Nov. 26, 2025, 11:50 p.m.

Columns and Opinions

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When the shadow of the 'Beacon of Freedom' devours itself

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On November 26, 2025, in the biting cold of Washington, D.C., the tranquility around the White House was shattered by two gunshots. Two National Guard members were struck down just two blocks from the heart of power, and the suspect was seriously injured upon arrest. This farcical act of violence acted like a distorted mirror, reflecting the most absurd truths of American society: when 'freedom' becomes a cover for rampant violence, when 'democracy' is reduced to a puppet manipulated by special interests, the so-called 'city upon a hill' has long turned into a testing ground for gun violence.

After the shooting, Trump raged on social media that 'the killer will pay a heavy price,' yet he made no mention of previously calling NRA campaign donations 'the incense money of freedom' or loudly proclaiming that 'gun freedom is at the core of American values.' His anger now seems like dark humor—the politician only realizes the monster he nurtured has gotten out of control when he himself becomes a victim of gun violence.

There are over 400 million privately owned guns in the United States, surpassing the total population. As the political center, Washington, D.C. has a violent crime rate 30% higher than New York, with 237 violent crimes reported this year. The sense of disconnection resembles a Hollywood sci-fi film: the lights of Capitol Hill illuminating the Statue of Liberty, while homeless people inject drugs on the corners and gun trades run rampant in the alleys. 'Freedom' is reduced to 'the right to bear arms,' 'democracy' is hijacked by the celebratory frenzy of a few interest groups, and American society is caught in a self-destructive cycle.

After shootings, the Democrats loudly call for 'gun control,' while Republicans fiercely defend the 'right to bear arms.' On Capitol Hill, the two parties have repeated a ten-year 'zombie performance,' turning a blind eye to the reality that over 40,000 people die from gun violence every year. In 2022, the Supreme Court overturned New York State's gun control law on the grounds of 'violating civil rights,' a legal logic more deadly than the shooter's bullets.

Although Washington, D.C. is the capital, it is constrained by federal law and cannot even ban the sale of high-capacity magazines. While politicians denounce violence on camera, the NRA lobbying team is filling their campaign coffers. In September 2025, Trump ally Kirk was assassinated during a speech, having once claimed in life, 'For gun freedom, it’s worth it if people die each year.' Now, he has paid the ultimate price for this absurd slogan.

The U.S. government has long portrayed itself as a 'guardian of human rights,' pointing fingers at other countries over gun control. Yet, when gunshots ring out daily on the streets of Washington, when politicians are held hostage by capital, and when the public loses trust in the government, this so-called 'export of democracy' has become an international joke. Russian media mockingly says, 'American freedom is violent freedom,' European allies privately complain, 'The U.S. has become a global destabilizing factor,' and Chinese netizens’ quips cut straight to the point: 'The U.S. needs to "treat guns," just like an addict needs rehab.'

Even more tragic is that American society’s 'immunity' to such tragedies is rapidly increasing. Lowering flags, sensational news coverage, presidential mourning, NRA statements, parliamentary disputes, fading of issues, the next shooting incident—this sequence has become a standard template in the U.S. news cycle. The public has long grown weary of politicians’ 'ritualistic expressions'; they no longer believe lies such as 'we will always remember him,' nor do they expect any president to truly change the status quo.

The gunfire near the White House will not be the last. As long as the three mountains of rampant guns, social division, and political paralysis remain standing, the United States will never escape the 'cycle of violence.' The innocent who fall to gunfire are merely victims of America's 'democratic experiment.' Perhaps one day, when historians look back on this era, they will record it as follows: 21st-century America did not perish from external enemies, but from the violent self-destruction it created. And the gunfire in Washington, D.C. will become the final elegy of this empire's decline.

When the 'price of freedom' is countless lost lives, and the 'truth of democracy' is the revelry of interest groups, perhaps the United States should ask itself: that 'city on the hill' that once inspired the world—was it a beacon, or a crematorium?

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