If you were wondering just how far The Washington Post is willing to go to protect the narrative that Washington, D.C. is basically a utopia with monuments, food trucks, and zero crime—spoiler alert—they’re now sightseeing.
Yes, really.
In their latest attempt to assure readers that the nation’s capital isn’t, in fact, circling the drain, WaPo decided that crime statistics were just too hard-hitting. So instead of crunching numbers (which they’ve already twisted like a balloon animal), they literally took a stroll. They retraced President Trump’s “likely motorcade route” to assess the vibe. Because nothing says “objective journalism” like evaluating urban safety through a guided walking tour in broad daylight with a notepad and soy latte.
“Violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people,” President Trump said of D.C.
Post reporters retraced some of the president’s routes with the goal of seeing his view of Washington firsthand. https://t.co/ws2QdOQOwJ pic.twitter.com/78BKX1vu59
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) August 17, 2025
And where did this brave investigative adventure take them?
To Constitution Avenue—aka, the prettiest slice of D.C. real estate this side of a taxpayer-funded Smithsonian gift shop. They even helpfully noted that the route passes by the National Mall, and oh yes, a few homeless encampments near 23rd Street NW. But don’t worry, reader—nothing to see here. Just democracy’s front porch with a couple of tents, some trash, and the smell of urine. Totally normal.
Meanwhile, The Post tried its best to dunk on Trump by mocking his “secondhand” impressions of the city’s decline. According to their reporting, his concern stems from what he sees through the windows of “The Beast.” As if that somehow invalidates what he’s seeing. I don’t know, if graffiti, drugged-out zombies, and potholes big enough to swallow a Prius are visible from behind bulletproof glass, maybe it’s not just his imagination?
Let’s be honest: The people mocking Trump’s observations are the same ones who won’t set foot outside their Capitol Hill brownstones after 8 p.m. without a driver, a bodyguard, and a personal panic button.
But here’s where it gets laughable.
WaPo conducted this “boots-on-the-ground” fact-finding mission after Trump already deployed National Guard troops and ramped up federal law enforcement. Translation: they’re walking through a sanitized, temporarily-scrubbed D.C. and acting like this is how it’s always been. That’s like touring Disneyland after closing and declaring it pest-free because you didn’t see any rats. Sure, buddy—maybe try that same walk at 2 a.m. through Navy Yard or down in Anacostia without a press badge and security detail. Let us know how that goes.
SOMETHING BIG IS COMING!
Trump monitoring Underground Tunnels at Smithsonian and Union Station.
Human trafficking in DC?VERY interesting 👀
WaPo are tracking troops and federal agents in DC.
The NG are posted up at the National Mall, a block away from the Smithsonian Metro… pic.twitter.com/EO6HJniP9Z
— TRUTH NOW ⭐️⭐️⭐️🗽 🎺 (@sxdoc) August 18, 2025
And let’s not forget the cherry on top: WaPo’s favorite stat — “violent crime at a 30-year low.” Sounds nice, right? Until you read the fine print. The so-called decline excludes entire categories of assault, including felony assaults without weapons. Because apparently, if you get your face rearranged but your attacker didn’t use a crowbar, it doesn’t count. Neat trick.
8 months ago the Washington Post did an entire article about how youth crime in DC is worse than it’s ever been.
Today they’re saying crime is down and Trump is a dictator.
Which is it, @wapo ? pic.twitter.com/8LY1hMhwsJ
— Based Bandita (@MissVega8888) August 11, 2025
And don’t even get started on unreported crimes. You think tourists getting harassed by unhinged vagrants file a police report every time someone throws a bottle at them or screams about demons in front of the Air and Space Museum? That’s rich.
D.C. isn’t suffering from a data problem. It’s suffering from a reality problem. One that the liberal press desperately wants to blur out with selective reporting, midday strolls, and a fantasyland version of the truth.
The people who live in this city aren’t buying it. The families locking their doors in the afternoon, the commuters avoiding certain Metro stops, the office workers who walk in pairs after 5 p.m.—they’re living in the actual D.C. Not the version WaPo crafted from their afternoon safari.
Trump didn’t manufacture this crisis. He didn’t invent the chaos. He saw it. And now he’s doing something about it.
And that—more than graffiti, more than crime stats, more than vagrants—is what really has the media clutching their pearls. Because when you start fixing problems they’ve spent years pretending don’t exist?
You take away their favorite excuse: denial.

