June17 , 2025

    Trump’s Parade Vs the People’s Protest: Two Very Different Versions of America

    Related

    Share


    As President Donald Trump rallied the troops to Washington, DC on June 14—the date of the US Army’s 250th anniversary, Flag Day, and his birthday—millions of his constituents joined in the nationwide “No Kings” march.

    It was a conflicting, polar day in America. In one city, a parade costing tens of millions of dollars was complete with robot military dogs walking down the street, the president being serenaded by a crowd singing Happy Birthday, and thousands of Army service members marching in rows. In a city just North of DC, at the flagship No Kings rally in Philadelphia, an estimated 80,000 people called out chants that have become familiar since 2016, like “Hey-hey! Ho-ho! Donald Trump has got to go!” and ones befitting the protest, like “Let freedom ring! We don’t want a king!”

    Nearly 3,000 miles away in Los Angeles, police shot stun grenades and rubber bullets, and used tear gas, on a group of demonstrators protesting the Trump administration’s attacks on immigrant communities. The offensive from police who claimed they were attempting to disperse the crowd came hours before the 8 o’clock curfew that part of downtown was placed under by Mayor Karen Bass.

    Protestors have been rallying in Los Angeles all week amid the Trump administration’s rounding up of immigrants in the city and their subsequent moves to call in the National Guard and active-duty Marines to quell the pro-immigrant, anti-ICE demonstrations.

    Below are just some of the images that illustrate what this one divisive day in the US looked like.

    Robot Dogs, Trump, and Tanks

    Military robot dogs walk alongside soldiers in the U.S. Army’s 250th Anniversary Parade in Washington, DC, on June 14, 2025.

    MANDEL NGAN/Getty Images

    President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump stand together at the end of the U.S Army parade on June 14, 2025 in Washington, DC.

    Andrew Harnik/Getty Images



    Source link