Trump bans ‘negative’ signage at national parks, asks visitors to snitch

In his ongoing war on βwoke,β President Trump has instructed the National Park Service to scrub any language he would deem negative, unpatriotic or smacking of βimproper partisan ideologyβ from signs and presentations visitors encounter at national parks and historic sites.
Instead, his administration has ordered the national parks and hundreds of other monuments and museums supervised by the Department of the Interior to ensure that all of their signage reminds Americans of our βextraordinary heritage, consistent progress toward becoming a more perfect Union, and unmatched record of advancing liberty, prosperity and human flourishing.β
Those marching orders, which went into effect late last week, have left Trump opponents and free speech advocates gasping in disbelief, wondering how park employees are supposed to put a sunny spin on monuments acknowledging slavery and Jim Crow laws. And how theyβll square the story of Japanese Americans shipped off to incarceration camps during World War II with an βunmatched record of advancing liberty.β
At Manzanar National Historic Site, a dusty encampment in the high desert of eastern California, one of 10 camps where more than 120,000 Japanese American civilians were imprisoned during the early 1940s, employees put up a required notice describing the changes last week.
Like all such notices across the country, it includes a QR code visitors can use to report any signs they see that are βnegative about either past or living Americans or that fail to emphasize the beauty, grandeur, and abundance of landscapesβ.
An identical sign is up at the Cesar E. Chavez National Monument in Kern County, a tribute to the struggle to ensure better wages and safer working conditions for immigrant farm laborers. Such signs are going up across the sprawling system, which includes Fort Sumter National Monument, where Confederates fired the first shots of the Civil War; Fordβs Theater National Historic Site in Washington, D.C., where Abraham Lincoln was assassinated; and the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Park.
So, nothing negative about John Wilkes Booth or James Earl Ray?
In response to an email requesting comment, a National Park Service spokesperson did not address questions about specific parks or monuments, saying only that changes would be made βwhere appropriate.β
The whole thing is βflabbergasting,β said Dennis Arguelles, Southern California director for the nonprofit National Parks Conservation Assn. βThese stories may not be flattering to American heritage, but theyβre an integral part of our history.
βIf we lose these stories, then weβre in danger of repeating some of these mistakes,β Arguelles said.
Trump titled his March 27 executive order requiring federal sign writers to look on the bright side βRestoring Truth and Sanity to American History.β He specifically instructed the Interior Department to scrutinize any signs put up since January 2020 β the beginning of the Biden administration β for language that perpetuates βa false reconstructionβ of American history.
Trump called out signs that βundermine the remarkable achievements of the United States by casting its founding principles and historical milestones in a negative light.β
He specifically cited the National Historical Park in Philadelphia and the Smithsonian Museum in Washington, D.C., as bowing to what he described as the previous administrationβs zeal to cast βour Nationβs unparalleled legacy of advancing liberty, individual rights, and human happinessβ as βinherently racist, sexist, oppressive, or otherwise irredeemably flawed.β
His solution? Order federal employees and historians to rewrite the βrevisionistβ history with language that exudes patriotism.
βIt all seems pretty Orwellian,β said Kimbrough Moore, a rock climber and Yosemite National Park guide book author. After news of the impending changes began circulating in park circles, he posted on Instagram a sign he saw in the toilet at the Porcupine Flat campground in the middle of the park.
Across from the ubiquitous sign in all park bathrooms that says, βPlease DO NOT put trash in toilets, it is extremely difficult to remove,β someone added a placard that reads, βPlease DO NOT put trash in the White House. It is extremely difficult to remove.β
Predictably, the post went viral, proving what would-be censors have known for centuries: Policing language is a messy business and can be hard to control in a free society.
βEven the pooper can be a venue for resistance,β Moore wrote.