According to a report, President Trump is turning D.C. into EPCOT.

Trump Seeks To Turn Washington Into His Personal EPCOT, Report Claims
The first thing visitors notice in Washington these days isn’t the monuments — it’s the atmosphere. Streets are lined with uniformed troops. Fountains bubble beneath new lighting. Lawns shine with emerald turf, freshly re-grassed under federal orders. Even the White House radiates gold, its interiors remodeled with plans for a massive ballroom expansion.
It’s a capital city, yes, but one that increasingly feels like something else: a spectacle. President Trump has taken extraordinary steps to reassert direct authority over Washington’s culture, safety, and image. For some, it feels like unprecedented federal control. For others, it’s proof that he’s building a vision of order and pride.
And whether intentional or not, the whole effort draws eerie parallels to Walt Disney’s most famous unfinished dream: EPCOT.

The New Rules of Washington
The changes began with security. Declaring a crime emergency earlier this year, Trump ordered more than 2,000 National Guard troops into the streets — many with firearms — to keep order.
The physical environment is next. Trump is pushing Congress to approve $2 billion to revamp the capital’s look: resurfaced roads, gleaming fountains, upgraded parks, and brighter streetlights. “We’re going to be re-grassing all your parks,” Trump boasted. “It’ll look like Augusta. It’ll look like, more importantly, Trump National Golf Club.”
Beyond appearances, Trump allies now direct many of Washington’s cultural institutions. The Kennedy Center is preparing for global events under his leadership, while Smithsonian museums face reviews to purge exhibits considered politically misaligned.

EPCOT’s Echo in Politics
When Walt Disney unveiled his plans for the “Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow,” it wasn’t designed as a theme park but as a city: perfectly controlled, meticulously landscaped, and guided by a central vision. Every storefront, every garden, every street was engineered to reinforce an image of progress.
Fast forward to today, and Washington is being shaped in the same way. Orderly, curated, and stripped of unpredictability, it projects a kind of showcase city. EPCOT turned swampland into a futuristic demonstration. Trump is turning Washington into a living demonstration of his presidency.

Parallels You Can’t Ignore
-
Controlled Experience: Like EPCOT guests encountering carefully scripted pavilions, Washington visitors now find a capital city with tightened narratives and curated cultural spaces.
-
Security Presence: Troops stationed throughout the city resemble cast members in uniform, ensuring the “show” runs smoothly.
-
Symbolic Grandeur: Trump’s gold-gilded White House upgrades mirror Disney’s reliance on spectacle to make a lasting impression.
These details blur the line between governance and presentation. Both EPCOT and Trump’s Washington are built less on organic growth and more on top-down design.

Why the Comparison Matters
For Disney fans, EPCOT is beloved precisely because it presents a hopeful, polished version of the world. But when a city like Washington takes on those qualities, the stakes are different. Instead of entertainment, it becomes governance by stagecraft.
With America’s 250th anniversary on the horizon, Trump’s version of Washington doubles as a symbol — a national showroom to broadcast his brand of America to the world. Whether people celebrate or criticize it, the effect is undeniable: Washington has never looked more like a theme park.
The EPCOT Connection
At its heart, EPCOT was about control and vision: Disney set the rules, and guests lived within them. Trump’s Washington carries the same DNA. Both were built to impress, but only one was designed as a vacation. The other is rewriting how Americans experience their own democracy.




I can’t believe this made it to and Disney blog site. Send it to Politico or somewhere where people would eat this up. What a downer. Keep negative political opinions off this site. It is not what I am looking for.