When President Trump announced that the Ultimate Fighting Championship would set up its Octagon on the White House South Lawn to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary, critics on the left howled. Democrats called it unbecoming, embarrassing, even degrading to the dignity of the presidency. They claimed the White House should be a sanctuary of peace and calm, not the backdrop for a mixed martial arts spectacle. These critics miss the point. The White House is not a monastery. It has never been untouched by fighting, conflict, or displays of physical power. Trump’s decision, unprecedented in scale, continues an old and distinctly American tradition of combat at the Executive Mansion.
250th ANNIVERSARY: UFC Octagon on the White House South Lawn for America’s 250th, weigh-ins at the Lincoln Memorial, and an 85,000-person viewing party at the Ellipse. Looks amazing. pic.twitter.com/tzQCnTAFUN
The UFC event itself is nothing short of monumental. The Octagon will rise on the South Lawn, with weigh-ins at the Lincoln Memorial. An 85,000-person viewing party will gather at the Ellipse, making this one of the largest public White House events in history. The UFC, now over 30 years old, began in 1993. Once dismissed as fringe, it has grown into a global phenomenon rivaling boxing in revenue and popularity. Tens of millions of Americans watch its matches, and the sport generates nearly $10 billion annually. To host such a contest at the seat of American power is to acknowledge not just the sport’s rise but the American taste for strength, resilience, and spectacle.
The 26th President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt, received boxing instruction from the legendary coach, “Professor” Mike Donovan. This illustration of Professor Donovan and T.R. was created by Robert Edgren.
This is not without precedent. Theodore Roosevelt, the president most associated with vigor and combat sports, turned the White House into a training hall. A college boxer at Harvard, Roosevelt continued sparring well into his presidency, trading blows with military aides in White House rooms. In 1908, one session ended with a punch that detached his retina, blinding him in one eye. Rather than retreat, Roosevelt shifted to martial arts, bringing Japanese judo master Yamashita Yoshiaki to the White House in 1904. Yamashita trained Roosevelt several afternoons a week in ground-floor rooms or even in the East Room itself. On one famous occasion, Roosevelt donned a gi and practiced throws before a gathering that included his wife Edith, his children, and Secretary of War William Howard Taft. Roosevelt made the White House a dojo and a boxing ring. His example shows that martial contests at the Executive Mansion are not aberrations, but traditions.
Abraham Lincoln versus Jefferson Davis – Abraham Lincoln – Wrestler.
Other presidents too had their links to fighting. Abraham Lincoln, towering at 6’4”, was a champion wrestler, with only one recorded defeat in roughly 300 matches. George Washington excelled at “collar and elbow” wrestling, while William Howard Taft twice won collegiate wrestling championships at Yale. Ulysses S. Grant, Zachary Taylor, and Chester Arthur all wrestled in their youths. Warren Harding even had a boxing ring installed in the White House, mainly for the training of Secret Service agents. More recently, Barack Obama received an honorary taekwondo black belt, and Michelle Obama’s White House fitness programs often featured boxing moves. Far from a temple of tranquility, the White House has long been associated with presidents who understood the value of combat, whether on the mat, in the ring, or in spirit.
And then there is the White House itself, often treated by Democrats as though it were a porcelain artifact never touched by turmoil. History tells a different story. In 1814, British troops set fire to the White House during the War of 1812, turning the presidential residence into a literal battlefield. In 1829, Andrew Jackson’s inaugural reception devolved into chaos as crowds broke furniture and smashed china in what resembled a tavern brawl. Jackson himself nearly suffocated before escaping. In 1835, Jackson fought back against an assassin right outside the White House, beating him with his cane until subdued. In 1950, the Truman assassination attempt at Blair House brought a gun battle to the president’s doorstep, killing a Secret Service agent. In 2018, inside the West Wing, Chief of Staff John Kelly physically confronted Corey Lewandowski, an altercation broken up only by the Secret Service. And in 2014, an intruder sprinted across the North Lawn and burst into the mansion before being tackled. These are not isolated footnotes. They show that physical struggle, sometimes noble, sometimes chaotic, has been part of White House life from the beginning.
To see Trump’s UFC celebration as an insult is to ignore this reality. The White House has been burned, brawled in, attacked, and defended. It has been a dojo and a boxing ring, a place of both ceremony and struggle. Hosting a UFC event on the South Lawn is not a departure from this history, but its continuation. Roosevelt’s gi and boxing gloves find their natural heir in the Octagon. Lincoln’s wrestling and Washington’s grappling echo in the cheers of the UFC crowd. Jackson’s cane fight, Truman’s shootout, and countless scrambles by Secret Service agents remind us that force and contest have always had their place there.
Trump’s decision is bold. It is populist in the best sense, connecting the presidency to the millions of Americans who follow mixed martial arts. It is a celebration of American fighting spirit on the nation’s grandest stage, timed with its 250th anniversary. And it is historically fitting, a reminder that our seat of power is not a cloister but a citadel, where strength and resolve are displayed as often as diplomacy. For all the Democratic hand-wringing, the truth is simple: fighting at the White House is not the exception, it is the rule.
Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
Alexander Muse has been delivering sharp conservative headlines and opinion editorials using the amuse on 𝕏 handle since 2007. His in-depth political analysis is available here through American Liberty. His work is read in the White House, the halls of Congress, on K Street, and by prominent Americans, including Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and Donald Trump Jr. Ranked among the top 200 most-followed Premium 𝕏 accounts, his content drives over four billion impressions annually. Follow him on 𝕏 https://x.com/amuse.
Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro is drawing attention for comments that appeared to echo one
At American Liberty News, we eschew the mainstream media’s tightly controlled narrative to provide our readers with real news, real insights, and the means to take action. We seek out insightful coverage – and partner with knowledgeable and experienced people and organizations to bring you the information and insight our readers demand.
We humbly seek to provide the tools and information necessary for our readers to decide for themselves what is true and what is right.
From Roosevelt’s Ring To Trump’s Octagon: The White House Tradition Of Combat
When President Trump announced that the Ultimate Fighting Championship would set up its Octagon on the White House South Lawn to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary, critics on the left howled. Democrats called it unbecoming, embarrassing, even degrading to the dignity of the presidency. They claimed the White House should be a sanctuary of peace and calm, not the backdrop for a mixed martial arts spectacle. These critics miss the point. The White House is not a monastery. It has never been untouched by fighting, conflict, or displays of physical power. Trump’s decision, unprecedented in scale, continues an old and distinctly American tradition of combat at the Executive Mansion.
The UFC event itself is nothing short of monumental. The Octagon will rise on the South Lawn, with weigh-ins at the Lincoln Memorial. An 85,000-person viewing party will gather at the Ellipse, making this one of the largest public White House events in history. The UFC, now over 30 years old, began in 1993. Once dismissed as fringe, it has grown into a global phenomenon rivaling boxing in revenue and popularity. Tens of millions of Americans watch its matches, and the sport generates nearly $10 billion annually. To host such a contest at the seat of American power is to acknowledge not just the sport’s rise but the American taste for strength, resilience, and spectacle.
This is not without precedent. Theodore Roosevelt, the president most associated with vigor and combat sports, turned the White House into a training hall. A college boxer at Harvard, Roosevelt continued sparring well into his presidency, trading blows with military aides in White House rooms. In 1908, one session ended with a punch that detached his retina, blinding him in one eye. Rather than retreat, Roosevelt shifted to martial arts, bringing Japanese judo master Yamashita Yoshiaki to the White House in 1904. Yamashita trained Roosevelt several afternoons a week in ground-floor rooms or even in the East Room itself. On one famous occasion, Roosevelt donned a gi and practiced throws before a gathering that included his wife Edith, his children, and Secretary of War William Howard Taft. Roosevelt made the White House a dojo and a boxing ring. His example shows that martial contests at the Executive Mansion are not aberrations, but traditions.
Other presidents too had their links to fighting. Abraham Lincoln, towering at 6’4”, was a champion wrestler, with only one recorded defeat in roughly 300 matches. George Washington excelled at “collar and elbow” wrestling, while William Howard Taft twice won collegiate wrestling championships at Yale. Ulysses S. Grant, Zachary Taylor, and Chester Arthur all wrestled in their youths. Warren Harding even had a boxing ring installed in the White House, mainly for the training of Secret Service agents. More recently, Barack Obama received an honorary taekwondo black belt, and Michelle Obama’s White House fitness programs often featured boxing moves. Far from a temple of tranquility, the White House has long been associated with presidents who understood the value of combat, whether on the mat, in the ring, or in spirit.
And then there is the White House itself, often treated by Democrats as though it were a porcelain artifact never touched by turmoil. History tells a different story. In 1814, British troops set fire to the White House during the War of 1812, turning the presidential residence into a literal battlefield. In 1829, Andrew Jackson’s inaugural reception devolved into chaos as crowds broke furniture and smashed china in what resembled a tavern brawl. Jackson himself nearly suffocated before escaping. In 1835, Jackson fought back against an assassin right outside the White House, beating him with his cane until subdued. In 1950, the Truman assassination attempt at Blair House brought a gun battle to the president’s doorstep, killing a Secret Service agent. In 2018, inside the West Wing, Chief of Staff John Kelly physically confronted Corey Lewandowski, an altercation broken up only by the Secret Service. And in 2014, an intruder sprinted across the North Lawn and burst into the mansion before being tackled. These are not isolated footnotes. They show that physical struggle, sometimes noble, sometimes chaotic, has been part of White House life from the beginning.
To see Trump’s UFC celebration as an insult is to ignore this reality. The White House has been burned, brawled in, attacked, and defended. It has been a dojo and a boxing ring, a place of both ceremony and struggle. Hosting a UFC event on the South Lawn is not a departure from this history, but its continuation. Roosevelt’s gi and boxing gloves find their natural heir in the Octagon. Lincoln’s wrestling and Washington’s grappling echo in the cheers of the UFC crowd. Jackson’s cane fight, Truman’s shootout, and countless scrambles by Secret Service agents remind us that force and contest have always had their place there.
Trump’s decision is bold. It is populist in the best sense, connecting the presidency to the millions of Americans who follow mixed martial arts. It is a celebration of American fighting spirit on the nation’s grandest stage, timed with its 250th anniversary. And it is historically fitting, a reminder that our seat of power is not a cloister but a citadel, where strength and resolve are displayed as often as diplomacy. For all the Democratic hand-wringing, the truth is simple: fighting at the White House is not the exception, it is the rule.
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Sponsored by the John Milton Freedom Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to helping independent journalists overcome formidable challenges in today’s media landscape and bring crucial stories to you.
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Alexander Muse has been delivering sharp conservative headlines and opinion editorials using the amuse on 𝕏 handle since 2007. His in-depth political analysis is available here through American Liberty. His work is read in the White House, the halls of Congress, on K Street, and by prominent Americans, including Elon Musk, Joe Rogan, and Donald Trump Jr. Ranked among the top 200 most-followed Premium 𝕏 accounts, his content drives over four billion impressions annually. Follow him on 𝕏 https://x.com/amuse.
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