"Whenever I go into a restaurant, I order both a chicken and an egg to see which comes first"

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Donald Trump Entertains The King Of England, And The No Kings Crowd Says, 'See, What Did We Tell You?'

The American public loves British royalty.  Upstairs, Downstairs and Downton Abbey were both long-running serials. Victorian England has always had a hold on America.  Empire, Churchillian values, confidence, reverence for God, King, and Country, the discipline of Eton and Harrow that made leaders of men; and above all, pomp and ceremony. 



In all Edwardian soap operas we may have rooted for the scullery maid or the footman, enjoyed the camaraderie and earthy enjoyment of the staff, but we cared only for the toffs.

Victorian and Edwardian England seems remote, but the images of an even earlier England, that of the imperial King George who ruled us in the 1700s, are American emblems.  Our Founding Fathers looked like Englishmen, dressed like them, behaved as aristocratically as their forefathers, built English-style homes as graceful and elegant as the country manors of England.

Image result for images james madison home

Our Eastern city neighborhoods are English. Georgetown, Beacon Hill, and Rittenhouse Square are like South Kensington or Holland Park.

Americans idolize their movie stars.  Although their glitzy, glamorous lives are far beyond our reach, they are not that far. Thousands of women have looked in the mirror and seen a face as classically beautiful as Angelina Jolie or as pouting and sexy like Scarlett Johansson. With a little luck and a few connections, one might be in Hollywood too, they say.

Aristocratic England is all the more appealing because it is remote and impossibly unattainable. We would fumble and drop our forks at Downton Abbey or trip over the Persian carpet at Montpelier.  English Lords and their estates, fox hunting, understatement, and chauffeurs are way beyond us.  We can imagine having a beer with Matthew McConaughey, but not the Third Earl of Hereford. 

The administration of John F Kennedy was called Camelot because it came as close to English aristocracy as possible for an American republic.  Americans disregarded the fact that Jack was a shanty Irish son of a crooked bootlegger and looked only to the sophistication, high culture, and royal taste of the president and his wife.  Robert Frost, poet emeritus of America read verse at Kennedy's inauguration.  Pablo Casals, renowned cellist played at state dinners.  Jackie refurnished the White House in simple, early American and classic European style. 

Camelot came close to Buckingham Palace but not that close.  Beneath it all Kennedy was as much of an Irish bar fighter as his father.  

The images of all the Trump-hating, No Kings zealots smiling while applauding King Charles III speech to Congress was an example of this royal idolatry.  Charles was the King of England after all, heir to thousands of years of aristocratic rule, the greatness of empire, the civilizing rule of the dark regions of the world, the genesis of democracy and the rule of law.  In those moments when he stood before the Congress and spoke in his plummy, marvelously elegant way, all thoughts of colonialism, white supremacy, predatory rule disappeared. He was an example of rule beyond politics, generosity, and good will swept away such ideas, and the room was his. 

The No Kings claques in the audience, caught off guard by their smiling, welcoming applause, quickly regained their form as they mingled in the rotunda, whispering innuendoes and suggestions about Donald Trump and his regal ambitions.  But the chatter was toned down, circumspect, and in fact quite compromised.  If this - that is, the elegant, composed, supremely patrician Charles - was kingship, maybe it wasn't such a bad idea. 

Vicki Barton had been in the phalanx of the No Kings protests in Washington. A fiercely harsh and demanding woman, she took all the ills of kingship on her shoulders and marched with a heavy burden.  The President of the United States, Donald J Trump had every intention of becoming a king.  Well, not exactly.  This crass, unschooled, brute could never match Louis XIV, Henry VIII, or the great shahs, emperors, and czars of of the world; and his reign would be a meretricious affair; but kingship has many faces.  Look at what Caligula did to Rome. 

