The Smithsonian Institution Building on the National Mall is seen on March 28 in Washington, DC. The organization is the target of an order from President Trump that seeks to restore 'truth and sanity to American history.' (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
President Trump issued a record number of executive actions in his first months in office, enacting sweeping changes in how the federal government works — and signaling his intentions to reshape how the country’s stories are told.
“Over the past decade, Americans have witnessed a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth,” the president said in an executive order entitled “Restoring Truth And Sanity To American History.”
The president’s actions are part of a general push-and-pull of how presidents seek to paint the past to bolster their agenda, historians say. Like many populists, Trump wants to “Make America Great Again” and champions nostalgia about a past golden age.
Trump said he wants to remind Americans of “our extraordinary heritage, consistent progress toward becoming a more perfect Union, and unmatched record of advancing liberty, prosperity, and human flourishing.”
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But many historians are sounding an alarm and say the president is going too far.
Critics worry that the executive actions taken together, for instance, would minimize or even erase achievements by women and minorities.
The Organization of American Historians says that under the Trump administration, institutions such as museums and historic parks are now “under assault.” The 6,000-member group calls the president’s order “a disturbing attack on core institutions and the public presentation of history, and indeed on historians and history itself.”
Trump’s allies defend his executive actions, saying they’re meant to correct what conservatives see as attempts to skew history.
“President Trump continues to fulfill his promise in restoring truth and common sense to the United States and its institutions,” White House Spokesman Davis Ingle said in a statement to NPR. “President Trump is ensuring that we are celebrating true American history and ingenuity instead of corrupting it in the name of left-wing ideology.”
Cadets training to join the first black combat unit in the US Army Air Corps are seen with an instructor in Tuskegee, Ala., on Sept. 5, 1942. (AP Photo)
Here’s a sampling of Trump’s actions, and what critics and supporters say about the battle over how the country’s cultural and historical heritage should be presented.
Restoring America’s Fighting Force
The Jan. 27 action abolishes DEI programs and initiatives in the military, long seen as a pioneer in America’s push toward racial equality. The Trump administration later reverses a purge of Pentagon webpages featuring notable female and minority veterans.
Ending Radical Indoctrination in K–12 Schooling
The Jan. 29 action revives Trump’s 2020 call for “patriotic education.” It accuses schools of indoctrinating children in anti-American ideologies, citing gender policies and stating that “demanding acquiescence to ‘White Privilege’ or ‘unconscious bias,’ actually promotes racial discrimination and undermines national unity.”
It’s common for U.S. presidents to consider history as they take office — and to overturn their predecessors’ actions, as Joe Biden did after Trump’s first term. But historians say Trump is charting new territory.
“Rather than seeking to place himself in [history], he’s trying to transform it to fit him,” says Jefferson Cowie, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian at Vanderbilt University. He calls Trump’s approach a “completely different kind of project” than previous presidents.
Denali, the tallest mountain on the North American continent, is seen here looming behind a boat on the Susitna River near Talkeetna, Alaska, in June 2021. (Mark Thiessen/AP)
Cowie says that Trump’s long-running slogan, “Make America Great Again,” points to how he wants to portray history.
“Like a lot of populists, he works on nostalgia for a golden age,” the historian says. “This idea that somebody took your birthright and there’s some version of America we need to get back to.”
Cowie says the president seems to invoke two different eras as touchstones: the golden age of American manufacturing, when work was stable and wages weren’t stagnant, and the 1950s, the pre-Civil Rights era of what Cowie describes as white, patriarchal households.
The approach hints at an essential divide in interpreting the story of the United States: Is America a country striving to return to former glory, or a nation on a continuous arc of self-improvement?
Those visions have always been competing, says Angela Diaz, an associate professor specializing in Civil War history at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
A large majority of Americans — for instance, women, people of color, the impoverished — did not, in fact, flourish during the so-called golden eras of the past, Diaz and other historians note.
For many groups, a return to the past would mean “erasing a lot of the legal, economic, political, technological, social progress that the country has made and calling all of that into question,” Diaz says.
Diaz also says history should include more stories: “The more voices we have in our history, the fuller it is, the richer it is. And I would say the more accurate it is, in terms of its complexity.”
The Organization of American Historians agrees. In its response to Trump’s order on American History, it warned that his action “proposes to rewrite history to reflect a glorified narrative that downplays or disappears elements of America’s history — slavery, segregation, discrimination, division — while suppressing the voices of historically excluded groups.”
Conservative groups have largely welcomed Trump’s push to influence history and culture. That includes the Heritage Foundation, creators of Project 2025, which lays out how the president should combat what it calls “the totalitarian cult known today as ‘The Great Awokening.'”
Jonathan Butcher, a Heritage Foundationsenior fellow focusing on education, praises Trump’s reinstatement of the 1776 Project on U.S. history.The presidential advisory commission’s report was released in the final days of Trump’s first administration.
It was seen as a counterpoint to the 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones and The New York Times. The Pulitzer Prize-winning series’ goal was, in its own words, to reframe American history by “placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of our national narrative.”
The 1776 Report lists what the advisory commission described as five “challenges to America’s principles”: slavery, progressivism, fascism, communism and “racism and identity politics.”
“I think that document helps to underlie the executive orders that have come” from the White House, Butcher says.
People attend the unveiling of a Confederate monument surrounded by U.S. and Confederate flags at Arlington Cemetery, Va., on June 4, 1914. (Library of Congress)
When the administration looks to prohibit DEI programs in schools, he adds, “it is with the understanding that those particular concepts are based on racial favoritism.”
Butcher agrees that there is a tension between two fundamental approaches to history: one focusing on America’s ideals, and one focusing on the country’s failures to embody them.
“Those two ideas are always going to be in competition in American life,” Butcher says. The country’s story includes the institution of slavery and the Jim Crow era, he explains, as well as the Constitution and the Declarationof Independence and the notion of God-given individual rights.
In Butcher’s view, the history of race in the U.S. has been portrayed recently in inaccurate or problematic ways, citing both The 1619 Project and an influential essay, “White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack” by Peggy McIntosh.
Criticizing those works, Butcher argues that they’re based on the “idea that there are burdens that America will either never get around or that systemic racism can’t be resolved.”
“It doesn’t give students the chance to look back in American history and say these were, of course, imperfect people who were trying, in many cases, in key cases, to live up to America’s founding ideals,” Butcher says. “And I think that that’s the message that we need to be giving to the next generation.”
Renaming places can unite people — if done correctly
In the U.S., recent pushes to transform how the past is remembered echo another large-scale attempt at revamping history: the Redemption era.
