It is no coincidence that my irrational fear of Sharpies is connected to my very rational fear of the Orange Worst. As a teacher, I am constantly on the lookout for children with indelible markers. Most of your standard pens and pencils, including those water-based smelly marking pens can be wiped away with a damp cloth. And for those fledgling taggers who use the teacher's dry-erase marker to leave their wit or wisdom on school property might consider another line of delinquency.
Then there's the convicted felon and war criminal who is so fond of the permanent Brand Name Sharpie that he spent nearly five full minutes of a televised Cabinet Meeting to discuss his fixation on this particular writing instrument. It was, perhaps, an attempt to create some sort of allegory about government waste, but ended up becoming an ironic counterpoint: While we're busy kibitzing about what pen we should use to hand out during document signings, people are dying across the globe in a war that this pinhead started.
Then there's the actual marking of territory, which my mother always used to say when describing the behavior of "taggers" was bad toilet training. When it comes to the former game show host, however, he is not content to merely scrawl his name in Sharpie or even spray paint. He hires crews of people to go out and attach new letters using tarps and scaffolding to slap his name on government buildings like the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the US Institute of Peace. And now he wants to put his scribbled signature on all our currency.
A former opponent and now full-on MAGA supplicant, Florida Governor Ron "of the Satan" DeSantis has declared that the Palm Beach Airport will now bear the name of an adjudicated rapist. John Oliver did a whole segment on how the National Park Service annual passes will now be defaced with the face of the Orange Worst. He then offered a solution: stickers to cover the unwanted visage of the accused pedophile with something, anything, better.
And yes, someday this folly will all come to an end. The next administration will have their hands full scrubbing off all that marking. A ridiculous and unfortunate task compared to fixing the economy and returning any semblance of our international standing, but necessary to be rid of any remnants of the Sharpie King. When that time comes, I suggest you give a public school teacher a call. We're pretty clever when it comes to getting rid of "permanent" marks.