The loudest yelps for liberty

Micromanaging all the museums.

Trump on Thursday ordered that “improper, divisive or anti-American ideology” be removed from the Smithsonian Institution, the vast museum and research complex that is a premier exhibition space for U.S. history and culture.

That’s not his job. His power and authority are not infinite, and I really doubt they stretch to telling the Smithsonian what it can and can’t include in its museums.

According to Trump’s order, the Democratic Biden administration “pushed a divisive ideology that reconstrued America’s promotion of liberty as fundamentally flawed, inflecting revered institutions like the Smithsonian and national parks with false narratives.”

Is it divisive though? Which is more divisive: insisting that “America’s promotion of liberty” has been without flaw throughout its history, or acknowledging the well-documented fact that many people were systematically denied liberty in America for most of its history? The thing about the second is that it doesn’t ignore the existence of people who know all too well that their grandparents and great-grandparents and so on were officially, by law, enforced by torture, denied liberty in America. Trump on the other hand does deny that, which is very easy for him because his grandparents weren’t whipped by their owners.

Samuel Johnson said it best in 1775: “”How is it that we hear the loudest yelps for liberty among the drivers of negroes?”

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