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Showing Original Post only (View all)Actually, Slavery Was Very Bad [View all]
The presidents latest criticism of museums is a thinly veiled attempt to erase Black history.
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/08/trump-attack-smithsonian-slavery/683969/
https://archive.ph/yiW72

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
In what looks to be an intensifying quest to reshape American history and scholarship according to his own preferences, President Donald Trump this week targeted the Smithsonian Institution, the national repository of American history and memory. Trump seemed outraged, in particular, by the Smithsonians portrayal of the Black experience in America. He took to Truth Social to complain that the countrys museums are, essentially, the last remaining segment of WOKE. The Smithsonian, he wrote, is OUT OF CONTROL. Then Trump wrote something astonishing, even for him. He asserted that the narrative presented by the Smithsonian is overly focused on how horrible our Country is, how bad Slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden have been.
Before continuing, it is important to pause a moment and state this directly: Donald Trump, the current president of the United States, believes that the Smithsonian is failing to do its job, because it spends too much time portraying slavery as bad. After reading his post, I thought of the historian Lonnie Bunch, the current secretary of the Smithsonianthe first Black person to lead the institution since its founding in 1846and the founding director of the Smithsonians National Museum of African American History and Culture. In his 2016 speech at the grand opening of the museum, Bunch thanked Barack Obama and George W. Bush for their support. We are at this moment because of the backing of the United States Congress and the White House, he said, turning to them both onstage. Its sobering to consider how different things are today.
Bunch has been fighting efforts by the Trump administration to bring the Smithsonian into conformity with the MAGA vision of American history, and people familiar with his views say he is committed to protecting the intellectual integrity and independence of the Smithsonian. But how much longer, given Trumps ever more antagonistic position, will Bunch be able to withstand the presidential pressure? On Truth Social, Trump said he had instructed my attorneys to go through the Museums, and start the exact same process that has been done with Colleges and Universities where tremendous progress has been made. A recent letter to the Smithsonian from the White House states that the review will be completed and a final report issued by early 2026, in time for the nations 250th anniversary, to ensure alignment with the Presidents directive to celebrate American exceptionalism.
Trumps Truth Social comment on slavery was unsettling for me not only because I am the descendant of enslaved people, and not only because I was born and raised in New Orleans, which was once the center of the domestic slave trade, but also because I am an American who believes that the only way to understand this countrythe only way to love this countryis to tell the truth about it. Part of that truth is that chattel slavery, which lasted in the British American colonies and then the American nation for nearly 250 years, was indeed quite bad. In 2021, I published a book about how we remember slavery. I have spent years reading the first-person accounts of formerly enslaved people discussing the myriad horrors they enduredthe journey across the Middle Passage, the abuse, the sexual violence, the psychological terror, the family separations. It is worth taking the time, in light of the presidents recent words, to revisit some of these accounts.
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Yes: there are three sides. African Americans had it bad, slavery whites were much worse since they held the whip.
Bernardo de La Paz
Saturday
#5
His Dad (Fred) was a Klansman arrested in NY in 1920's at a rally (WaPo). Together they paid the highest fine
Evolve Dammit
Saturday
#14
When you are evil personified like trump and hitler, it's hard to see the bad in the bad.
Wonder Why
Saturday
#16
It's hard to believe that in the 1970's on network TV Roots was shown and it exposed the cruelty of slavery
kimbutgar
Saturday
#18
NO, I saw it the first time, and it was the mid-70s, since I was in Jr. High at the time.
Jack Valentino
Sunday
#30