In the decades after the Civil War, white Southerners led a violent counteraction to Reconstruction and sought a return to the old order based on white supremacy. Statues and monuments sprang up to honor the Confederacy. Through at least the 1940s, U.S. military bases were named for Confederate leaders, according to the U.S. Army.
In the 1950s and ’60s, as tensions again rose over civil rights in the U.S., so did memorials to the Confederacy.
In the past decade, many monuments and memorials linked to white supremacy made headlines again. This time, they’ve been targeted for removal or renaming during a national reckoning that grew after shocking events such as the mass shooting that killed nine Black worshipers at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., in 2015 and the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis in 2020.
A similar dynamic can be seen in other countries: In times of social and political upheaval, leaders seek to refocus the lens of history.
Political regimes seek “to represent and manipulate landscapes to promote their own ideological and political objectives,” says Martha Lungi Kabinde-Machate, who studies language and names at Tshwane University of Technology in Pretoria, South Africa.
Changing things like street names, she says, helps politicians focus “on cleansing, restoring, and transforming memory.”
Kabinde-Machate has analyzed what happened after the end of apartheid when South Africa renamed geographic markers like streets. The most successful efforts, she says, use eponyms “that unite people rather than names that cause divisions … These [uniting] names include athletes, poets, scholars, doctors, and musicians.”
In some ways, President Trump appears to be following this thinking: Many people to be featured in the “Garden of American Heroes” are from entertainment (Alex Trebek) and sports (Kobe Bryant). But his approach to military forts and historical markers is more divisive.
Trump previously opposed a plan to rename U.S. bases if their namesakes were Confederate figures. And in his second term, Trump’s defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has restored names such as Fort Benning and Fort Bragg. The Pentagon says those two installations now honor U.S. veterans with the same last names as Confederate officers. But as Hegseth announced the change to the now-former Fort Liberty in North Carolina, he stated, “That’s right: Bragg is back.”
Such reversions raise a question: The Trump administration’s push to remake American history is stirring controversy, but what kind of lasting effects might it have?
“As long as the data is not lost, it seems all reversible,” Vanderbilt’s Cowie says. “Especially since they’re executive orders, which you can immediately reverse with a new regime.”
If Trump’s intent is to make changes that truly resonate and reflect America, Kabinde-Machate’s work suggests that the process should be transparent. The goal, she says, is that “everyone has a chance to participate and express their opinions on the process; the information should be made public.”
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"content": "\u003cp>President Trump issued a record number of executive actions in his first months in office, enacting sweeping changes in how the federal government works — and signaling his intentions to reshape how the country’s stories are told.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Over the past decade, Americans have witnessed a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth,” the president said in an executive order entitled \u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/\">“Restoring Truth And Sanity To American History.”\u003c/a>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The president’s actions are part of a general push-and-pull of how presidents seek to paint the past to bolster their agenda, historians say. Like many populists, Trump wants to “Make America Great Again” and champions nostalgia about a past golden age.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Trump said he wants to remind Americans of “our extraordinary heritage, consistent progress toward becoming a more perfect Union, and unmatched record of advancing liberty, prosperity, and human flourishing.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>[ad fullwidth]\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But many historians are sounding an alarm and say the president is going too far.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Critics worry that the executive actions taken together, for instance, would minimize or even erase achievements by women and minorities.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The Organization of American Historians says that under the Trump administration, institutions such as museums and historic parks are now “\u003ca href=\"https://www.oah.org/2025/03/31/statement-on-executive-order-restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/\">under assault\u003c/a>.” The 6,000-member group calls the president’s order “a disturbing attack on core institutions and the public presentation of history, and indeed on historians and history itself.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Trump’s allies defend his executive actions, saying they’re meant to correct what conservatives see as attempts to skew history.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“President Trump continues to fulfill his promise in restoring truth and common sense to the United States and its institutions,” White House Spokesman Davis Ingle said in a statement to NPR. “President Trump is ensuring that we are celebrating true American history and ingenuity instead of corrupting it in the name of left-wing ideology.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_12041448\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1600px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-12041448\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1259\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11.jpg 1600w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-800x630.jpg 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-1020x803.jpg 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-160x126.jpg 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-1536x1209.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Cadets training to join the first black combat unit in the US Army Air Corps are seen with an instructor in Tuskegee, Ala., on Sept. 5, 1942. \u003ccite>(AP Photo)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>Here’s a sampling of Trump’s actions, and what critics and supporters say about the battle over how the country’s cultural and historical heritage should be presented.\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>Executive actions and orders related to history\u003c/h2>\n\u003cul class=\"edTag\">\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/\">Restoring Truth And Sanity To American History\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/03/27/nx-s1-5342914/smithsonian-president-trump-executive-order\"> March 27 executive order\u003c/a> calls for the removal of “divisive, race-centered ideology” at the Smithsonian Institution, and instructs the Interior secretary to \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/03/28/nx-s1-5343613/trump-executive-order-smithsonian-monuments\">revoke recent changes to landmarks and monuments\u003c/a> if they’re found to “perpetuate a false reconstruction of American history.”\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/improving-education-outcomes-by-empowering-parents-states-and-communities/\">Improving Education Outcomes by Empowering Parents, States, and Communities\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe March 20 executive order seeks to shut down the Department of Education. It also \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/04/03/nx-s1-5350978/trump-administration-warns-schools-about-dei-programs\">calls for withholding federal money\u003c/a> from programs related to diversity, equity and inclusion or “promoting gender ideology.”\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/continuing-the-reduction-of-the-federal-bureaucracy/\">Continuing The Reduction Of The Federal Bureaucracy\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe March 14 presidential action seeks to dismantle the Institute of Museum and Library Services, which sends federal money to\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/04/22/nx-s1-5364825/small-and-rural-libraries-are-feeling-the-cuts-from-president-trumps-executive-order\"> libraries and museums\u003c/a>, and six other agencies.\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/restoring-americas-fighting-force/\">Restoring America’s Fighting Force\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe Jan. 27 action abolishes DEI programs and initiatives in the military, long seen as a pioneer in America’s push toward racial equality. The Trump administration later \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/03/20/nx-s1-5334461/pentagon-black-veterans-navajo-code-talkers-website-diversity\">reverses a purge of Pentagon webpages\u003c/a> featuring notable female and minority veterans.