United States|The extensive cleaning project also includes the restoration of the monuments and statues of South State.
The abstract is made by artificial intelligence and checked by man.
US President Donald Trump has ordered to eliminate “non-American ideology” from the Museums of the Smithsonian Institute.
Vice President JD Vance is leading a project, which also includes the restoration of monuments and statues in Southern State.
Professor Chandra Manning from the University of Georgetown considers the order to be a demonstration of uncertainty about the country and its past.
US president Donald Trump has been given order “To eliminate” inappropriate, opinion-sharing and unreported ideology from the Museums of the Smithsonian Institute, say BBC and The Washington Post.
The Smithsonian Institute is an independent research and education institution operating with federal and private funding, which maintains several museums. Many of them present the history of the United States.
The title of Trump’s order is “Restoring Truth and Reason to America’s History,” and the cleansing project is led by a vice -president Jd vancewho is also a member of the Board of the Smithsonian Institute because of his post.
In addition The President has ordered the Minister of the Interior to restore parks, monuments and statues that have been “misused or changed over the past five years to capture a false re -evaluation of history.”
In 2020, numerous monuments and statues erected in the Civil War were removed in the United States in 2020 in honor of slavery southern figures. The removal of statues and monuments was associated with extensive anti -racism and police violence that started with a black George Floyd death in the summer of 2020.
Floyd died in the arrest in the police, and the Caucasian police who were found to be guilty received a prison sentence.
Trump The order also specifically mentions a museum of American women’s history, and the collections may not be included in the collections.
According to the order, over the last decade, the United States has wanted to “replace objective facts with a distorted story that is controlled by ideology instead of the truth”.
Professor of American History interviewed by Washington Post Chandra Manning Georgetown University regards Trump’s order as an indication of uncertainty about the country and its past.
“It seems to suggest that if we let anyone hear the whole story of the challenges of the Americans, our nation breaks down. The Americans are not so fragile,” Manning says.