Now, if Trump could be like Charles, Vicki thought as the King of England made his way through official Washington, very properly attired, gentlemanly, and acting with grace and charm, then she might think differently, but Trump was a rube, a clown, a second-rate vaudevillian.  'I hate him', she said, hoping this bit of venom would dispel these traitorous thoughts. 

Vicki never looked past the end of her nose when it came to politics.  Donald Trump was ipso facto an evil man, the very incarnation of evil, a man endowed with every Satanic ambition and hatred of humankind as this patron.  What more was there to say?  What parsing, what exegesis, what logical deconstruction was necessary? He was already testing the extrajudicial waters with ICE and DOGE, running roughshod over the Constitution, preparing for a fourth term and the consolidation of a Republican conservative monarchy ad perpetuam. 

This invitation of King Charles was a carefully-planned ploy on Trump's parts.  He wanted to show the world that this is what kings and kingship was all about - the embodiment of history, the motherlode of culture.  Charles was Britain just as De Gaulle had said, 'La France, c'est moi'. 

After all, that was what Trump had always wanted to convey.  He would restore the central ethos of America enshrined in the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights, bring forward the principles that are at the foundation of the Republic, represent them, promote them, incorporate them.  He would be, like the kings of England, embody the best of his nation's culture. 

This was the most serious reasoning Vicki had ever given to any idea since struggling with her philosophy final at Vassar those many years ago, and she found it confusing.  There was something to this idea of a harmonizing ethos, a reverence and invocation of history, and an avowed patriotism; but at the same time he was a racist, misogynist, capitalist tool.  What was a mother to do?

This befuddlement was on the faces of the No Kings partisans in Congress, the cabal of screechy Squad harridans; the alte kockers who had pushed their soggy ideas of progressivism for years as their union card, their ticket to election victory in solidly Democratic districts; and the hangers-on and wannabes who actually believed that Kamala Harris would have made a good president and that the time for dumping white people into the Potomac had finally come. 

This gentleman of English royalty gave them pause for the first time in years.  O, if he were only king of America, then things would be right again.  It was the kindly image of Charles who brought the real nastiness of kingship to the fore.  Against his warm, welcoming, charitable man were the real autocrats, dictators, and tyrants of the world - Idi Amin, Mobutu, Bokassa, Kagame, Deby, Kim, and a thousand more human predators. Trump, as demonic as he was, was a far cry from these murderers. 

Vicki turned off the television - she had been watching the king's visit since his plane set down at Andrews Air Force base - and sat looking out her picture window.  She must refill the birdfeeder, she thought, and the begonias needed trimming.  The usual bile she felt after watching the news wasn't there for the first time in weeks.  The urge to go out in the streets and tear off her clothes in protest of the evil man in the White House was surprisingly absent.  What was happening?  Without the hatred, the bile, the venomous thoughts, she was an empty vessel.  Trump hate had not only consumed her for years but had become her.  She would be nothing without it. 

And there he was, standing with the king and queen showing them the Presidential beehive and basking in their praise.  He, Trump, spawn of the devil, a beekeeper? But the bile still wouldn't rise.  It was a touching scene, a charitable one, a kindly one.  What was happening to her?

No Kings organizers shelved their plans for more rallies and demonstrations. Somehow after Charles' visit, they didn't seem to make much sense.  'Maybe Kings', suggested one conservative observer, who had always been amused at the old Sixties matrons marching every which way to protest Trump, white biddies for whom the jamboree was a nice outing.  'I'll miss them', he said, but of course like everything else he said, it was tongue in cheek.  Good riddance was what he meant. 

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Life As No Exit From The DMV - Kafka, Big Brother, And The Nightmare Of Government

John Michael Phillips stood inside the Half Street DC Inspection Station watching his car make its way slowly up the line - exhaust, brakes, lights, alignment, door locks, and windshield.  He like every one of the residents peering through the scratched, graffitied plexiglass, dreaded 'The Big Red', the 'failed sticker' which would oblige him to come back, submit his car to a repeat inspection, and Go Green for another year. 