\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/ending-radical-indoctrination-in-k-12-schooling/\">Ending Radical Indoctrination in K–12 Schooling\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe Jan. 29 action revives Trump’s\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2020/09/17/914127266/trump-announces-patriotic-education-commission-a-largely-political-move\"> 2020 call for “patriotic education.”\u003c/a> It accuses schools of indoctrinating children in anti-American ideologies, citing gender policies and stating that “demanding acquiescence to ‘White Privilege’ or ‘unconscious bias,’ actually promotes racial discrimination and undermines national unity.”\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/restoring-names-that-honor-american-greatness/\">Restoring Names That Honor American Greatness\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nTrump seeks to put his stamp on the map in this Jan. 20 action, calling for changing the name of the \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/01/22/nx-s1-5269660/president-trump-promises-to-rename-the-mountain-denali-as-mount-mckinley\">Alaskan mountain known as Denali\u003c/a> back to its earlier name, Mount McKinley, and changing the Gulf of Mexico to\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/02/03/nx-s1-5281985/google-maps-gulf-of-mexico-america\"> the Gulf of America\u003c/a>.\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/celebrating-americas-250th-birthday/\">Celebrating America’s 250th Birthday\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe action from Jan. 29 reinstates and expands Trump’s \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2021/01/18/958079495/i-beg-your-garden-trump-adds-hero-names-to-statue-garden-unlikely-to-take-root\">2020 plan\u003c/a> to create a \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/04/24/nx-s1-5375767/trump-national-garden-of-american-heroes-statues\">National Garden of American Heroes\u003c/a>. The \u003ca href=\"https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-building-national-garden-american-heroes/\">original list\u003c/a> includes civil rights activist Ida B. Wells-Barnett and anti-abortion activist Nellie Gray, along with actor John Wayne and Oglala Lakota war strategist \u003ca href=\"https://www.mtpr.org/montana-news/2013-11-13/the-only-indian-chief-to-win-a-war-against-the-u-s-army\">Red Cloud\u003c/a>.\u003c/li>\n\u003c/ul>\n\u003ch2>Competing visions of how to view American history\u003c/h2>\n\u003cp>It’s common for U.S. presidents to consider history as they take office — and to overturn their predecessors’ actions, as \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2021/05/14/997010619/biden-dissolves-controversial-trump-orders-on-race-and-culture\">Joe Biden did after Trump’s first term\u003c/a>. But historians say Trump is charting new territory.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Rather than seeking to place himself in [history], he’s trying to transform it to fit him,” says Jefferson Cowie, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian at Vanderbilt University. He calls Trump’s approach a “completely different kind of project” than previous presidents.\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_12041449\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1600px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-12041449\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1067\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12.jpg 1600w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-800x534.jpg 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-1020x680.jpg 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-160x107.jpg 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-1536x1024.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Denali, the tallest mountain on the North American continent, is seen here looming behind a boat on the Susitna River near Talkeetna, Alaska, in June 2021. \u003ccite>(Mark Thiessen/AP)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>Cowie says that Trump’s long-running slogan, “Make America Great Again,” points to how he wants to portray history.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Like a lot of populists, he works on nostalgia for a golden age,” the historian says. “This idea that somebody took your birthright and there’s some version of America we need to get back to.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Cowie says the president seems to invoke two different eras as touchstones: the golden age of American manufacturing, when work was stable and wages weren’t stagnant, and the 1950s, the pre-Civil Rights era of what Cowie describes as white, patriarchal households.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The approach hints at an essential divide in interpreting the story of the United States: Is America a country striving to return to former glory, or a nation on a continuous arc of self-improvement?[aside postID=forum_2010101909697 hero='https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/43/2025/04/GettyImages-2207404060-smithsonian-1020x574.jpg']Those visions have always been competing, says Angela Diaz, an associate professor specializing in Civil War history at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>A large majority of Americans — for instance, women, people of color, the impoverished — did not, in fact, flourish during the so-called golden eras of the past, Diaz and other historians note.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>For many groups, a return to the past would mean “erasing a lot of the legal, economic, political, technological, social progress that the country has made and calling all of that into question,” Diaz says.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Diaz also says history should include more stories: “The more voices we have in our history, the fuller it is, the richer it is. And I would say the more accurate it is, in terms of its complexity.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The Organization of American Historians agrees. In its response to Trump’s order on American History, it warned that his action “proposes to rewrite history to reflect a glorified narrative that downplays or disappears elements of America’s history — slavery, segregation, discrimination, division — while suppressing the voices of historically excluded groups.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In some instances, legal challenges have \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/05/06/nx-s1-5388902/library-funding-cuts-trump-injunction\">put some of the initiatives on hold\u003c/a> for now.\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>Conservatives applaud Trump’s moves\u003c/h2>\n\u003cp>Conservative groups have largely welcomed Trump’s push to influence history and culture. That includes the Heritage Foundation, creators of \u003ca href=\"https://static.heritage.org/project2025/2025_MandateForLeadership_FULL.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Project 2025\u003c/a>, which lays out how the president should combat what it calls “the totalitarian cult known today as ‘The Great Awokening.'”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Jonathan Butcher, a Heritage Foundation\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>senior fellow focusing on education, praises Trump’s reinstatement of the \u003ca href=\"https://www.ed.gov/sites/ed/files/about/bdscomm/list/1776/final-report.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">1776 Project\u003c/a> on U.S. history.\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>The presidential advisory commission’s report was released in the final days of Trump’s first administration.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>It was seen as a counterpoint to the \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2020/09/18/914519531/creator-of-1619-project-on-trumps-patriotic-education\">1619 Project\u003c/a> by Nikole Hannah-Jones and \u003cem>The New York Times\u003c/em>. The Pulitzer Prize-winning series’ goal was, in its own words, to reframe American history by “placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of our national narrative.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The 1776 Report lists what the advisory commission described as five “challenges to America’s principles”: slavery, progressivism, fascism, communism and “racism and identity politics.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“I think that document helps to underlie the executive orders that have come” from the White House, Butcher says.\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_12041450\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1600px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-12041450\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1161\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13.jpg 1600w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-800x581.jpg 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-1020x740.jpg 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-160x116.jpg 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-1536x1115.