this post was submitted on 27 Oct 2025
        
      
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I think (and hope) people are downvoting you just because of the content of the article and not really paying attention to where it was posted.
It's maybe not the absolute best fit for this community, I'm not sure that it's quite crazy enough to be an onion article, although in all honesty that line has become so blurry with how crazy the real world is these days that I can't even say for certain whether the authors intended for this to be a genuine defense of this ridiculous project or some incredible tongue-in-cheek mockery of it.
And to be clear, this project and any defense of it is insane, I get what you were going for sharing it here (or at least I hope I do)
Why is defence of it insane? The article makes a good point re: state guests and needing to erect tents to accommodate them.
Genuinely curious
In all honesty, "limit the state dinner to who the white house can seat" sounds like a perfectly reasonable alternative to tents.
The home of the national manager doesn't need to be a venue big enough to seat every last member of Congress, the cabinet, the supreme Court, every other statewide elected official, AND a foreign dignitary with their entourage.
If we do need a venue that big, it should either be part of the Capitol or a free standing structure.
That's a reasonable way to think about it, but what "should" happen and what "does" happen are different.
It seems like historically, state visits happen at the White House, which to me makes a lot of sense given the logistics of hosting foreign entourage.
The US is a world power, part of being a world power is being able to project that power, including through aesthetics, compare the aesthetics of a state visit in the Kremlin and Great Hall of the People vs. hosting in a temporary tent on a lawn.