- The National Museum of African American History and Culture debuted a series to educate people on âa society that privileges white people and whitenessâ â defining so-called âwhite dominant cultureâ as âways white people and their traditions, attitudes, and ways of life have been normalized over timeâ and portraying âthe nuclear family,â âwork ethic,â and âintellectâ as white qualities rooted in racism.

- As part of its campaign to stop being âwealthy, pale, and male,â the National Portrait Gallery featured a choreographed âmodern dance performanceâ detailing the âramificationsâ of the southern border wall and commissioned an entire series to examine âAmerican portraiture and institutional history⌠through the lens of historical exclusion.â
- The American History Museum prominently displays the âIntersex-Inclusive Progress Pride flagâ at its entrance, which was also flown alongside the American flag at multiple Smithsonian campuses.

- The National Portrait Gallery features art commemorating the act of illegally crossing the âinclusive and exclusionaryâ southern border â even making it a finalist for one of its awards.

- The National Museum of African Art displayed an exhibit on âworks of speculative fiction that bring to life an immersive, feminist and sacred aquatopia inspired by the legend of Drexciya,â an âunderwater kingdom populated by the children of pregnant women who had been thrown overboard or jumped into the ocean during the Middle Passage.â
- The American History Museumâs âLGBTQ+ Historyâ exhibit seeks to âunderstand evolving and overlapping identities such as lesbian, gay, bi-sexual, transgender, queer, transsexual, transvestite, mahu, homosexual, fluid, invert, urning, third sex, two sex, gender-bender, sapphist, hijra, friend of Dorothy, drag queen/king, and many other experiences,â and includes articles on âLGBTQ+ inclusion and skateboardingâ and âthe rise of drag ball culture in the 1920s.â
- The National Museum of the American Latino features programming highlighting âanimated Latinos and Latinas with disabilitiesâ â with content from âa disabled, plus-sized actressâ and an âambulatory wheelchair userâ who âeducates on their identity being Latinx, LGBTQ+, and disabled.â

- The National Museum of the American Latino characterizes the Texas Revolution as a âmassive defense of slavery waged by âwhite Anglo Saxonâ settlers against anti-slavery Mexicans fighting for freedom, not a Texan war of independence from Mexico,â and frames the Mexican-American War as âthe North American invasionâ that was âunprovoked and motivated by pro-slavery politicians.â
- According to the National Museum of the American Latino, âwhat unites Latinas and Latinosâ is âthe Black Lives Matter movement.â


- The American History Museumâs exhibit marking the 50th anniversary of Title IX includes biological men competing in womenâs sports and argues in favor of âtransgenderâ athletes competing in sports against the opposite biological sex.
- A exhibit at the American History Museum depicts migrants watching Independence Day fireworks âthrough an opening in the U.S.-Mexico border wallâ and says Americaâs founders âfeared non-White immigration.â

- The American History Museum features a display that refers to the founding of America as âa profound unsettling of the continent.â
- The American History Museumâs âAmerican Democracyâ exhibit claims voter integrity measures are âattempts to minimize the political powerâ of ânew and diverse groups of Americans,â while its section on âdemonstrationsâ includes only leftist causes.
- An American History Museum exhibit features a depiction of the Statue of Liberty âholding a tomato in her right hand instead of a torch, and a basket of tomatoes in her left hand instead of a tablet.â

- The National Museum of the American Latino features an anti-American exhibit that defines Latino history as centuries of victimhood and exploitation, suggests the U.S. is stolen land, and characterizes U.S. history as rooted in âcolonization.â
- The exhibit features writing from illegal immigrants âfighting to belong.â
- The exhibit displays a quote from Claudia de la Cruz, the socialist nominee for president and a director an anti-American hate group, as well as another quote that reads, âWe didnât cross the border; the border crossed us.â
- The exhibit remains prominently featured on its website alongside a quote from the Communist Party USAâs Angela Davis, who was once among the FBIâs Top 10 Most Wanted Fugitives.

- The National Museum of the American Latino describes the post-Mexican-American War California describes a âCalifornioâ family losing their land to American âsquatters.â
- The Museum of American Art uses American sculpture âto invite dialogue and reflection on notions of power and identity.â
- The American History Museumâs âUpending 1620â exhibit claims Pilgrims are a âmyth,â instead framing them as colonizers.
- The American History Museumâs exhibit about Benjamin Franklin focuses almost solely on slavery, directing visitors to learn more about his âelectrical experiments and the enslaved people of his household,â noting his âscientific accomplishments were enabled by the social and economic system he worked within.â
- The National Portrait Gallery was set to feature a âpainting depicting a transgender Statue of Libertyâ before the artist withdrew it.

- The former interim director of the future Smithsonian American Womenâs History Museum declared the museum will be âinclusiveâ of biological men posing as women.