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">People attend the unveiling of a Confederate monument surrounded by U.S. and Confederate flags at Arlington Cemetery, Va., on June 4, 1914. \u003ccite>(Library of Congress)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>When the administration looks to prohibit DEI programs in schools, he adds, “it is with the understanding that those particular concepts are based on racial favoritism.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Butcher agrees that there is a tension between two fundamental approaches to history: one focusing on America’s ideals, and one focusing on the country’s failures to embody them.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Those two ideas are always going to be in competition in American life,” Butcher says. The country’s story includes the institution of slavery and the Jim Crow era, he explains, as well as the Constitution and the Declaration\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>of Independence and the notion of God-given individual rights.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In Butcher’s view, the history of race in the U.S. has been portrayed recently in inaccurate or problematic ways, citing both \u003cem>The 1619 Project\u003c/em> and an influential essay, “\u003ca href=\"https://admin.artsci.washington.edu/sites/adming/files/unpacking-invisible-knapsack.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack\u003c/a>” by Peggy McIntosh.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Criticizing those works, Butcher argues that they’re based on the “idea that there are burdens that America will either never get around or that systemic racism can’t be resolved.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“It doesn’t give students the chance to look back in American history and say these were, of course, imperfect people who were trying, in many cases, in key cases, to live up to America’s founding ideals,” Butcher says. “And I think that that’s the message that we need to be giving to the next generation.”\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>Renaming places can unite people — if done correctly\u003c/h2>\n\u003cp>In the U.S., recent pushes to transform how the past is remembered echo another large-scale attempt at revamping history: the \u003ca href=\"https://www.neh.gov/news/reconstruction-vs-redemption\">Redemption era\u003c/a>.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In the decades after the Civil War, white Southerners led a violent counteraction to Reconstruction and sought a return to the old order based on white supremacy. Statues and monuments sprang up to honor the Confederacy. Through at least the 1940s, U.S. military bases were named for Confederate leaders, \u003ca href=\"https://history.army.mil/Research/Frequently-Asked-Questions/Naming-of-US-Army-Posts/\">according to the U.S. Army\u003c/a>.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In the 1950s and ’60s, as tensions again rose over civil rights in the U.S., so did memorials to the Confederacy.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In the past decade, many monuments and memorials linked to white supremacy made headlines again. This time, they’ve been targeted for \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2018/08/05/633952187/where-do-confederate-monuments-go-after-they-come-down\">removal\u003c/a> or \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2023/11/06/1211025633/the-last-army-base-named-for-a-confederate-general-is-now-called-fort-eisenhower\">renaming\u003c/a> during a national reckoning that grew after shocking events such as the \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2016/06/08/481149042/how-a-shooting-changed-charlestons-oldest-black-church\">mass shooting that killed nine Black worshipers\u003c/a> at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., in 2015 and \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/sections/trial-over-killing-of-george-floyd/2021/04/20/987777911/court-says-jury-has-reached-verdict-in-derek-chauvins-murder-trial\">the police killing of George Floyd\u003c/a> in Minneapolis in 2020.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>A similar dynamic can be seen in other countries: In times of social and political upheaval, leaders seek to refocus the lens of history.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Political regimes seek “to represent and manipulate landscapes to promote their own ideological and political objectives,” says Martha Lungi Kabinde-Machate, who\u003ca href=\"https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03736245.2024.2418603\"> studies language and names\u003c/a> at Tshwane University of Technology in Pretoria, South Africa.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Changing things like street names, she says, helps politicians focus “on cleansing, restoring, and transforming memory.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Kabinde-Machate has analyzed what happened after the end of apartheid when South Africa renamed geographic markers like streets. The most successful efforts, she says, use eponyms “that unite people rather than names that cause divisions … These [uniting] names include athletes, poets, scholars, doctors, and musicians.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In some ways, President Trump appears to be following this thinking: Many people to be featured in the “Garden of American Heroes” are from entertainment (Alex Trebek) and sports (Kobe Bryant). But his approach to military forts and historical markers is more divisive.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Trump \u003ca href=\"https://www.militarytimes.com/news/pentagon-congress/2020/06/10/trump-opposes-changing-bases-named-for-confederate-generals/\">previously opposed a plan to rename U.S. bases\u003c/a> if their namesakes were Confederate figures. And in his second term, Trump’s defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has restored names such as \u003ca href=\"https://www.live5news.com/2025/03/03/pentagon-changes-name-georgia-army-base-back-fort-benning-dumping-fort-moore/\">Fort Benning\u003c/a> and \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/02/11/nx-s1-5293246/hegseth-fort-bragg-liberty-name\">Fort Bragg\u003c/a>. The Pentagon says those two installations now honor U.S. veterans with the same last names as Confederate officers. But as Hegseth announced the change to the now-former Fort Liberty in North Carolina, he stated, “That’s right: Bragg is back.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Such reversions raise a question: The Trump administration’s push to remake American history is stirring controversy, but what kind of lasting effects might it have?\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“As long as the data is not lost, it seems all reversible,” Vanderbilt’s Cowie says. “Especially since they’re executive orders, which you can immediately reverse with a new regime.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>If Trump’s intent is to make changes that truly resonate and reflect America, Kabinde-Machate’s work suggests that the process should be transparent. The goal, she says, is that “everyone has a chance to participate and express their opinions on the process; the information should be made public.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>[ad floatright]\u003c/p>\n",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003cp>President Trump issued a record number of executive actions in his first months in office, enacting sweeping changes in how the federal government works — and signaling his intentions to reshape how the country’s stories are told.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Over the past decade, Americans have witnessed a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth,” the president said in an executive order entitled \u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/\">“Restoring Truth And Sanity To American History.”\u003c/a>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The president’s actions are part of a general push-and-pull of how presidents seek to paint the past to bolster their agenda, historians say. Like many populists, Trump wants to “Make America Great Again” and champions nostalgia about a past golden age.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Trump said he wants to remind Americans of “our extraordinary heritage, consistent progress toward becoming a more perfect Union, and unmatched record of advancing liberty, prosperity, and human flourishing.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But many historians are sounding an alarm and say the president is going too far.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Critics worry that the executive actions taken together, for instance, would minimize or even erase achievements by women and minorities.