{"id":276,"date":"2026-06-03T11:15:54","date_gmt":"2026-06-03T11:15:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=276"},"modified":"2026-06-03T11:15:54","modified_gmt":"2026-06-03T11:15:54","slug":"dont-build-the-arch","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=276","title":{"rendered":"Don\u2019t Build the Arch"},"content":{"rendered":"<section>\n<p><span>The meanings of words<\/span> such as <em>honor<\/em>, <em>sacrifice<\/em>, and <em>humility<\/em> have been leaking away from American civic life like red blood cells from an anemic. But if there\u2019s one place where they retain their rich, sticky, life-giving force, it\u2019s surely in the air around the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=274\">The Left Needs to Rediscover Its Patriotism<\/a><\/p>\n<p>The cemetery is where Americans remember those who sacrificed their lives for the nation. The memorial is where they remember their greatest president\u2014the man who proclaimed an end to slavery and kept the union intact, though the cost was staggering. The air between these two places is the medium through which Lincoln gets to speak with his war dead, and vice versa.<\/p>\n<p>If President Trump\u2019s ambition is realized, a triumphal arch will thrust its way into this murmuring conversation like a boastful bore crashing into a huddle of friends swapping stories about a loved one at a wake. Heavy-handed and overbearing, it would pervert the significance of this uniquely meaningful place, forcing visitors to see these two sites through a crass and generalized assertion of victory and triumph. It will interfere with the bond between Lincoln and his troops and, by extension, the bond between America\u2019s precious, hard-won democratic government and those who have been willing to lay down their lives to defend it.<\/p>\n<p>Trump wants to erect his arch at Memorial Circle, a rotary you come to from the Lincoln Memorial after crossing the Potomac River on Arlington Memorial Bridge. The arch is to be 250 feet high, more than twice as high as the Lincoln Memorial. It will feature gilded statuary, a winged Lady Liberty\u2013like figure on top, and the inscriptions <span>One Nation Under God<\/span> on one side and <span>Liberty and Justice for All<\/span> on the other. The project was approved by one key federal commission on May 21 and goes before another on Thursday, but it also faces a lawsuit filed by Vietnam War veterans.<\/p>\n<p>Some opponents of the arch are convinced it will never go ahead. But pink surveyors\u2019 flags were already planted in the grass at Memorial Circle on Memorial Day, when I walked the stretch from Lincoln through the cemetery, hoping to imagine how Trump\u2019s proposal would play against Washington\u2019s carefully choreographed civic spaces. At the high point of the cemetery sits Arlington House, once the home of Robert E. Lee. The view between this and the Lincoln Memorial creates a link between North and South, symbolizing reconciliation after the Civil War.<\/p>\n<p>At mid-morning, amid light rain and fog so thick that it delayed flights out of nearby Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, the Washington Monument was mostly invisible. A smattering of protesters on the Lincoln Memorial side of the Potomac held up signs for pedestrians and passing cars. They\u2019d erected a mock arch, about 15 feet high, cut from white cloth and emblazoned with blue lettering: <span>86 TRUMP\u2019S ARCH<\/span>. Across the bridge at Memorial Circle, Paul A. Romano III, a retired federal law-enforcement officer wearing a green <span>Vietnam Veteran<\/span> cap, told me that the day the construction crews arrive, \u201cI\u2019ll be like the guy in front of the tanks at Tiananmen Square.\u201d (Romano plans to testify against the arch at Thursday\u2019s meeting of the National Capital Planning Commission.)<\/p>\n<p>Inside the cemetery, some roads had been cut off to secure the site for the imminent arrival of the president and vice president. I paused to watch the motorcade go by before crossing into Section 60, where the road was lined with a dozen or so cars bearing plates reading <span>Combat Wounded<\/span> and <span>Gold Star<\/span>. As the president prepared to speak in the Memorial Amphitheater, families had gathered with friends in folding chairs around flower-strewn headstones. They had brought coolers and food baskets, and, by the orientation of their chairs and their warm, relaxed demeanor, it was clear that each enveloped gravestone represented a person made present\u2014someone the visitors wished both to honor on a meaningful day and, out of love, to include in a family picnic.