These Two Things Are Not The Same…

Which will be remembered?

Viral images of a grand classical arch and a twisted modernist one reveal the unbridgeable divide between leaders who celebrate America’s heritage and those who seem determined to replace it with something cold, crooked, and alien.

The contrast could not be clearer or more deliberate. On one side stands towering marble, golden eagles, and inscriptions evoking “One Nation Under God.” On the other, a bent, leaning metal structure that looks like a giant wire hanger or a failed piece of iron work. One lifts the spirit. The other drains it.

These side-by-side images, now racing across platforms, capture two fundamentally opposed ideas of what a presidential legacy should look like and what America itself should feel like. 

One draws from the classical traditions that built the great monuments of Washington. The other embraces the brutalist and deconstructivist styles that have produced so many unloved public buildings in recent decades.

The Obama Presidential Center in Chicago, set to open its doors this month, has long been criticized for its looming tower and heavy, fortress-like forms. 

It has been described as a “Tower of Doom,” an eyesore that clashes with its surroundings and burdens taxpayers while delivering questionable public value. 

The ‘arch’ featured in the viral posts fits perfectly into that pattern: asymmetric, industrial, and devoid of warmth or grandeur. 

It is the physical embodiment of a worldview that treats traditional beauty as suspect and replaces it with abstract statements about power and disruption.

In stark opposition, President Trump has advanced plans for a 250-foot classical triumphal arch to mark America’s 250th anniversary. Designed in the timeless style of great national monuments, it will feature soaring proportions, eagles, and a golden figure symbolizing victory and the enduring American spirit. 

The project sits alongside another classically inspired initiative: a grand new ballroom at the White House that restores elegance and scale to the People’s House rather than subtracting from it.

These are not minor aesthetic disagreements. They reflect two different convictions about what a nation owes its citizens visually and culturally. 

Classical architecture communicates permanence, order, and aspiration. It says the republic is worth celebrating in stone and gold. Modernist and brutalist experiments often communicate the opposite: transience, alienation, and a deliberate break with the past.

You’d think the classical architecture would be more expensive. Wrong.

Nowhere is the difference between the two visions more visible than in Washington, D.C. itself. In just over a year, the capital has been transformed from a city plagued by graffiti, encampments, and neglected infrastructure into a place where historic monuments gleam again and water flows freely in fountains for the first time in years.

Statues that rioters once tried to topple now stand polished and proud. The Andrew Jackson statue in Lafayette Square, targeted during the 2020 unrest, has been cleaned and restored to its rightful prominence.

Fountains at Columbus Circle, Meridian Hill, Dupont Circle, and the World War II Memorial are operating once more. 

The reflecting pool has received a proper deep cleaning and mirror finish, not a superficial coat of paint. 

The work is projected to save roughly 16 million gallons of water annually while restoring a landmark to its intended splendor.

Certain media outlets have responded to these tangible improvements by framing them as trivial or even suspicious. Stories have suggested the administration is merely “painting” the reflecting pool or engaging in cosmetic gestures, downplaying the removal of hundreds of graffiti tags, the clearing of encampments, and the return of families to public spaces. 

The same voices that once ignored or excused the decay now treat its reversal as somehow controversial.

Progressive aesthetics and governance often treat classical beauty and ordered public spaces as relics of a past that must be overcome. The results are visible in both the Obama Presidential Center’s grim forms and in the years of neglect that turned parts of Washington into an open-air exhibit of decline. 

Trump’s approach rejects that premise. It restores what was broken and builds what will endure.

Two arches. Two visions. One celebrates the American inheritance with stone, light, and proportion. The other offers a twisted metal abstraction that seems to apologize for the very idea of grandeur. 

The American people can see the difference with their own eyes. They are choosing beauty, order, and pride over the alternative. The fountains flow again and the monuments stand tall.

And don’t even get use started on Obama’s statue at his tower of doom…

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