By Stacy M. Brown
BlackPressUSA.com Senior National Correspondent

BLACKPRESSUSA NEWSWIRE โ€” Even the most cynical observers knew this day would come.

The National Museum of African American History and Culture is now the target of a decidedly anti-Black president. Credit: Courtesy image

Since Donald Trump returned to the White House in January, the dog whistle has become a bullhorn. The whitewashing of American history is no longer impliedโ€”itโ€™s spelled out in ink, signed into law, and backed by a government that is now openly in the grip of White supremacist power.ย 

In his latest executive order, President Trump has targeted the Smithsonian Institution and the National Museum of African American History and Culture, calling for the erasure of what he deems โ€œdivisive race-centered ideology.โ€ He has directed Vice President JD Vance to eliminate these so-called โ€œdivisiveโ€ elements from the Smithsonianโ€™s 21 museums, educational and research centers, and even the National Zoo. The executive order is chillingly titled โ€œRestoring Truth and Sanity to American History.โ€ It declares that the Smithsonian, once a symbol of โ€œAmerican excellence,โ€ has become tainted by narratives that portray โ€œAmerican and Western values as inherently harmful and oppressive.โ€ย 

โ€œMuseums in our Nationโ€™s capital should be places where individuals go to learnโ€”not to be subjected to ideological indoctrination or divisive narratives that distort our shared history,โ€ the order states.

The directive goes further, instructing Vance, along with Vince Haley, assistant to the president for domestic policy, and Lindsey Halligan, special assistant to the president, to work with Congress to block all federal appropriations for Smithsonian exhibitions or programs that โ€œdegrade shared American values, divide Americans based on race, or promote programs or ideologies inconsistent with Federal law and policy.โ€ย 

The order also aims at the American Womenโ€™s History Museum, demanding that no future appropriations โ€œrecognize men as women in any respect,โ€ and calls for new citizen members to be appointed to the Smithsonian Board of Regentsโ€”individuals committed to enforcing the presidentโ€™s vision.ย 

This is not an isolated move. Since returning to office, Trump has issued a barrage of executive orders aimed at dismantling every vestige of diversity, equity and inclusion across the federal government. He terminated all such programs, calling them โ€œillegal and immoral discrimination.โ€ย 

The National Endowment for the Arts Challenge America initiativeโ€”long dedicated to uplifting historically underserved communitiesโ€”has been gutted. The Pentagonโ€™s website erased the stories of Navajo Code Talkers. A โ€œBlack Lives Matterโ€ mural in the heart of Washington, D.C., was demolished. Perhaps most brazenly, the Department of Defense Education Activity banned Black History Month observances at military base schools and ordered the removal of any book or material that mentions slavery, the Civil Rights Movement, or the treatment of Native Americans.

Now, the National Museum of African American History and Cultureโ€”which opened to national fanfare in 2016โ€”is in the crosshairs.ย 

โ€œIn an almost surprising fashion, the Smithsonian has been outside of the bounds of political wrangling,โ€ said Samuel Redman, a history professor and director of the public history program at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. โ€œItโ€™s not as though there hasnโ€™t been political influence โ€ฆ but just in terms of overall funding and support for the Smithsonian, itโ€™s been remarkably consistent.โ€ย 

That consistency has now been shattered. Trumpโ€™s executive order doesnโ€™t just attack the museumโ€”it hints at restoring what many hoped America had buried: Confederate monuments, White supremacist names on federal buildings, and the reinstallation of statues that were taken down during the countryโ€™s reckoning after the murder of George Floyd.

What the president calls โ€œshared American valuesโ€ is beginning to resemble a national doctrine rooted in erasure and oppression. The Smithsonian Institution, the worldโ€™s largest museum, education and research complex, was founded on increasing and diffusing knowledge. Established by Congress with funds left by James Smithson, a British scientist, the institution spans 21 museums and the National Zoo, with 11 of the museums located along the National Mall in Washington, D.C. Now, it faces its greatest threat yetโ€”not from budget cuts or neglect, but from a government determined to rewrite history at the expense of truth. The stakes have never been clearer as the country watches these moves unfold.ย 

The battle over American history isnโ€™t theoretical. Itโ€™s happening now, in plain sight, with executive orders, political enforcers, and the full weight of the federal government behind it.ย 

โ€œThis is about power,โ€ said a Smithsonian staffer who asked not to be named out of fear of retribution. โ€œTheyโ€™re not hiding it anymore.โ€