 

A return visit to the Inspection Station however, was no easy matter.  The long, deliberate, excruciating process, few inspection bays, and an indifferent, bullying crew meant a two hour wait just to get into the station. 

At each station, three overalled men poked around the car, kicking the tires, flashing the lights, opening the hood, and revving the engine.  It was a boring, repetitive, mind-dulling job in a poorly-ventilated, dark, miserable place.  Even at this level of government the only recompense was authority.  The inspectors knew how much District residents hated coming down there, feared The Big Red, shuddered in the soulless, echoing vacuum of the hangar, and prayed for passage.  

Failing them in a joking camaraderie of chance, one out of three, one out of five on a nice day, was all they had.  It was a poor arrogation of power, something more than the projects, a spliff and a malt liquor on Saturday, and parttime pimping on the side. 

An elderly woman standing next to Phillips turned to him and said, 'Is it always like this?'.  She was recently widowed and this was her first time to the Inspection Station.  'My husband took care of the cars', she said as her car inched forward on the pulleyed incline for chassis inspection.  It was a vision of hell, a dark underworldly place with ungodly screeches and groans, masked figures in the shadows, horns blowing, and a miasma of blue exhaust giving them a a hellish cast. 

There was indeed no worse experience for a DC resident except perhaps for the DMV office itself - circumambulating lines, surly, bitchy clerks, endless rounds of duplication, triple stamps, identity checks, and toadying. One irritable moment and your claim would be rejected to be refiled; and you would have to come town again, stand in the shuffling, interminable lines, and put up with abuse, pissiness, and bored, aggressive indifference. 

When anyone inclined to reflect on the nature of government, its purpose, and its relationship to the citizens it serves, visited the Inspection Station and saw a Dore vision out of Dante's hell, he couldn't help but seeing the miserable place as a microcosm or metaphor for all government.  It and the post office were reminders of exactly who ruled and how.  Both were desperate reminders of the bottom of the barrel, the scrapings, the leavings, the gunk and goo that accumulates as residue. 

No one at the Inspection Station got their job through a civil service exam but through a cousin or brother-in-law higher up who got his job from an uncle appointed by an aide to the Ward Representative who got elected thanks to walkin' around money, no-show jobs, and generous contractor emoluments. 

John Michael was one of those who did reflect on all this and who had watched the system tank under successively corrupt municipal governments; and then a few years back, the District revised its vehicle inspection program - now inspection was required only once every two years and mirabile dictu, cars would only be inspected for emissions.  Someone somewhere ran the numbers and found that the checks on tires, brakes, lights, and alignment had absolutely no correlation with accidents, mortality or morbidity.  The DMV would keep the staff, stagger their hours while maintaining their salaries, and reduce the inspection time to fifteen minutes instead of two hours. 

The whole previous rigamarole was completely unnecessary, an arrogation of government authority, a needless burden on residents, and the perpetuation of government over the people, never by or for them. 

The individual DC tax burden is penitential, and the rewards are almost nil.  Every year the City Council votes for more diversity, more accessibility, more compassion; and millions of dollars worth of contractor fraud are assembled.  New sidewalks where the old ones were perfectly good, hundreds of non-existent Minnesota Somali-style 'Learing' Centers, empty job training workshops, boarded up  methadone clinics. 

Most of the revenue came from wealthy, white Ward 3, funneled through the Council to all-black, poor, endemically dysfunctional Wards 7 and 8.  John Michael remembered Mayor-for-Life Marion Barry who told the residents of Ward 3 angry that not one snowplow had been seen on their streets after one of Washington's usual snowstorms, 'It'll melt'. 

To add insult to injury when the mayoral election rolled around that November and Barry won with almost 90 percent of the black vote, he told Ward 3 all of which had voted against him, 'Get over it'. 

