viewed most things in his life: as a competition.

It is not enough for him to love America; the United States is not just great, it must be better than all those other places. It has better people, a better military, a better economy. Some of that is true, but a patriot celebrates love of country for its own sake, not as a continual comparison to others. The United States is worth the loyalty of every citizen because of what it is, because of its eternal character. But for Trump, it is great only insofar as it is superior to some other place, because otherwise those other nations are always laughing, taking advantage, and disrespecting us.

All Trump had to do tonight was walk out on the stage and remind the American people that the nation and its ideals are bigger than all of us. He could have told us that we are blessed to live in freedom and plenty. He could have reminded us that the survival of the American experiment, and the freedoms guaranteed in the Constitution, are miracles that bless every person who lives here.

Instead, he told America that he is great, and that because he is great, America is great, and thanks to him, it is now better than everywhere else. And then a handsome man in a bright military dress uniform sang “YMCA” to him, as the president of the United States danced and smiled.

The post Trump Is Making the 250th Small appeared first on The Atlantic.

As More Chinese Own Pets, Young People Stand Up for Animal Welfare
News

As More Chinese Own Pets, Young People Stand Up for Animal Welfare

by New York Times
June 25, 2026

In the video, a man stands on a balcony at night hitting a puppy as it lets out sharp shrieks. ...

Read more
News

Back-to-back powerful earthquakes slam Venezuela, collapsing buildings in the capital of Caracas

June 25, 2026
News

BLACKPINK’s Lisa sparks breakup rumors with billionaire boyfriend after getting emotional during interview: ‘Heartbroken’

June 25, 2026
News

Mexico celebrates magical World Cup win over Czechia at rowdy Azteca Stadium

June 25, 2026
News

Lincoln Memorial’s hidden 15,000-square-foot undercroft opens to the public after a century underground

June 25, 2026
Daily Horoscope: June 25, 2026

Daily Horoscope: June 25, 2026

June 25, 2026
Trump DOJ’s defiance backfires as judges move to revive contempt case: legal expert

Trump DOJ’s defiance backfires as judges move to revive contempt case: legal expert

June 25, 2026
NY charter school heads blast education department in scathing letter: ‘Success has made it a target’

NY charter school heads blast education department in scathing letter: ‘Success has made it a target’

June 25, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026