From Shutdown to Showdown: Trump’s Trillion-Dollar Circus
Government services grind toward collapse while the Commander-in-Chief rants about “fat troops,” golden paper, and 3,000 years of war.
Good morning! The Capitol spent yesterday rehearsing for calamity. Democrats and Republicans filed into the White House, where Trump and Vice President JD Vance treated the looming shutdown like another chance to rehearse the blame game. Vance declared Democrats were “holding a gun to the American people’s head,” which was rich coming from an administration threatening not just furloughs but permanent layoffs of federal workers. Schumer and Jeffries, meanwhile, rolled out human stories, families facing $400-a-month premium hikes, mothers watching their kids with cancer lose care, only to find Trump blinking back at them as if he was hearing about America’s healthcare crisis for the very first time. Republicans left muttering about “clean bills,” Democrats left swearing off cave-ins, and the rest of us are left staring down the barrel of a shutdown designed not just to squeeze but to dismantle the civil service.
As if that weren’t enough, Trump then decamped to Quantico, where Pete Hegseth summoned the nation’s generals for what was billed as a summit and staged as a pageant. Hegseth warmed up the room by sneering that “it’s tiring to look at fat troops” and complaining about “fat generals” wandering the halls of the Pentagon, because nothing says warrior ethos like body-shaming your own command. He promised to gut the Equal Opportunity program and neuter the Inspector General’s office so that future complaints of racism or sexual harassment can be dismissed as “frivolous.” He even tried a joke, “We’re not talking hot yoga and stretching – real, hard PT,” which landed about as gracefully as a Humvee in a swimming pool.
Then came Trump, striding in late to a roomful of stiff spines and balding heads. “I’ve never walked into a room so silent before,” he said, before warning the brass that they could laugh, applaud, or even walk out if they wished, though, he added, “there goes your rank, there goes your future.” The President as stand-up comic, with the punchline always a threat. From there it only unraveled: Trump declared that Israel and Palestine have been at war for 3,000 years, bragged that he had “solved eight wars,” and unveiled a plan to spend a cool trillion dollars on defense in 2026. He rambled about the “Gulf of America,” rhapsodized about “beautiful paper” with his golden signature, and introduced his latest linguistic innovation: nuclear is now “the N-word,” one of two, he assured the room, “you can’t use.” This, to a captive audience of admirals and generals who must have wondered how their careers landed them as extras in the reality-TV remake of Dr. Strangelove.
Meanwhile, the Gaza “peace plan” was still hanging in the air like stage fog. Trump and Netanyahu unveiled it with the gravitas of a season finale: hostages freed in 72 hours, an end to the assault, even a pathway to Palestinian self-determination, though Netanyahu promptly vowed he’d never allow a Palestinian state. Hamas, who hadn’t been invited to the unveiling of their own fate, muttered they’d “study” the deal. World leaders, desperate for any sign of an end to the carnage, applauded politely. But the truth was obvious: this was another performance, a deal without a partner, a mirage conjured for the cameras.
And while Trump and Netanyahu were congratulating themselves for “isolating Hamas,” a very real act of defiance was underway on the Mediterranean. The global Sumud flotilla, more than fifty boats strong, continued its voyage toward Gaza carrying food, medicine, and activists from forty-four countries. They’ve already endured drone harassment and explosions at sea, yet keep sailing. International coverage frames them as desperate humanitarians risking everything to break the siege; Israeli media, by contrast, insists darkly on Hamas ties, a smear that conveniently erases the doctors, clergy, and civil society workers on board. To the people of Gaza, who report life has become “unbearable, no food, no drinks, no clothes,” the flotilla is a lifeline.
Back at home, Portland found itself once again cast as Trump’s domestic war zone. A text exchange obtained by OregonLive reporters showed Trump dictating through his assistant: “They attacked our ICE Patriots … Portland has been an unmitigated disaster for years. I won’t let that happen in America!” Governor Tina Kotek, not amused, texted back that the deployment of Oregon’s National Guard without her consent was “unlawful and unwarranted.” The theater is obvious, Trump paints American cities as failed states, then swoops in with federalized troops to prove his point.
If you still had the stamina to check his social media feed after all that, you were greeted with AI slop of Democratic leaders in sombreros, QAnon “medbeds” promising alien cancer cures, and endless emails signed off like scripture: the mighty hand of God guiding this movement. All while coffee prices double, Kushner launders Saudi billions through video game acquisitions, and Trump’s family toasts their golden age in 90,000-square-foot ballrooms.
So here we are: a shutdown looming, a military conscripted into photo ops, Gaza turned into a prop, Portland occupied by presidential text message, and the Commander-in-Chief musing about the “two N-words” while bragging about his gold-embossed stationery. Governance has given way to spectacle, and the only thing being solved in real time is how much humiliation the generals can endure before their hearts sink and they take Trump’s advice: resign.
On a personal note, I’ll admit the last week has been emotionally exhausting. The torrent of shutdown brinkmanship, Gaza theatrics, and Quantico spectacle has left me scrambling just to keep up. I’m happy to say, though, that help has arrived: I now have an assistant and proofreader keeping me honest, catching the typos, and making sure my snark doesn’t outrun my syntax. Once the full transcripts of today’s military meeting are released, (Trump is still speaking as I write this), I’ll circle back with a proper write-up. For now, let’s all take a breath, we’ve just watched history performed as farce, and the encore will no doubt arrive by tomorrow’s news cycle.
My big hairy question is: what are the enlisted folks thinking and feeling about all of this- the big meeting today and the National Guard troops sent to control citizens? Are they speaking to anyone anywhere? I'd really wish to hear about the conversations, impact and perspectives from these fine folks who make sacrifices for very different causes than the ones for which they are currently being used.
Mary, I honestly don’t know how you manage to turn out such high quality writing every day. You are amazing. I watch from the other side of the world and wonder in astonishment at how he still has an approval rating of 40%????