Philadelphia liberals caught turning historic site into anti-Trump circus until judge steps in

The circus never ends in Philadelphia, where left-wing bureaucrats seem more interested in stoking division than in protecting America’s heritage. The President’s House park site—supposedly a place to honor our history—has become ground zero for another anti-Trump spectacle. After all, nothing excites liberals more than using slavery exhibits as a club to bash America and its leaders.

Recently, the Trump administration tried to remove these loaded displays, which offer little more than a constant reminder that the left wants Americans to feel shame, not pride. Of course, as fast as the administration tried to act, the local powers had already snuck the exhibits back into place. They see history only as a tool for their agenda: blame, shame, and division. Who cares about unity or moving forward? Not these activists.

But hold on—a glimmer of sanity came from the federal appeals court. A judge actually delivered a brief reprieve for President Trump and his team. It’s a rare moment of common sense, telling Philadelphia’s museum bosses that they can’t just trample over the concerns of elected officials or the people with their own one-sided propaganda.

Why are Democrat-controlled cities always ready to undermine America’s leaders for their own political stunts? They’ll cry about unity, then turn historic landmarks into stages for grievance. The hypocrisy reeks from coast to coast. These are the same folks who bow to globalist interests and tear down statues, but suddenly want to “preserve history” as long as it fits their tale of endless victimhood.

America deserves more than endless guilt trips and divisive performances. Patriots remember that history should unite us, not be twisted into a weapon against those trying to lead our nation. Why should the anti-American left control the story we pass on to the next generation? Maybe it’s time to ask: when will common sense—and patriotism—finally take center stage in places like Philadelphia?

Source: Washington Times


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