Step into Lafayette Square, where the city’s calm surface hides a long memory of confrontation. Under the trees, the proximity to power is impossible to miss, and the space seems to hold two energies at once: restraint and insistence. This is a place where people gather to be counted—not just physically, but historically. Voices rise here because the setting itself is an argument about visibility. As you look around, notice the layers: statues, fences, sightlines, and the choreography of who can stand where. Lafayette Square invites you to consider how protest becomes part of a nation’s biography, and how public space becomes political speech.