A Judge Just Paused Trump’s Plan to Evict a Slavery Exhibit From a National Park
Because nothing says "let's unite the country" quite like trying to delete the most uncomfortable parts of its history from the woods.
The federal courts have entered the chat regarding Donald Trump’s crusade against national park exhibits. A judge just put a temporary freeze on the administration's order to rip out certain historical displays, but the fate of one major exhibit about slavery is still completely up in the air.
It turns out some folks in Washington looked at a historic site explaining the brutal reality of slavery and decided, "Yeah, that's the real problem with America's parks." The executive order wanted these displays gone, but a judge stepped in to say, "Hold on, let's actually look at the law first."
Now everyone is left waiting to see if history gets to stay where it happened, or if the parks are going to get a sanitized, PG-rated rewrite.
It is always fascinating when the preservation of history becomes a matter of national security and lawn maintenance.
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