Barry was finally removed from office having been caught in a drug sting by the FBI ('The bitch set me up'), but not after he had turned the city into a corrupt, get it while you can jamboree.  He was the Idi Amin of DC. 

Yet despite all this there were still voters in DC who were solidly and resolutely for the expansion of government which was after all, the caretaker of the people, the assurance agent for mitigating misfortune, for providing solace and compassion, for assuring a diverse, inclusive, and equitable society.

Trips to the DMV and the Inspection Station did nothing to dampen their enthusiasm.  The redundant sidewalks and bike lanes to nowhere were not examples of government overreach and corruption, but positive signs of social progress. 

Mary Louise Hammond was one of these aficionados.  Even the worst examples of municipal disservice and electoral manipulation were dismissed out of hand.  God forbid that the nation fall completely into the hands of Donald Trump; and with that she festooned her lawn with Hate Has No Home Here, Democracy Matters, and BLM signs, marched on the Mall on No Kings Day and prepared to reprise her role of COVID vigilante when the next iteration arrived. 

It was this way up and down the political phylogenetic ladder.  As Ronald Reagan put it almost fifty years ago, 'Government is not the solution.  Government is the problem'; and videos of Milton Friedman warning not of the concentration of wealth but of the concentration of government power are more and more visible on social media. The scandals of power are endemic from municipalities to Congress, a never ending scam, a persistent use of unlimited power for personal ends. 

Mary Louise saw her money sucked away by the DC government in income tax, sales tax, property tax and a raft of a hundred other ways of filling its coffers; and yet she overlooked this unconscionable drain and insisted that government, ipso facto, was a good thing, that every barrel of apples had a few rotten ones, and that that was no excuse to throw the baby out with the bathwater. 

Liberalism dies hard because it is based on ideals not reality.  The progressive overlooks what is staring him in the face because the future beckons - a future which is rosy, verdant, peaceful and prosperous. Mary Louise will be a progressive till the day she dies and will have orations of progress said over her grave. Meanwhile John Michael Phillips has moved to Florida. 

'I Hate Him', Said Matrons Over Cucumber Sandwiches - How Patrician Ladies Were Delighted By The Attack On The President

Vicki Parker liked to organize tea parties, gatherings of friends and neighbors to honor local poets and artists and to share ideas about America and the political scene. A recent event feted Abigail Saunders, an elderly woman who had been writing verse for decades without notice or publication.  Despite her claim that she was writing only for herself 'and for those souls who feel inspired by my words', she had hoped that some journal would accept her work, but none ever did.

The work was a treacly assemblage of childhood memories of her cat, the arbor in the yard, and  the picnics on the lawn.  She never got much beyond 'the pretty blossoms, the birds in the sky, O what wonders where they fly' but Vicki persisted.   Her voice was true, she said, and her words metaphors, charming allusions to a better world.  

The assembly gathered in Vicki's suburban home smiled with each verse, each guest bound by acceptance of the hostess' kind invitation to at least pay lip service to the poet and to try their best to find a scintilla of meaning in the poet's childish lines. 

When Vicki opened up the gathering for questions, there were but a desultory few who politely lobbed a few marshmallows - was there a real arbor, when during the day did she write, etc. - but the reading ended as all of Vicki's events did with tea sandwiches and iced tea and little else. 

It happened that one of these events - this time to fete a local artist - followed the attempted shooting of the President at the White House press dinner; and the group was more interested in parsing the attempt on his life than listening to Mildred Barnes talk about her still lifes. 

It was a disgrace, the women all nodded in agreement, that such violence should occur.  'We must rid the country of guns', said one, to which others chimed in with the same opinion.  Guns, guns, guns, they said in chorus, the symbol of an America gone wrong; and from there turned to the seditious nature of conservatism, its idolatry of guns, individualism, and raw capitalism.  

Trump deserved what he got, they all agreed, for anyone promoting an ethos of white supremacy, Wall Street greed, and American xenophobia was bound to be the subject of hatred. 

