The Swamp Has Entered Its Algae Era
A green puddle beneath Lincoln becomes the perfect portrait of an administration trying to repaint rot as restoration.
Today’s installment of America versus the receipt comes to us from the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, which has somehow become the most honest body of water in Washington, D.C.
It was supposed to be patriotic blue, because apparently even water must now wear campaign merchandise, but instead the pool has turned green, cloudy, peeling, and deeply symbolic. Trump’s $14.7 million renovation, complete with an “American flag blue” coating and a no-bid contract awarded to a company he said had worked on one of his golf club pools, has become less a restoration project than a 2,028-foot performance review. Within weeks, the water had bloomed with algae, pieces of liner were reportedly coming loose, and the administration responded in the traditional Washington style, which is to blame saboteurs, increase law enforcement, and hope nobody notices the duck paddling through the metaphor.
There are worse things happening, obviously, which is exactly why the pool works so well. It is not the crisis, it is the diorama. A stagnant green puddle beneath Abraham Lincoln is not causing the country’s problems, but it does seem to have been hired as their visual aid.
Across town, the Supreme Court handed the Trump administration another immigration victory, ruling 6-3 that border officers didn’t need to prove by clear and convincing evidence that a lawful permanent resident had committed a crime involving moral turpitude before placing him on immigration parole. The case involved Muk Choi Lau, a green card holder who was stopped after returning from China in 2012, before later pleading guilty in a counterfeiting case, and the majority treated the government’s power as broad enough to move first and prove less. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, joined by the Court’s other liberals, warned that the ruling gives the government what she called a “massive blank check” and can strand people in “immigration limbo” before a conviction ever happens.
That phrase, “immigration limbo,” deserves to be placed somewhere permanent, perhaps engraved beside the reflecting pool once the algae has finished filing its amicus brief. It describes the whole machinery pretty well. You don’t have to be convicted yet, you don’t have to be clearly proved dangerous yet, and you don’t even have to be new to the country, because the point is not due process as much as permission. The government asked how much room it had to move people around inside the system before the facts caught up, and the Court handed over the keys with a little bow on top.
Meanwhile, the Justice Department announced a health care fraud takedown involving 455 defendants, including 90 doctors and other licensed medical professionals, with alleged schemes totaling more than $6.5 billion in false claims. That is real, or at least real enough to take seriously, because provider fraud in Medicare and Medicaid is not some imaginary goblin invented in a focus group beneath a Heritage Foundation conference table. It exists, it hurts patients, it drains public programs, and some of these allegations involve exactly the kind of predatory billing mills and medical profiteering operations that deserve sunlight, subpoenas, and possibly a very uncomfortable chair under fluorescent lighting.
But here is the trick, because there is always a trick. The existence of fraud inside Medicaid doesn’t prove that Medicaid itself is the fraud, no matter how eagerly the administration would like to staple those two ideas together and parade them around like a single animal. CMS’s own 2025 improper payment data said Medicaid’s improper payment rate was 6.12%, and more than 77% of those improper payments were tied to insufficient documentation, which CMS says is generally not evidence of fraud or abuse.
That is the difference between finding a cockroach in the kitchen and declaring dinner illegal. Fraud enforcement is legitimate when it targets the providers, contractors, billing schemes, hospice hustlers, opioid mills, and private companies siphoning public money through the cracks. It becomes propaganda when the administration uses those crimes to suggest that the patient is the thief, the child is the burden, and the home care recipient is somehow the mastermind because they had the nerve to need help while poor.
So yes, prosecute the fraudsters. Chase the shell companies, pull the records, follow the money until the money starts sweating; but don’t let anyone turn a provider crime scene into an excuse to punish a kid with asthma, a grandmother waiting for an aide, or a disabled person whose entire “scheme” is trying to survive Tuesday.
In New York, Maryland, South Carolina, and Utah, voters are also doing their part in the national experiment by walking into polling places and deciding which version of political exhaustion they prefer. New York is especially lively, because Mayor Zohran Mamdani is trying to reshape the city’s congressional delegation with endorsements in several districts, including the race where Rep. Dan Goldman faces former city comptroller Brad Lander, while George Conway and Jack Schlossberg are among the Democrats competing in New York’s 12th District.
This is the Democratic Party’s favorite hobby, which is standing at a fork in the road and forming seven committees to debate whether forks are divisive. The establishment wants discipline, progressives want a spine, donors want reassurance, voters want rent they can afford, and everyone claims to be fighting Trump while arguing over who gets to hold the fire extinguisher. Somewhere in there is a real question about whether Democrats intend to meet the moment or simply admire it from a safe distance while telling everyone how complicated moments can be.
Overseas, the Iran ceasefire is already developing the delicate structural integrity of a gingerbread house in July. Secretary of State Marco Rubio is meeting Gulf allies to reassure them that the United States remains committed to their security after a 60-day ceasefire deal with Iran, while also insisting that no country, including Iran, will be allowed to charge tolls in the Strait of Hormuz. Trump claimed Iran agreed to allow long-term nuclear inspections, while Iran directly denied that such an agreement had been reached, which is not exactly the kind of shared understanding one likes to see in a peace deal involving missiles, oil routes, and several governments that appear to be reading different group chats.
Iran has also said it has no plans to allow International Atomic Energy Agency inspections at nuclear facilities that were bombed, which makes the administration’s victory lap feel less like diplomacy and more like someone announcing the wedding before checking whether the other person has agreed to leave the house.
And because the planet apparently didn’t want Washington to hog the symbolism, Europe is baking under a brutal heat wave. France has recorded its hottest day ever, 40 people have drowned since June 18 while swimming in unsupervised areas, Météo-France placed 54 departments under red heatwave alert, and several countries are dealing with dangerous temperatures, power strain, school disruptions, and emergency services stretched by heat-related illness.
Here at home, NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center is warning that mid-level high pressure could raise the risk of extreme heat from Florida through the Mid-Atlantic and across much of the eastern and central United States from June 30 through July 6. There is a high risk of extreme heat for parts of the Mid-Atlantic from June 30 through July 2, with broader risks stretching through the South, Midwest, Ohio and Tennessee Valleys, Gulf Coast states, Southeast, and Mid-Atlantic.
This is the part where the weather starts testifying. The heat is not an abstraction, the water is not behaving, the courts are expanding state power, the fraudsters are raiding public programs, the politicians are fighting over narrative control, and the administration keeps trying to repaint reality in patriotic colors as if reality won’t peel.
The reflecting pool was built to reflect. That was the whole point, it was supposed to hold the image of monuments, clouds, history, and ourselves long enough for the country to consider what it was looking at. Now it reflects something else, which is what happens when power becomes obsessed with appearance and forgets the engineering underneath.
You can paint the bottom blue, call it restoration, blame the algae on enemies, and send more officers to guard the puddle, but the water will still answer in green.
And honestly, at this point, so will everything else.




Trump's reflecting pool fiasco is the perfect metaphor for the Washington swamp: a no-bid contract, handed to a Mar-a-Lago insider, followed by a predictable algae bloom that anyone who passed elementary school science could have seen coming. Darker surface = warmer water =green slime.
And, honestly, what did they expect from a company called 'Green Water Services"?
Now we have reports of dead birds in the pool. How long before we see conspiracies that the Radical Democrats planted them just to "make the president look bad"?
Too late for that