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The Organization of American Historians says that under the Trump administration, institutions such as museums and historic parks are now “\u003ca href=\"https://www.oah.org/2025/03/31/statement-on-executive-order-restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/\">under assault\u003c/a>.” The 6,000-member group calls the president’s order “a disturbing attack on core institutions and the public presentation of history, and indeed on historians and history itself.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Trump’s allies defend his executive actions, saying they’re meant to correct what conservatives see as attempts to skew history.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“President Trump continues to fulfill his promise in restoring truth and common sense to the United States and its institutions,” White House Spokesman Davis Ingle said in a statement to NPR. “President Trump is ensuring that we are celebrating true American history and ingenuity instead of corrupting it in the name of left-wing ideology.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_12041448\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1600px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-12041448\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1259\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11.jpg 1600w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-800x630.jpg 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-1020x803.jpg 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-160x126.jpg 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-11-1536x1209.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Cadets training to join the first black combat unit in the US Army Air Corps are seen with an instructor in Tuskegee, Ala., on Sept. 5, 1942. \u003ccite>(AP Photo)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>Here’s a sampling of Trump’s actions, and what critics and supporters say about the battle over how the country’s cultural and historical heritage should be presented.\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>Executive actions and orders related to history\u003c/h2>\n\u003cul class=\"edTag\">\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/restoring-truth-and-sanity-to-american-history/\">Restoring Truth And Sanity To American History\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/03/27/nx-s1-5342914/smithsonian-president-trump-executive-order\"> March 27 executive order\u003c/a> calls for the removal of “divisive, race-centered ideology” at the Smithsonian Institution, and instructs the Interior secretary to \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/03/28/nx-s1-5343613/trump-executive-order-smithsonian-monuments\">revoke recent changes to landmarks and monuments\u003c/a> if they’re found to “perpetuate a false reconstruction of American history.”\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/improving-education-outcomes-by-empowering-parents-states-and-communities/\">Improving Education Outcomes by Empowering Parents, States, and Communities\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe March 20 executive order seeks to shut down the Department of Education. It also \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/04/03/nx-s1-5350978/trump-administration-warns-schools-about-dei-programs\">calls for withholding federal money\u003c/a> from programs related to diversity, equity and inclusion or “promoting gender ideology.”\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/03/continuing-the-reduction-of-the-federal-bureaucracy/\">Continuing The Reduction Of The Federal Bureaucracy\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe March 14 presidential action seeks to dismantle the Institute of Museum and Library Services, which sends federal money to\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/04/22/nx-s1-5364825/small-and-rural-libraries-are-feeling-the-cuts-from-president-trumps-executive-order\"> libraries and museums\u003c/a>, and six other agencies.\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/restoring-americas-fighting-force/\">Restoring America’s Fighting Force\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe Jan. 27 action abolishes DEI programs and initiatives in the military, long seen as a pioneer in America’s push toward racial equality. The Trump administration later \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/03/20/nx-s1-5334461/pentagon-black-veterans-navajo-code-talkers-website-diversity\">reverses a purge of Pentagon webpages\u003c/a> featuring notable female and minority veterans.\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/ending-radical-indoctrination-in-k-12-schooling/\">Ending Radical Indoctrination in K–12 Schooling\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe Jan. 29 action revives Trump’s\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2020/09/17/914127266/trump-announces-patriotic-education-commission-a-largely-political-move\"> 2020 call for “patriotic education.”\u003c/a> It accuses schools of indoctrinating children in anti-American ideologies, citing gender policies and stating that “demanding acquiescence to ‘White Privilege’ or ‘unconscious bias,’ actually promotes racial discrimination and undermines national unity.”\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/restoring-names-that-honor-american-greatness/\">Restoring Names That Honor American Greatness\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nTrump seeks to put his stamp on the map in this Jan. 20 action, calling for changing the name of the \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/01/22/nx-s1-5269660/president-trump-promises-to-rename-the-mountain-denali-as-mount-mckinley\">Alaskan mountain known as Denali\u003c/a> back to its earlier name, Mount McKinley, and changing the Gulf of Mexico to\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/02/03/nx-s1-5281985/google-maps-gulf-of-mexico-america\"> the Gulf of America\u003c/a>.\u003c/li>\n\u003cli>\u003ca href=\"https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/01/celebrating-americas-250th-birthday/\">Celebrating America’s 250th Birthday\u003c/a>\u003cbr>\nThe action from Jan. 29 reinstates and expands Trump’s \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2021/01/18/958079495/i-beg-your-garden-trump-adds-hero-names-to-statue-garden-unlikely-to-take-root\">2020 plan\u003c/a> to create a \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/04/24/nx-s1-5375767/trump-national-garden-of-american-heroes-statues\">National Garden of American Heroes\u003c/a>. The \u003ca href=\"https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/presidential-actions/executive-order-building-national-garden-american-heroes/\">original list\u003c/a> includes civil rights activist Ida B. Wells-Barnett and anti-abortion activist Nellie Gray, along with actor John Wayne and Oglala Lakota war strategist \u003ca href=\"https://www.mtpr.org/montana-news/2013-11-13/the-only-indian-chief-to-win-a-war-against-the-u-s-army\">Red Cloud\u003c/a>.\u003c/li>\n\u003c/ul>\n\u003ch2>Competing visions of how to view American history\u003c/h2>\n\u003cp>It’s common for U.S. presidents to consider history as they take office — and to overturn their predecessors’ actions, as \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2021/05/14/997010619/biden-dissolves-controversial-trump-orders-on-race-and-culture\">Joe Biden did after Trump’s first term\u003c/a>. But historians say Trump is charting new territory.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Rather than seeking to place himself in [history], he’s trying to transform it to fit him,” says Jefferson Cowie, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian at Vanderbilt University. He calls Trump’s approach a “completely different kind of project” than previous presidents.\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_12041449\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1600px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-12041449\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1067\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12.jpg 1600w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-800x534.jpg 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-1020x680.jpg 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-160x107.jpg 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-12-1536x1024.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">Denali, the tallest mountain on the North American continent, is seen here looming behind a boat on the Susitna River near Talkeetna, Alaska, in June 2021. \u003ccite>(Mark Thiessen/AP)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>Cowie says that Trump’s long-running slogan, “Make America Great Again,” points to how he wants to portray history.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Like a lot of populists, he works on nostalgia for a golden age,” the historian says. “This idea that somebody took your birthright and there’s some version of America we need to get back to.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Cowie says the president seems to invoke two different eras as touchstones: the golden age of American manufacturing, when work was stable and wages weren’t stagnant, and the 1950s, the pre-Civil Rights era of what Cowie describes as white, patriarchal households.