However, if there was ever a more treasonous charge, it would be hard to imagine.

Each of these suburban matrons had grown up with the same privilege as Vicki. They were proud, patriotic Philadelphians and Bostonians, schooled in the Constitution, the War of Independence, and their ancestors' role in both.  

Ginny Adams was an Adams of the John Adams family and had just moved from her home on Beacon Hill to the Washington area because of grandchildren.  She hated to give up the silver, crystal, lace and Chippendale of her family home, and had looked up at the portraits of the founders of America every morning with reminiscence and pride.

Despite her Republicanism, her deep Old English patrician roots, and her love of country, Ginny had come to hate Donald Trump not so much for his policies - she was certainly for lower taxes, the private sector, and secure borders - but for his persona.  He was a boor, a charlatan, a cheap Las Vegas trickster with a fondness for line dancers, arm candy, and meretricious spending.  The White House ballroom was the last straw, a defilement of old, historic, 18th century propriety, one that reflected the values of her family. 

'Disgusting', she shouted to the noisy women up in arms about the further fall of America into the hands of gunrunners and dogs of war. 

'Disgusting, what, dear?' she was asked. 

'The ballroom, Isabel, the ballroom', Ginny replied, but Isabel couldn't follow the non sequitur exactly and what it had to do with the attempted assassination, so turned to the group who were now onto Melania, her slanty eyes, triple plastic surgeries, and empty head.  'What I wouldn't give to have Michelle back in the White House', one said. 

 

Sort of, most women privately agreed. They would rather have the elegant, statuesque, beautiful Melania than this....Here all of them stopped themselves short from admitting very racist thoughts, for Michelle did look like, God forbid...some....What they were all thinking never was said, never could be said, and never would be said, but there it was. 

'Please, ladies, please', Vicki pleaded. 'Can we let Margaret (the artist in residence) have the floor?' but none of the women, flushed with the delirium that speaking one's mind about the evil in the White House produced - a kind of feverish, overheated pleasure - wanted to look at lifeless, amateurish, clunky, clownish paintings by some street painter. 

The poor artist only managed to show a few of her tableaux before the women scraped their chairs and went back to the living room, the Chablis, and the cucumber-and-chutney tea sandwiches.

‘What will he do next?', said one, referring of course to the President. 'ICE and DOGE were bad enough, but that boorish thug has other fish to fry.'

While Vicki was happy to see her friends so animated and so committed to the downfall of the President, she felt badly for Mildred Barnes who had hoped to show off her entire portfolio but had been stopped in her tracks.  'I must invite her back another time', thought Vicki attending to the maid who couldn't keep up with the demand for her canapés and truffles.

If these ladies of all people, women of presumed stature, breeding, education, and sincerity, could have  so quickly turned the corner, gone round the bend with complicit hatred, what hope was there for ordinary Americans? The bile and venomous, inchoate hatred now viral in the country and spreading has its consequences. It was tantamount to crying 'Fire' in a crowded theatre, free speech gone awry, turned nasty, bullying, and unconscionable. 

Vicki tried to square her normal sentiments of diversity, equity, and inclusivity with her growing visceral hatred for the President - good and evil have always co-existed, she said, struggling to remember her college Kierkegaard...or was it Augustine? - but squaring things was irrelevant in a time of political apocalypse; and so even she, perhaps the most reserved if not recondite member of her suburban friends, lost it.  From the dignified patron of the arts, she became the harridan of Beeker Lane, the Madwoman of Chaillot, as crazed and addled as any woman in the county. 

For the next meeting she did away with the frills - no more still life artists or neighborhood poets - and replaced them with a political litany, a mudwrestling event with no holds barred.  Matrons they might be but they had not lost their moxie. 

The lights were always on way past midnight at 4567 Beeker Lane, doors banging, shouts in the garden; but what could you expect when the tyrant, the boor, the fascist was still in the White House?