It was supposed to be a spectacle of red, white and blue. The US Freedom 250 festival, a grand celebration ahead of America's semiquincentennial, collapsed this week under the weight of its own ambition – and a phone call from the White House. 'Cancel it', Donald Trump reportedly instructed, and the organisers obliged. The event, planned for the National Mall, had been plagued by funding shortfalls and logistical nightmares. But the real story is not the festival's failure. It is what that failure tells us about the commodification of national pride.
Across the Atlantic, British cultural events remain unaffected. Our own anniversaries – the 80th of VE Day, the centenary of the General Strike – proceed with the quiet dignity of state funding and lottery distributions. But the contrast is instructive. In America, patriotism has become a product, subject to the same market forces as any other entertainment. When the bottom line fails to deliver, the show does not go on. It is cancelled by fiat.
This is not simply a story of mismanagement. It is a story of how we have come to expect our national identities to be performed, monetised and consumed. The Freedom 250 was not a spontaneous outpouring of civic feeling. It was a ticketed event, with VIP packages and corporate sponsors. When those sponsors grew nervous, and the advance sales disappointed, the entire edifice crumbled. Trump's intervention was merely the final nail.
For those of us who watch the cultural shifts, the lesson is clear. We have outsourced our collective memory to events management. And when the event fails, the memory falters too. The British model, for all its flaws, at least insulates our commemorations from the whims of a single man. But we should not be smug. Our own civic rituals are increasingly sponsored, branded and televised. The difference is one of degree, not kind.
On the streets of Washington, the absence of the festival will be felt by the vendors who booked stalls, the performers who rehearsed routines, and the families who planned trips. They are the human cost of a cancelled dream. And they are the first to realise that when patriotism becomes a product, we are all just customers.









