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Trump’S Cultural Clash Targets U.S. Museums
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) President Donald Trump signed an executive order on March 27, 2025, targeting the Smithsonian Institution, according to White House statements.
He aims to remove what he calls“anti-American ideology” from its 21 museums and National Zoo, impacting 20 million annual visitors. Vice President J.D. Vanc leads this push, focusing on a narrative of America's traditional strengths.
Trump argues that movements like Black Power, transgender rights, and“woke” culture clash with the values that built America. He points to independence, innovation, and a unified identity as the nation's core, claiming these shifts-tied to racial justice and inclusion-divide rather than strengthen.
The decree scraps exhibits like a 2020 Smithsonian graphic linking“hard work” to“White culture.” It also bans transgender references in a planned women's museum.
The order also eyes federal lands, reviewing 160 Confederate statues toppled since George Floyd's 2020 murder. Trump sees their removal as erasing history, not progress, despite slavery's role-4 million enslaved, 12% of the 1860 population-shaping early America.
He pushes a return to a pre-1960s ethos, when 90% of the population was White, per census data, and social norms aligned with his vision. The Smithsonian, with a $1.1 billion budget-two-thirds federal-faces pressure to comply or lose funds.
Trump's Vision for America
Trump targets sites like Philadelphia's Independence Park, set for its 250th anniversary in 2026, to highlight achievements over systemic flaws. Another decree hits Washington, D.C., boosting police and deportations in a city that rejected him by 92% in 2024, leveraging its lack of statehood.
Supporters see this as reclaiming America's essence-individualism and grit-echoed by 45% of Americans who, per 2023 Pew Research, feel“woke” culture overreaches.
Businesses note tourism and federal spending hang in the balance, with the Smithsonian's $367 million in private funds as a potential buffer. Critics argue adaptation-ending slavery, expanding rights-defines America too, with 59% seeing diversity as a strength.
Artifacts like Felix Gonzalez-Torres's AIDS-themed installation, now stripped of context, highlight the stakes. Trump's base, 40-45% of voters per polls, backs this nostalgic lens, but a broader culture-38% non-White today-reflects change.
The 2026 milestone nears as a test of which story prevails. Globally, this signals America wrestling with its identity. Trump champions a selective past, sidelining a decade of reckoning since Floyd's death.
Data shows a split-51% back some transgender protections, 70% supported civil rights in 1964. His purge aims to unify, but risks deepening divides over what truly made America strong-or weak.
He aims to remove what he calls“anti-American ideology” from its 21 museums and National Zoo, impacting 20 million annual visitors. Vice President J.D. Vanc leads this push, focusing on a narrative of America's traditional strengths.
Trump argues that movements like Black Power, transgender rights, and“woke” culture clash with the values that built America. He points to independence, innovation, and a unified identity as the nation's core, claiming these shifts-tied to racial justice and inclusion-divide rather than strengthen.
The decree scraps exhibits like a 2020 Smithsonian graphic linking“hard work” to“White culture.” It also bans transgender references in a planned women's museum.
The order also eyes federal lands, reviewing 160 Confederate statues toppled since George Floyd's 2020 murder. Trump sees their removal as erasing history, not progress, despite slavery's role-4 million enslaved, 12% of the 1860 population-shaping early America.
He pushes a return to a pre-1960s ethos, when 90% of the population was White, per census data, and social norms aligned with his vision. The Smithsonian, with a $1.1 billion budget-two-thirds federal-faces pressure to comply or lose funds.
Trump's Vision for America
Trump targets sites like Philadelphia's Independence Park, set for its 250th anniversary in 2026, to highlight achievements over systemic flaws. Another decree hits Washington, D.C., boosting police and deportations in a city that rejected him by 92% in 2024, leveraging its lack of statehood.
Supporters see this as reclaiming America's essence-individualism and grit-echoed by 45% of Americans who, per 2023 Pew Research, feel“woke” culture overreaches.
Businesses note tourism and federal spending hang in the balance, with the Smithsonian's $367 million in private funds as a potential buffer. Critics argue adaptation-ending slavery, expanding rights-defines America too, with 59% seeing diversity as a strength.
Artifacts like Felix Gonzalez-Torres's AIDS-themed installation, now stripped of context, highlight the stakes. Trump's base, 40-45% of voters per polls, backs this nostalgic lens, but a broader culture-38% non-White today-reflects change.
The 2026 milestone nears as a test of which story prevails. Globally, this signals America wrestling with its identity. Trump champions a selective past, sidelining a decade of reckoning since Floyd's death.
Data shows a split-51% back some transgender protections, 70% supported civil rights in 1964. His purge aims to unify, but risks deepening divides over what truly made America strong-or weak.

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