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The approach hints at an essential divide in interpreting the story of the United States: Is America a country striving to return to former glory, or a nation on a continuous arc of self-improvement?\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>Those visions have always been competing, says Angela Diaz, an associate professor specializing in Civil War history at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>A large majority of Americans — for instance, women, people of color, the impoverished — did not, in fact, flourish during the so-called golden eras of the past, Diaz and other historians note.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>For many groups, a return to the past would mean “erasing a lot of the legal, economic, political, technological, social progress that the country has made and calling all of that into question,” Diaz says.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Diaz also says history should include more stories: “The more voices we have in our history, the fuller it is, the richer it is. And I would say the more accurate it is, in terms of its complexity.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The Organization of American Historians agrees. In its response to Trump’s order on American History, it warned that his action “proposes to rewrite history to reflect a glorified narrative that downplays or disappears elements of America’s history — slavery, segregation, discrimination, division — while suppressing the voices of historically excluded groups.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In some instances, legal challenges have \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/05/06/nx-s1-5388902/library-funding-cuts-trump-injunction\">put some of the initiatives on hold\u003c/a> for now.\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>Conservatives applaud Trump’s moves\u003c/h2>\n\u003cp>Conservative groups have largely welcomed Trump’s push to influence history and culture. That includes the Heritage Foundation, creators of \u003ca href=\"https://static.heritage.org/project2025/2025_MandateForLeadership_FULL.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Project 2025\u003c/a>, which lays out how the president should combat what it calls “the totalitarian cult known today as ‘The Great Awokening.'”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Jonathan Butcher, a Heritage Foundation\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>senior fellow focusing on education, praises Trump’s reinstatement of the \u003ca href=\"https://www.ed.gov/sites/ed/files/about/bdscomm/list/1776/final-report.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">1776 Project\u003c/a> on U.S. history.\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>The presidential advisory commission’s report was released in the final days of Trump’s first administration.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>It was seen as a counterpoint to the \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2020/09/18/914519531/creator-of-1619-project-on-trumps-patriotic-education\">1619 Project\u003c/a> by Nikole Hannah-Jones and \u003cem>The New York Times\u003c/em>. The Pulitzer Prize-winning series’ goal was, in its own words, to reframe American history by “placing the consequences of slavery and the contributions of black Americans at the very center of our national narrative.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The 1776 Report lists what the advisory commission described as five “challenges to America’s principles”: slavery, progressivism, fascism, communism and “racism and identity politics.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“I think that document helps to underlie the executive orders that have come” from the White House, Butcher says.\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_12041450\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 1600px\">\u003cimg loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"size-full wp-image-12041450\" src=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1600\" height=\"1161\" srcset=\"https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13.jpg 1600w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-800x581.jpg 800w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-1020x740.jpg 1020w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-160x116.jpg 160w, https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2025/05/npr.brightspotcdn-copy-13-1536x1115.jpg 1536w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 1600px) 100vw, 1600px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">People attend the unveiling of a Confederate monument surrounded by U.S. and Confederate flags at Arlington Cemetery, Va., on June 4, 1914. \u003ccite>(Library of Congress)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>When the administration looks to prohibit DEI programs in schools, he adds, “it is with the understanding that those particular concepts are based on racial favoritism.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Butcher agrees that there is a tension between two fundamental approaches to history: one focusing on America’s ideals, and one focusing on the country’s failures to embody them.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“Those two ideas are always going to be in competition in American life,” Butcher says. The country’s story includes the institution of slavery and the Jim Crow era, he explains, as well as the Constitution and the Declaration\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>of Independence and the notion of God-given individual rights.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In Butcher’s view, the history of race in the U.S. has been portrayed recently in inaccurate or problematic ways, citing both \u003cem>The 1619 Project\u003c/em> and an influential essay, “\u003ca href=\"https://admin.artsci.washington.edu/sites/adming/files/unpacking-invisible-knapsack.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack\u003c/a>” by Peggy McIntosh.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Criticizing those works, Butcher argues that they’re based on the “idea that there are burdens that America will either never get around or that systemic racism can’t be resolved.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“It doesn’t give students the chance to look back in American history and say these were, of course, imperfect people who were trying, in many cases, in key cases, to live up to America’s founding ideals,” Butcher says. “And I think that that’s the message that we need to be giving to the next generation.”\u003c/p>\n\u003ch2>Renaming places can unite people — if done correctly\u003c/h2>\n\u003cp>In the U.S., recent pushes to transform how the past is remembered echo another large-scale attempt at revamping history: the \u003ca href=\"https://www.neh.gov/news/reconstruction-vs-redemption\">Redemption era\u003c/a>.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In the decades after the Civil War, white Southerners led a violent counteraction to Reconstruction and sought a return to the old order based on white supremacy. Statues and monuments sprang up to honor the Confederacy. Through at least the 1940s, U.S. military bases were named for Confederate leaders, \u003ca href=\"https://history.army.mil/Research/Frequently-Asked-Questions/Naming-of-US-Army-Posts/\">according to the U.S. Army\u003c/a>.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In the 1950s and ’60s, as tensions again rose over civil rights in the U.S., so did memorials to the Confederacy.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In the past decade, many monuments and memorials linked to white supremacy made headlines again. This time, they’ve been targeted for \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2018/08/05/633952187/where-do-confederate-monuments-go-after-they-come-down\">removal\u003c/a> or \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2023/11/06/1211025633/the-last-army-base-named-for-a-confederate-general-is-now-called-fort-eisenhower\">renaming\u003c/a> during a national reckoning that grew after shocking events such as the \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2016/06/08/481149042/how-a-shooting-changed-charlestons-oldest-black-church\">mass shooting that killed nine Black worshipers\u003c/a> at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., in 2015 and \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/sections/trial-over-killing-of-george-floyd/2021/04/20/987777911/court-says-jury-has-reached-verdict-in-derek-chauvins-murder-trial\">the police killing of George Floyd\u003c/a> in Minneapolis in 2020.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>A similar dynamic can be seen in other countries: In times of social and political upheaval, leaders seek to refocus the lens of history.