Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Fascist Move of the Day
National Guard troops stay in Washington long after the emergency logic runs out. The point of spectacle policing is that you get used to it.
Source: AP via Google News, April 21 2026
Historical Parallel
After the 1973 coup in Chile, Pinochet turned soldiers, armored vehicles, and armed patrols into part of the ordinary visual grammar of civic life. The point was not only to stop an immediate threat. It was to educate the public.
Streets, plazas, and public institutions were being reintroduced as spaces subordinate to armed power. Once troops become political scenery, civilian life starts to organize itself around their presence.
"The point of spectacle policing is that people get used to it."
— Newslings framing of the AP reportSources: Wikipedia: 1973 Chilean coup · Wikipedia: Military dictatorship of Chile
The Full Dispatch
National Guard troops are still deployed across Washington with no clear end point, turning what was sold as an emergency measure into background scenery. That is the real danger with this kind of militarized posture. The emergency becomes ambient. Troops become furniture. The public is asked to adapt itself to the sight of armed force in ordinary civic space and then to forget that anything unusual happened at all.
Governments often insist these deployments are temporary, defensive, and regrettable. But temporariness is part of the sales pitch. In practice, once soldiers are normalized in civilian political space, the visual lesson matters as much as the operational one. The public learns where authority visibly resides. It is no longer in civilian process, ordinary policing, or democratic confidence. It is in the boots, the vehicles, the rifles, and the implied permission structure that comes with them.
Pinochet's Chile is the clean historical parallel because the regime understood that military presence had a theatrical function. Armed patrols and visible troop deployments were not only responses to threats. They were arguments. They told Chileans that public life belonged to the junta first and to civilians only on conditional terms. A city with soldiers woven into its everyday rhythms is a city being taught a lesson about ownership.
Washington is not Santiago in 1973. But this is how spectacle policing works in democracies that are drifting toward something uglier. You keep the troops in place just long enough for them to stop looking exceptional. Once people get used to the uniforms in the background, the state has already won half the argument.
The Playbook
Declare an emergency → Flood civilian space with armed force → Keep the troops visible after the pretext fades → Turn militarization into background normal → Teach the public who the streets belong to