Everything Is a Toll Booth Now
Rights, medicine, eggs, oil, trade, and even the weather are all collecting fees in the republic’s latest markup window.
There are days when the country feels less like a nation than a series of gates. You pull up to one for medicine, another for groceries, another for fuel, another for trade, another for the weather itself, and everywhere there is a little window with a hand sticking out. Sometimes the person inside wears a suit. Sometimes it’s a corporation. Sometimes it’s a government. Sometimes it’s a foreign military command standing near one of the most important oil corridors on earth, explaining that commerce may continue, provided everyone uses the approved lane.
America has not exactly become more complicated, it has become more itemized.
Today’s installment begins, naturally, with the presidency discovering that public service is much more rewarding when it comes with a crypto wallet. New financial records show that Trump made more than $1.4 billion from cryptocurrency in 2025, according to reporting from The Washington Post, a number large enough to make the old ethics language sound antique, like something stored in a museum next to powdered wigs and the idea of shame.
This is not merely a rich man being rich, which has never been rare in American politics, nor is it merely another entry in the long ledger of presidential self-dealing. It is something more modern and somehow cheaper, a presidency with a checkout screen attached, where public power and private profit stand close enough together that the little card reader starts asking whether you’d like to leave a tip.
Roll Call noted that the disclosure landed just as Senate negotiations over a major digital assets bill were entering a sensitive moment, which is the sort of timing that makes the room go quiet for half a second before everyone pretends the curtains are not on fire. Crypto, once sold as a rebellion against old finance, has now managed to become what old finance always wanted to be, less regulated, more obscure, and ideally parked close to the Oval Office.
From there, the toll booth moves offshore, to the Strait of Hormuz, where Iran’s joint military command warned oil tankers to use Tehran-approved routes or face a “forceful response.” The Strait is one of the world’s most strategically important energy chokepoints, which is a bloodless way of saying that a tremendous amount of modern life passes through a narrow strip of water where men with maps can make groceries, gas, shipping, and diplomacy more expensive before breakfast.
The U.S. military said regional nations had emphasized their commitment to the free flow of commerce through the Strait, which is a noble phrase and also the kind of phrase people use when the flow is no longer feeling especially free. The global economy loves to pretend it is frictionless until one corridor, one canal, one port, one war, one warning, or one bad decision reveals that everything is balanced on infrastructure, weather, and the moods of powerful men.
Then there is trade, because apparently even Trump’s own signature trade deal has now been sent back to the counter for a price adjustment. The United States declined to renew the USMCA in its current form, setting up new North American trade talks and pushing the agreement into a review process that could drag uncertainty across autos, freight, tariffs, supply chains, and every business that has to plan more than six minutes into the future.
The agreement doesn’t vanish overnight, which is important, but the point of a toll booth is not always to stop you entirely. Sometimes it is only there to slow you down, make you nervous, change your route, and remind you who controls the arm of the gate. The whole continent can keep moving, of course, but now everyone gets to inch forward under the cheerful fluorescent light of annual review. And then, because the republic has a sense of humor but not a kind one, we arrive at eggs.
A bipartisan multistate investigation with the Department of Justice found that major egg producers had allegedly coordinated to manipulate egg prices, leading to a proposed settlement involving $3.3 million and more than 50 million eggs for consumers and food banks. New York Attorney General Letitia James said the investigation uncovered an illegal scheme that raised costs for consumers and businesses.
There is something almost too perfect about the eggs. For years, families were told that grocery prices were high because of inflation, supply chain issues, bird flu, labor costs, fuel costs, feed costs, and whatever other invisible machinery had apparently conspired to turn breakfast into a luxury item. Some of that was real, because life is rarely kind enough to offer only one culprit. But then here comes the investigation, looking under the carton, and finding the familiar little toll booth hiding between the shells.
No chicken ever asked to become a symbol of economic precarity. No hen sat down with a spreadsheet and decided the American family had gotten too comfortable with protein. Yet somehow, even the egg aisle began to feel managed by someone who understood that people still need to eat, even when they are angry, exhausted, and already paying more than they should.
Healthcare, not wanting to be outdone by breakfast, has its own booth open today. The Trump administration proposed a rule aimed at stopping hospitals from charging Medicare patients markups on discounted drugs obtained through the 340B program, estimating that the change could save consumers $1.1 billion next year.
On paper, this is the rare policy sentence that sounds like someone found a lever connected to an actual problem. Hospitals buy certain outpatient drugs at steep discounts through 340B, then Medicare patients can still be billed at rates that don’t always reflect those discounts. The administration says lowering those markups could save Medicare Part B patients money, while hospitals are warning that reduced payments could threaten services, particularly at facilities already operating on thin margins.
That is the American healthcare system, a place where even good news has to be read with one eye squinting. Patients shouldn’t be overcharged for drugs hospitals bought at a discount. Hospitals serving vulnerable communities shouldn’t be pushed closer to collapse. Both things can be true, which is exactly why the system feels less like care and more like a collection of trapdoors labeled reform.
Every reform arrives with a lobby. Every savings estimate arrives with a warning label. Every patient stands somewhere in the middle, hoping the people arguing over the mechanics remember that the machine was supposed to help human beings.
And while all this is happening, the weather is collecting its own fee. The National Weather Service warned that dangerous, record-breaking heat would continue across much of the central and eastern United States through Friday, then focus on the East Coast through the Independence Day weekend, with peak heat indices possibly reaching 115 degrees. AP reported that temperatures in the Northeast could climb into the high 90s, with Philadelphia and Boston potentially topping 100, while cities opened cooling centers, extended pool hours, and adjusted holiday plans to keep people safe.
It is hard not to notice the timing. America is preparing to celebrate 250 years of independence under a heat dome, which feels a little on the nose, even for us. The fireworks are planned, the flags are out, the parades are scheduled, and the atmosphere is standing at the edge of the festivities with a clipboard, asking whether anyone has considered the cost of all this pretending.
This is the toll booth republic, not because every fee is the same, and not because every story has the same villain, but because every part of daily life now seems to come with a surcharge that ordinary people are expected to absorb. The presidency has a crypto lane. The oil route has a military lane. The trade deal has an annual review lane. The egg aisle has a price-fixing lane. The hospital has a billing lane. The climate has no lane at all, which is worse, because it simply rolls over the road and asks whether your city has enough cooling centers.
There is no single grand metaphor that explains a country this frayed, but there are patterns, and today’s pattern is not subtle. The gates are multiplying, the fees are rising, the explanations are laminated, and the people collecting the money are very sorry for the inconvenience, though not sorry enough to stop. Please pull forward when ready.




I am utterly disgusted and saturated with Trump and the Federal Government. I cannot stand to see him or hear him and that means tuning out of most news sources except yours. Our whole system of government does not work if a person like Trump can totally demolish it and get away with it. We need to rethink the whole thing.