Donald Trump gets it. While the radical left tears down statues and trashes American history, Trump is busy building. His new vision for Washington is bold — a towering triumphal arch, shining with gold, standing tall in the heart of our capital. This is what real leadership looks like.
Forget the bland, boring designs the elites have tried to shove down America’s throat. Trump’s arch flips the script. Right at the center is a powerful winged figure, torch in hand and crowned—looking just like Lady Liberty, but even grander. This is pure American spirit, and it stands for freedom, hope, and unapologetic strength. Around her are two mighty eagles—America’s own symbol—watching over our nation, ready to soar above the petty squabbles of the radical left.
And let’s talk about those four lions guarding the base. You won’t find any weak, whimpering virtue signaling here. Lions are the kings of the animal world, and that’s exactly how America should see itself: proud, fierce, and unwilling to bow to the globalist mob trying to tell us what to build, what to think, and how to live.
Of course, liberals are already in meltdown mode. They claim it’s “too flashy,” “too nationalistic,” or whatever phrase du jour their focus groups cry out this week. But anyone who loves this country knows that bold symbols are important. Our kids should look up and see glory, not shame. For too long, Democrat-run cities have been happy to erase patriotism and replace national pride with empty, soulless junk. That ends with leaders like Trump.
At the bottom of this mighty arch are the words that send woke activists running for their safe spaces: “One Nation Under God.” Imagine that—a leader unafraid to put faith and unity back where they’ve belonged all along. Maybe the real reason the left is scared is because they know Trump isn’t just building an arch. He’s building a movement. And the cowards tearing down monuments just can’t stand it.
Maybe it’s time the anti-American crowd learned a lesson or two about what makes this country great. Will they keep whining, or will they actually start building something real for once?
Source: Washington Times
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