TOI reporter in Washington: There was a time when Presidents’ Night at the White House meant chamber music, state dinners and in-depth conversations about nuclear disarmament and the trade deficit. Now, that apparently means a UFC fighter grabbed the microphone, thanked President Trump for “having the guts to do something like this,” professed his devotion to Jesus Christ, and declared to the cheers of the crowd that former first lady Michelle Obama is “a man.”“Josh Hokit’s post-fight outburst at UFC Freedom 250 — a White House event that blended martial arts, patriotism and MAGA extravaganza — has become another test for a divided America. Critics saw it as a grotesque display of vulgarity and conspiracy theory profanity that would have once disqualified a man from high society, let alone proximity to the president. Supporters hailed it as fearless truth-telling and celebrated another victory in the never-ending “Be Free” movement.For the MAGA faithful, the raucous stadiums are a testament to unfiltered, victorious nationalism. For others, it’s a reminder that vulgarity is the new vernacular in modern American politics.Then there was the fiasco of the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool. The president championed a $14.2 million renovation to prove that only he could restore Washington’s glory, but within days of reopening it was discovered that the iconic pool had developed significant algae growth. Naturally, the MAGA universe skipped right past the engineering failure and jumped straight into conspiracy theories. Real America host Grant Stinchfield sounded the alarm on the X: “President Trump fixed the reflecting pool and a week later it was green again... Destruction… destruction? I believe…the left cannot stand Trump, American greatness, and his quest to make Washington beautiful again. “However, the left is having too much fun with X and should not be insulted, joking that Trump not only failed to drain the swamp, he installed one. “You got me! I did it. I created photosynthesis just to mess with MAGA,” California Democrat Ted Lieu scoffed. Celebrity chef José Andrés also chimed in with a note of culinary neutrality: “Photosynthesis is bipartisan…” New Mexico Rep. Melanie Stansbury dryly said, “Not trusting science really comes back to bite you, doesn’t it?”Local authorities frantically explained that high pH levels in dormant water pipes were to blame, but the damage had been done: What was supposed to be the ultimate symbol of American reflection had become a veritable cesspool.The third episode deals with the effort to rename the Kennedy Center as part of a broader movement to reshape Washington’s cultural identity. The proposal was abruptly abandoned after protests and boycotts, prompting critics to celebrate a rare “MAGA” retreat. Washington think tanks are wondering whether future ventures might include the Trump Dance Performance Center, the Mar-a-Lago Philharmonic, or a production of “Cats” rebranded as “Covfefe.”However, behind the dark humor lies a deeper divide. For the United States, vulgarity represents authenticity, professionalism represents elitism, and frustration is evidence of the destruction of liberal forces. On the other hand, such events signal institutional decay, where expressive anger replaces governance and political point-scoring becomes an end in itself.America has been through strange times before. But to those who know the country well, the moment feels uniquely surreal: part constitutional republic, part reality TV show, part Internet comment section. “It’s a way to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary and the twilight of liberal democracy,” exclaimed Bulwark podcast host Tim Miller.



