NORTON META TAG

13 June 2025

Trump's misuse of the military in LA and Washington D.C. & What Orwell thought of military parades 11&13JUN25


20 APRIL 1939

DEMAND PROGRESS reports on how this Army anniversary parade came about and it is followed by a fascinating perspective on military parades and the "leaders" who demand them from George Orwell, yes, 1984 George Orwell from the Washington Post.....

Trump's misuse of the military in LA and Washington D.C.

The Washington Post reports that the military planned to celebrate its 250th anniversary with a modest event in Washington — roughly 300 troops and a ceremony.1 Then, Trump got elected and decided to turn the whole thing into a costly, grotesque show of authoritarianism on his birthday. He said that any protesters at his military parade will be met with “very heavy force.”2

300 troops turned into 7,000 troops. Tanks, military jets, missiles and rocket launchers were added.3 Trump’s parade will cost taxpayers well over $45 million.4 As Trump floods the streets of Los Angeles with the National Guard and Marines, he’s going ahead and filling the streets of D.C. with a military display that has no place in a democracy.

While Trump wastes money on his birthday parade, his budget cuts are taking away benefits from veterans, military families, and many others across the country. ICE is raiding our cities and taking immigrants away from their families and communities. The White House continues defying court orders. This is an anti-democratic regime preparing to march the military through the streets — wasting taxpayer money and abusing its power.

Trump has shown an unwavering commitment to targeting his political enemies and carry out his extreme right-wing polices — like mass deportations. A military parade is a strongman’s show of strength, to continue Trump’s march towards autocracy.

Sources:

  1. Washington Post, “How Trump finally got the military parade he always wanted,” June 7, 2025.
  2. NBC News, “Trump warns that military parade protesters will face 'very heavy force,'” June 10, 2025.
  3. Axios, “Scoop: Rocket launchers, missiles to be featured in Trump's Army parade,” June 7, 2025.
  4. The Intercept, “Expect Trump's Military Parade To Cost More Than The Army Says,” May 29, 2025.
Members of the U.S. Army 1st Calvary Division on a M1A3 Abrams tank in West Potomac Park ahead of Saturday’s parade. (Matt McClain/The Washington Post)

The display marks an unusual moment in a country that traditionally doesn’t do the type of military parades that are annual occurrences elsewhere, with tanks rolling down boulevards and intercontinental ballistic missiles wheeled out in a show of force. To be sure, there’s widespread respect accorded to the U.S. military and its veterans in many arenas of American life, not least in arenas and stadiums where homages to the troops precede most sporting events.

When Trump reportedly came up with the idea of staging his own parade after attending France’s Bastille Day celebrations during his first term, it was met with a degree of incredulity from Republican colleagues. The United States has the world’s biggest military footprint and doesn’t need a martial celebration to project its power across the globe, suggested Sen. John Neely Kennedy (R-Louisiana) in 2018. “America is the most powerful country in all of human history, everybody knows it, and we don’t need to show it off,” he said.

 

Seven years later, Trump finally gets to show it off. The parade is happening on a day that commemorates the Army’s 250th anniversary and, coincidentally, Trump’s birthday. Kennedy remains skeptical — “We’re a lion, and a lion doesn’t have to tell you it’s a lion,” he told reporters this week — but a loyalist GOP won’t thwart the effort, even as it seeks to slash critical funding on all sorts of other federal programs. Rep. Derrick Van Orden (R-Wisconsin) told my colleagues that “you cannot put a price tag on patriotism. You cannot. And celebrating arguably — not even arguably — the best army that has ever existed in the history of the planet deserves attention.”

This parade, then, offers a glimpse of the “social atmosphere” — as Orwell put it — of a fractious nation. The buildup to it has been marked by Trump’s bellicose speeches before troops that raised fears of the politicization of the military. There’s also the Trump administration’s deployment of the National Guard and Marines to Los Angeles in reaction to public unrest stoked by federal attempts to carry out a mass deportation campaign of undocumented migrants. In the shadow of the parade, “No Kings” protests are planned across the country, including in Washington. Trump warned earlier this week that those protesting the parade are “going to be met with very big force.”

Orwell’s remarks about parades were included in an essay he wrote in 1941 about the character of his own country. The Nazi war machine had trained its eye on Britain — “highly civilized human beings are flying overhead, trying to kill me,” the essay opens — and Orwell was thinking through why the British military did not itself choose to goose-step, a brutal move that “is the vision of a boot crashing down on a face.” He concluded that British soldiers don’t do it “because the people in the street would laugh. Beyond a certain point, military display is only possible in countries where the common people dare not laugh at the army.”

Instead, the British military march is “without definite swagger,” Orwell wrote, and belongs to a society “ruled by the sword … but a sword which must never be taken out of the scabbard.” Historians can quibble with Orwell’s reading here of British identity and history, replete with its own vast legacy of violence. But he was gesturing to a kind of civic restraint and sensibility he saw wholly absent in Nazi Germany.

“Orwell is describing a world where the army has become an extension of the personal will of a dictator,” Laura Beers, a historian at American University and author of “Orwell’s Ghosts: Wisdom and Warnings for the Twenty-First Century,” told me. Whatever the optics and rhetoric surrounding Trump’s parade, “we haven’t reached that moment,” she said. Still, the deployments of U.S. active duty soldiers within U.S. cities is a sign of “the sword being pulled from the scabbard,” Beers added.

Trump is keen to project a certain image of dominance and strength. It’s unclear how well the message will be received — about 6 in 10 Americans, according to a new Associated Press poll, think the exercise is a waste of government funds. That may be beside the point. “The reason he is doing the military parade is not for flexing, it is to show he is willing to break norms with the military,” Mike Madrid, a longtime Republican consultant who is critical of Trump, told my colleagues.


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