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Political regimes seek “to represent and manipulate landscapes to promote their own ideological and political objectives,” says Martha Lungi Kabinde-Machate, who\u003ca href=\"https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/03736245.2024.2418603\"> studies language and names\u003c/a> at Tshwane University of Technology in Pretoria, South Africa.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Changing things like street names, she says, helps politicians focus “on cleansing, restoring, and transforming memory.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Kabinde-Machate has analyzed what happened after the end of apartheid when South Africa renamed geographic markers like streets. The most successful efforts, she says, use eponyms “that unite people rather than names that cause divisions … These [uniting] names include athletes, poets, scholars, doctors, and musicians.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>In some ways, President Trump appears to be following this thinking: Many people to be featured in the “Garden of American Heroes” are from entertainment (Alex Trebek) and sports (Kobe Bryant). But his approach to military forts and historical markers is more divisive.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Trump \u003ca href=\"https://www.militarytimes.com/news/pentagon-congress/2020/06/10/trump-opposes-changing-bases-named-for-confederate-generals/\">previously opposed a plan to rename U.S. bases\u003c/a> if their namesakes were Confederate figures. And in his second term, Trump’s defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, has restored names such as \u003ca href=\"https://www.live5news.com/2025/03/03/pentagon-changes-name-georgia-army-base-back-fort-benning-dumping-fort-moore/\">Fort Benning\u003c/a> and \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/2025/02/11/nx-s1-5293246/hegseth-fort-bragg-liberty-name\">Fort Bragg\u003c/a>. The Pentagon says those two installations now honor U.S. veterans with the same last names as Confederate officers. But as Hegseth announced the change to the now-former Fort Liberty in North Carolina, he stated, “That’s right: Bragg is back.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Such reversions raise a question: The Trump administration’s push to remake American history is stirring controversy, but what kind of lasting effects might it have?\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>“As long as the data is not lost, it seems all reversible,” Vanderbilt’s Cowie says. “Especially since they’re executive orders, which you can immediately reverse with a new regime.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>If Trump’s intent is to make changes that truly resonate and reflect America, Kabinde-Machate’s work suggests that the process should be transparent. The goal, she says, is that “everyone has a chance to participate and express their opinions on the process; the information should be made public.”\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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"info": "Every weekday, \u003cem>All Things Considered\u003c/em> hosts Robert Siegel, Audie Cornish, Ari Shapiro, and Kelly McEvers present the program's trademark mix of news, interviews, commentaries, reviews, and offbeat features. Michel Martin hosts on the weekends.",
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"title": "American Suburb: The Podcast",
"tagline": "The flip side of gentrification, told through one town",
"info": "Gentrification is changing cities across America, forcing people from neighborhoods they have long called home. Call them the displaced. Now those priced out of the Bay Area are looking for a better life in an unlikely place. American Suburb follows this migration to one California town along the Delta, 45 miles from San Francisco. But is this once sleepy suburb ready for them?",
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"order": 19
},
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"baycurious": {
"id": "baycurious",
"title": "Bay Curious",
"tagline": "Exploring the Bay Area, one question at a time",
"info": "KQED’s new podcast, Bay Curious, gets to the bottom of the mysteries — both profound and peculiar — that give the Bay Area its unique identity. And we’ll do it with your help! You ask the questions. You decide what Bay Curious investigates. And you join us on the journey to find the answers.",
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"order": 4
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"info": "The day's top stories from BBC News compiled twice daily in the week, once at weekends.",
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"apple": "https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/global-news-podcast/id135067274?mt=2",
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"id": "code-switch-life-kit",
"title": "Code Switch / Life Kit",
"info": "\u003cem>Code Switch\u003c/em>, which listeners will hear in the first part of the hour, has fearless and much-needed conversations about race. Hosted by journalists of color, the show tackles the subject of race head-on, exploring how it impacts every part of society — from politics and pop culture to history, sports and more.\u003cbr />\u003cbr />\u003cem>Life Kit\u003c/em>, which will be in the second part of the hour, guides you through spaces and feelings no one prepares you for — from finances to mental health, from workplace microaggressions to imposter syndrome, from relationships to parenting. The show features experts with real world experience and shares their knowledge. Because everyone needs a little help being human.\u003cbr />\u003cbr />\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510312/codeswitch\">\u003cem>Code Switch\u003c/em> offical site and podcast\u003c/a>\u003cbr />\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/lifekit\">\u003cem>Life Kit\u003c/em> offical site and podcast\u003c/a>\u003cbr />",
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"id": "commonwealth-club",
"title": "Commonwealth Club of California Podcast",
"info": "The Commonwealth Club of California is the nation's oldest and largest public affairs forum. As a non-partisan forum, The Club brings to the public airwaves diverse viewpoints on important topics. The Club's weekly radio broadcast - the oldest in the U.S., dating back to 1924 - is carried across the nation on public radio stations and is now podcasting. Our website archive features audio of our recent programs, as well as selected speeches from our long and distinguished history. This podcast feed is usually updated twice a week and is always un-edited.",
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"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Commonwealth-Club-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
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"source": "Commonwealth Club of California"
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"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Forum-Podcast-Tile-703x703-1.jpg",
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"order": 10
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"google": "https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5tZWdhcGhvbmUuZm0vS1FJTkM5NTU3MzgxNjMz",
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},
"freakonomics-radio": {
"id": "freakonomics-radio",
"title": "Freakonomics Radio",
"info": "Freakonomics Radio is a one-hour award-winning podcast and public-radio project hosted by Stephen Dubner, with co-author Steve Levitt as a regular guest. It is produced in partnership with WNYC.",
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"officialWebsiteLink": "http://freakonomics.com/",
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"meta": {
"site": "radio",
"source": "WNYC"
},
"link": "/radio/program/freakonomics-radio",
"subscribe": {
"npr": "https://rpb3r.app.goo.gl/4s8b",
"apple": "https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/freakonomics-radio/id354668519",
"tuneIn": "https://tunein.com/podcasts/WNYC-Podcasts/Freakonomics-Radio-p272293/",
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},
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"id": "fresh-air",
"title": "Fresh Air",
"info": "Hosted by Terry Gross, \u003cem>Fresh Air from WHYY\u003c/em> is the Peabody Award-winning weekday magazine of contemporary arts and issues. One of public radio's most popular programs, Fresh Air features intimate conversations with today's biggest luminaries.",
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"info": "A live production of NPR and WBUR Boston, in collaboration with stations across the country, Here & Now reflects the fluid world of news as it's happening in the middle of the day, with timely, in-depth news, interviews and conversation. Hosted by Robin Young, Jeremy Hobson and Tonya Mosley.",
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"rss": "https://feeds.npr.org/510051/podcast.xml"
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},
"how-i-built-this": {
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"title": "How I Built This with Guy Raz",
"info": "Guy Raz dives into the stories behind some of the world's best known companies. How I Built This weaves a narrative journey about innovators, entrepreneurs and idealists—and the movements they built.",
