General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAmerica 250 debacle on the Mall - my thoughts FWIW
My son, DIL and 2 wonderful grandgirls live in DC. We're there quite often. Prior to that, my bestie moved to DC after college (I moved to Boston and ended up in FL, long story). IOW, I'm pretty familiar with DC, the Mall, the museums, etc.
Oh, and did I mention that SO and I were at the Women's March with our kids in 2017? An experience that changed my life and spurred me on to help found (and be the first elected president of) at Democratic Women's Club in my ruby red FL county.
The debacle of the Trump 250 Ego trip is just pathetic. We were on the Mall in late December, when the temperatures were ridiculously low for the area. It was fricking freezing - and there were many times more people on the Mall then. We were back again in February - ditto.
We've been on the Mall in the dead of summer, granted just heading to our car or the bus after visiting a museum - and there were gobs more people.
In June/July, thousands of school groups are usually on the Mall, doing their 5th grade trips. You can't even get into the the Natural History Museum then. I guess those poor kids lost their chance to TSF's ego trip.
There are always thousands of people on the Mall. It's a wonderful place. I'm always so happy when I'm there.
This American State Fair thing is both hysterical and sad. And disgusting.
TBF
(37,685 posts)Mostly lived in Northern VA and worked in law firms in DC. I haven't been back for many years now, and I think I wouldn't want to visit at all. I'd rather hold on to my memories of how it was. Imagine working during the Clinton admin, so many young and bright people in the private firms and on the hill. Just one example - I was walking back from lunch one day and Robert Reich came out of a building surrounded by people and press (now I watch his Substack every Saturday morning!) - he was a rock star Secretary of Labor back then! Besides working, I did graduate school, and had so much fun spending time at the museums, running around the city, etc. I can't even imagine how horrible it must be now with the agencies in shambles and ICE everywhere.
Shellback Squid
(10,249 posts)good for us tho
mcar
(46,590 posts)Ill never forgive them for destroying this beautiful place, though.
Cheezoholic
(4,160 posts)For many kids across the country these trips to DC are a once in a lifetime event and can take years of planning and funding. I can't imagine being a middle schooler going to my nations capitol and all I see are bulldozers and military troops. It's so sad.
mcar
(46,590 posts)So they can take the trip. Once in a lifetime for so many.
orthoclad
(5,242 posts)was the bipartisan public event, planned for years, that got pushed out of the way by Trump's "Freedom 250" privatized fiasco.
See
https://cdn.bsky.app/img/feed_thumbnail/plain/did:plc:y2jwc6fghlwq6ntmmvgbwmt7/bafkreighejg5sh3clobymv6ih55xbv6wdp35kfpepffss2kn4puzbv4tcy
I don't know how true this particular post is, but it rings true. I've read elsewhere that the public festival would have been like a month-long Folk Life Festival.
from the wiki https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Semiquincentennial
Celebrations are organized by two main organizations at the federal level: the non-partisan congressional America250 Commission created in 2016 and backed by a nonprofit; and the White House Task Force on Celebrating America's 250th Birthday, chaired by Donald Trump and established via an executive order in 2025.[1]
I remember the Bicentennial well (or at least parts of it : > ), and this party ain't nuthin.
progressoid
(53,584 posts)oberle
(475 posts)This stupid crap on the mall now is a joke. I also was downtown for the 1976 Bicentennial fireworks. There were not enough porta-potties, and lots of drunk people, so everyone waded into the Reflecting Pool to pee. Good times.