<\/p>\n<p>As I stepped back, the long rows of white headstones, each with their small American flag planted in front, had their overwhelming effect. Surely no arch, no matter how tall, could measure up to the somber beauty\u2014the profundity\u2014of this place?<\/p>\n<p><span>History can serve<\/span> as a guide for how we ought to understand the spatial conversation designed to take place between Arlington and the Lincoln Memorial. In 1862, Lincoln visited Sharpsburg, Maryland, where Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain watched the president review his troops, noting that the commander in chief and his soldiers seemed joined by a \u201cmystic bond, wonderful in its intensity.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWe could see the deep sadness in the President\u2019s face and feel the burden on his heart,\u201d he wrote, \u201cthinking of his great commission to save this people and knowing that he could do this no otherwise than as he had been doing, by and through the manliness of these men.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Contrast this with Trump, who, in 2018, rejected a proposal to visit the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery near Paris, saying, \u201cWhy should I go to that cemetery? It\u2019s filled with losers.\u201d Trump, who received a medical deferment (for bone spurs in his feet) during the Vietnam War, also described the more than 1,800 Marines who died at Belleau Wood as \u201csuckers\u201d; attacked the parents of Humayun Khan, an Army captain killed in Iraq; and poured contempt on Senator John McCain for having been captured during the Vietnam War.<\/p>\n<p>Chamberlain\u2019s Civil War account reveals the space between the Lincoln Memorial and Arlington National Cemetery as charged not only with honor and pride but also with grief. Lincoln\u2019s memorial embodies the humility of a commander in chief who lived as his troops were dying because of his decisions, and now honors their loyalty and sacrifice. And the war dead, in turn, honor his leadership, the principles they shared, and the sacrifice that Lincoln, too, would make so soon after theirs, on April 15, 1865.<\/p>\n<p>The defenders of Trump\u2019s arch say the enormous structure won\u2019t block the sight lines connecting these two significant sites. Rather, it will frame them: You\u2019ll still be able to see from one to the other <em>through<\/em> the arch. But this is misleading.<\/p>\n<p>First, it will be true only from very specific vantage points, mostly close to the arch. From Lee\u2019s house, the arch will certainly block the view of the Lincoln Memorial. Second (and more important), to frame something is to impose meaning on it. In this case, a fragile, sacred conversation about sacrifice will be framed\u2014and corrupted\u2014by a shallow rhetoric of triumph.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=272\">The President Keeps Contradicting Himself on AI<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Trump has been doing this for years, hasn\u2019t he? Interfering with and reframing our vision, trying to make us mistrust our own eyes and to see in all he does nothing but winning. \u201cWe\u2019re going to win so much, you may even get tired of winning,\u201d he\u2019s frequently said. We saw what happened on January 6, 2021: a mob attacking police officers, invading the U.S. Capitol, interfering with democracy and threatening people\u2019s lives. But thanks to Trump\u2019s 2024 victory, we are now forced to see January 6 reframed as a \u201cday of love.\u201d We have to see these vandals, whom the president has called \u201cgreat patriots,\u201d \u201cpeaceful people,\u201d and \u201chostages,\u201d through a scrim of pardons and proposed compensation funds.<\/p>\n<p>Triumphant rhetoric is always pinched. It leaves out the perspective of the vanquished. (In ancient Rome, the vanquished used to be paraded in chains under triumphal arches.) And it imposes brittle, jingoistic meanings on so many deaths that are senseless or, at the very least, difficult to explain.<\/p>\n<p>Before dying himself, seven days before the end of World War I, Wilfred Owen wrote witheringly of \u201cthe old Lie\u201d\u2014\u201c<em>Dulce et decorum est<\/em> \/ <em>Pro patria mori<\/em>\u201d\u2014that \u201cit is sweet and fitting to die for one\u2019s country.\u201d You would not tell this lie \u201cwith such high zest,\u201d he wrote, to \u201cchildren ardent for some desperate glory\u201d if you could see what it is really like to die in war\u2014to \u201cwatch the white eyes writhing\u201d in the soldier exposed to mustard gas or hear \u201cthe blood \/ Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs, \/ obscene as cancer.