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"airtime": "SUN 7:30pm-8pm",
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"link": "/radio/program/how-i-built-this",
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"id": "inside-europe",
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"info": "Inside Europe, a one-hour weekly news magazine hosted by Helen Seeney and Keith Walker, explores the topical issues shaping the continent. No other part of the globe has experienced such dynamic political and social change in recent years.",
"airtime": "SAT 3am-4am",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Inside-Europe-Podcast-Tile-300x300-1.jpg",
"meta": {
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"source": "Deutsche Welle"
},
"link": "/radio/program/inside-europe",
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"apple": "https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/inside-europe/id80106806?mt=2",
"tuneIn": "https://tunein.com/radio/Inside-Europe-p731/",
"rss": "https://partner.dw.com/xml/podcast_inside-europe"
}
},
"latino-usa": {
"id": "latino-usa",
"title": "Latino USA",
"airtime": "MON 1am-2am, SUN 6pm-7pm",
"info": "Latino USA, the radio journal of news and culture, is the only national, English-language radio program produced from a Latino perspective.",
"imageSrc": "https://ww2.kqed.org/radio/wp-content/uploads/sites/50/2018/04/latinoUsa.jpg",
"officialWebsiteLink": "http://latinousa.org/",
"meta": {
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"link": "/radio/program/latino-usa",
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"apple": "https://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?s=143441&mt=2&id=79681317&at=11l79Y&ct=nprdirectory",
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"rss": "https://feeds.npr.org/510016/podcast.xml"
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},
"live-from-here-highlights": {
"id": "live-from-here-highlights",
"title": "Live from Here Highlights",
"info": "Chris Thile steps to the mic as the host of Live from Here (formerly A Prairie Home Companion), a live public radio variety show. Download Chris’s Song of the Week plus other highlights from the broadcast. Produced by American Public Media.",
"airtime": "SAT 6pm-8pm, SUN 11am-1pm",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Live-From-Here-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
"officialWebsiteLink": "https://www.livefromhere.org/",
"meta": {
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"source": "american public media"
},
"link": "/radio/program/live-from-here-highlights",
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"tuneIn": "https://tunein.com/radio/Live-from-Here-Highlights-p921744/",
"rss": "https://feeds.publicradio.org/public_feeds/a-prairie-home-companion-highlights/rss/rss"
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},
"marketplace": {
"id": "marketplace",
"title": "Marketplace",
"info": "Our flagship program, helmed by Kai Ryssdal, examines what the day in money delivered, through stories, conversations, newsworthy numbers and more. Updated Monday through Friday at about 3:30 p.m. PT.",
"airtime": "MON-FRI 4pm-4:30pm, MON-WED 6:30pm-7pm",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Marketplace-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
"officialWebsiteLink": "https://www.marketplace.org/",
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"source": "American Public Media"
},
"link": "/radio/program/marketplace",
"subscribe": {
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},
"mindshift": {
"id": "mindshift",
"title": "MindShift",
"tagline": "A podcast about the future of learning and how we raise our kids",
"info": "The MindShift podcast explores the innovations in education that are shaping how kids learn. Hosts Ki Sung and Katrina Schwartz introduce listeners to educators, researchers, parents and students who are developing effective ways to improve how kids learn. We cover topics like how fed-up administrators are developing surprising tactics to deal with classroom disruptions; how listening to podcasts are helping kids develop reading skills; the consequences of overparenting; and why interdisciplinary learning can engage students on all ends of the traditional achievement spectrum. This podcast is part of the MindShift education site, a division of KQED News. KQED is an NPR/PBS member station based in San Francisco. You can also visit the MindShift website for episodes and supplemental blog posts or tweet us \u003ca href=\"https://twitter.com/MindShiftKQED\">@MindShiftKQED\u003c/a> or visit us at \u003ca href=\"/mindshift\">MindShift.KQED.org\u003c/a>",
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"imageAlt": "KQED MindShift: How We Will Learn",
"officialWebsiteLink": "/mindshift/",
"meta": {
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"source": "kqed",
"order": 13
},
"link": "/podcasts/mindshift",
"subscribe": {
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"google": "https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5tZWdhcGhvbmUuZm0vS1FJTkM1NzY0NjAwNDI5",
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},
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"id": "morning-edition",
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"info": "\u003cem>Morning Edition\u003c/em> takes listeners around the country and the world with multi-faceted stories and commentaries every weekday. Hosts Steve Inskeep, David Greene and Rachel Martin bring you the latest breaking news and features to prepare you for the day.",
"airtime": "MON-FRI 3am-9am",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Morning-Edition-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
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"onourwatch": {
"id": "onourwatch",
"title": "On Our Watch",
"tagline": "Deeply-reported investigative journalism",
"info": "For decades, the process for how police police themselves has been inconsistent – if not opaque. In some states, like California, these proceedings were completely hidden. After a new police transparency law unsealed scores of internal affairs files, our reporters set out to examine these cases and the shadow world of police discipline. On Our Watch brings listeners into the rooms where officers are questioned and witnesses are interrogated to find out who this system is really protecting. Is it the officers, or the public they've sworn to serve?",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/On-Our-Watch-Podcast-Tile-703x703-1.jpg",
"imageAlt": "On Our Watch from NPR and KQED",
"officialWebsiteLink": "/podcasts/onourwatch",
"meta": {
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"source": "kqed",
"order": 12
},
"link": "/podcasts/onourwatch",
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"google": "https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5ucHIub3JnLzUxMDM2MC9wb2RjYXN0LnhtbD9zYz1nb29nbGVwb2RjYXN0cw",
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},
"on-the-media": {
"id": "on-the-media",
"title": "On The Media",
"info": "Our weekly podcast explores how the media 'sausage' is made, casts an incisive eye on fluctuations in the marketplace of ideas, and examines threats to the freedom of information and expression in America and abroad. For one hour a week, the show tries to lift the veil from the process of \"making media,\" especially news media, because it's through that lens that we see the world and the world sees us",
"airtime": "SUN 2pm-3pm, MON 12am-1am",
"imageSrc": "https://ww2.kqed.org/radio/wp-content/uploads/sites/50/2018/04/onTheMedia.png",
"officialWebsiteLink": "https://www.wnycstudios.org/shows/otm",
"meta": {
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"source": "wnyc"
},
"link": "/radio/program/on-the-media",
"subscribe": {
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"tuneIn": "https://tunein.com/radio/On-the-Media-p69/",
"rss": "http://feeds.wnyc.org/onthemedia"
}
},
"our-body-politic": {
"id": "our-body-politic",
"title": "Our Body Politic",
"info": "Presented by KQED, KCRW and KPCC, and created and hosted by award-winning journalist Farai Chideya, Our Body Politic is unapologetically centered on reporting on not just how women of color experience the major political events of today, but how they’re impacting those very issues.",
"airtime": "SAT 6pm-7pm, SUN 1am-2am",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Our-Body-Politic-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
"officialWebsiteLink": "https://our-body-politic.simplecast.com/",
"meta": {
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"source": "kcrw"
},
"link": "/radio/program/our-body-politic",
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"google": "https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5zaW1wbGVjYXN0LmNvbS9feGFQaHMxcw",
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"rss": "https://feeds.simplecast.com/_xaPhs1s",
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},
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"id": "pbs-newshour",
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