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Part of being modern, and wise, is about grasping the ways in which Owen was right. It\u2019s about understanding that presidential speeches, even by Lincoln, may be inscribed into stone or livestreamed around the world, but they remain just words. We seek meaning; we try to rationalize, but that meaning can seem paltry, especially to loved ones, in comparison with amputated limbs, crippling PTSD, or death\u2014death that may have come by disease, friendly fire, or training accidents, or in the course of an ill-conceived war.<\/p>\n<p>What\u2019s extraordinary is that, even knowing all of this, people are still willing to die to protect this country and defend its values. In that willingness lies their honor and their heroism. What they deserve is not some cheap and unoriginal assertion of \u201cvictory\u201d but our thanks, our admiration, and a redoubling of our efforts to safeguard peace and security.<\/p>\n<p><span>Triumphal arches<\/span> are thuggish. They\u2019re the architectural equivalent of a domestic abuser standing, arms crossed, legs athwart, in front of the bedroom door. I prefer the democratic, American tradition of modest, respectful, open-air monuments. I love going to Concord battle site, just west of Boston, where the American Revolution kicked off, and seeing kayakers paddling beneath the Old North Bridge and cyclists standing quietly at the foot of <em>The Minute Man<\/em> statue by Daniel Chester French (the same sculptor responsible for the figure of Lincoln at the Lincoln Memorial). I love Antietam, a big, rolling field where you can imagine what happened on September 17, 1862, without anyone mediating or prescribing your response.<\/p>\n<p>Psychologizing Donald Trump has become boring; psychology is made interesting by human depth and complexity. But what is the psychology of a <em>nation<\/em> that feels the need to put up triumphal arches? Isn\u2019t it usually a symptom of insecurity on the part of those in power?<\/p>\n<p>The Arc de Triomphe in Paris, which Trump has said inspired his idea for an arch in Washington, was the idea of Napoleon Bonaparte\u2019s imperial government. But the arch was far from finished when Napoleon was defeated and sent into exile. It was completed over three decades under three different styles of government. Each regime\u2014imperialist, absolute monarchist, and constitutional monarchist\u2014manipulated the rationale behind the arch to try to cement its own legitimacy. But none of those regimes lasted.<\/p>\n<p>If an arch had been erected in Washington at the end of World War II, when American troops had heroically defeated European fascism and imperial Japan, it might have made some sense. But it seems the Greatest Generation didn\u2019t need to erect triumphal arches, preferring instead to treasure the memory of dead comrades and put resources into rebuilding Europe and Japan, neutralizing the Soviet Union, and securing peace.<\/p>\n<p>The significance of places and monuments can be belied by their names. <em>Shiloh<\/em>, for instance, is a Hebrew word meaning \u201cplace of peace.\u201d But Shiloh, the site of one of the first great battles of the Civil War, was a place of carnage. It had about the same number of French casualties as Waterloo\u2014close to 24,000. \u201cAnd yet when it was fought,\u201d said the historian Shelby Foote in Ken Burns\u2019 documentary <em>The Civil War<\/em>, people couldn\u2019t have known that \u201cthere were another 20 Waterloos to follow.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Trump\u2019s arch risks a similar fate. Will future generations associate it with winning, as Trump clearly intends? Or will they associate it with insecurity and bluster, and perhaps a more generalized shame\u2014the shame of a nation that twice elected a man judged by his former chief of staff, the retired Marine General John Kelly (whose Marine-officer son, Robert M. Kelly, gave his life in Afghanistan and is buried in Section 60) as \u201ca person that has no idea what America stands for and has no idea what America is all about.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><em>*Illustration sources: NCPC \/ Harrison Design; iStock \/ Getty; Sergej Borzov \/ Getty; Erik McGregor \/ LightRocket \/ Getty.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/commercialrelocationpros.com\/?p=270\">What Trump Wants From Bill Pulte<\/a><\/p>\n<\/section>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Trump\u2019s colossal monument would mar Washington\u2019s skyline and disrupt one of its most sacred spaces.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":275,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-276","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-culture"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.7 - 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