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President Donald Trump has always understood the brand’s strength. As a famous businessman, he attached his name to the facades of skyscrapers and a license for his name for a group of products, from hotels to wine.
Now, he tries to hold his bolder trade campaign yet: America itself.
On his first day in office, he signed an order to rename the Gulf of Mexico in the Gulf of America. Denali, the original name of Alaska’s famous climax, will return to Mount McKinley, in reference to the nineteenth century president.
Fort Prague, which was named after General Confederation, even changed the army to Fort Liberty, will bear its original name again – but this time it is attributed to a less controversial soldier than World War II.
Trump is not the first American president to restore a memorial. Barack Obama, a democratic, was called Mount McKinley to his original American name, Denali, after years of pressure from Alaska.
George W. Bush, a Republican, was renamed the Caribbean National Forest in Community Portorico to the National Forest in 2007, to reflect the heritage of the American region.
After George Floyd was killed in 2020 It sparked a national account of race, Congress began a process to rename the American military bases called Confederation. In 2023, during the chairmanship of Joe Biden, the Ministry of Defense re -named nine American military bases, including Fort Prague.
At the heart of these decisions, there is a desire to photograph America and its values, in a certain light.
“The act of naming is a means that the presidents can reshape their vision of the nation,” said Alison Brash, a professor at the University of Wisconsin Madison, who is studying political discourse.
She said Trump’s options during his second term sent a clear message about his priorities as well.
“It raises a very national vision of the imperialism of the United States,” said Ms. Brash.
Some of Trump’s options are the recovery operations to the expansion era of America, when the prevailing ideology said that America has a mission from God to expand from the beach to the beach.
Part of President William McKinley’s legacy was his role in the inclusion of Puerto Rico, Jam, the Philippines and Hawaii. In changing the name Denali, Trump said he wanted to honor McKinley because he “made our country very rich through customs tariffs and through talents.”
It is an ideology that seems to teach Trump today as well, as it also presented the idea of returning the Panama channel, which was once under the control of the United States, the purchase of Greenland and the annexation of Canada to become the “51st State”.
Meanwhile, Fort Bragg is the latest in a continuous debate about the Confederation’s legacy – the alliance of the southern countries that separated from the United States on the issue of slavery and the effects of civil war.
During the first administration of Trump, amid a national account of racial injustice, Congress asked the Pentagon to rename the facilities called the name of the Confederation and banned future military establishments of its name.
This step was occupied by Trump, who tried to veto the measure and declared that “our history as a greater nation in the world will not be tampered with!” The Congress exceeded with the support of the two parties.
But historian Conor Williams, who served in the re -name committee, which was recommended to remove the name Bragg in 2021, said that the Confederation honoring is misleading.
“What makes the Confederations such as these bad topics to celebrate is that they have a very little recovery,” Williams said. “They committed betrayal against the United States.”
He added, “What we celebrate, what we celebrate, what the audience we do, where we put the wreaths of flowers – the president has this ability to refer to what he believes is important.”
In 2023, the Biden Fort Prague administration, which was named after the Confederation, Gen. Praceston Prague, changed to Fort Liberty.
“We have seized this opportunity to make ourselves better and ask for excellence,” Lieutenant General Christopher Donho said at a rename. “This is what we have always done and we will always do.”
However, changing the name prompted mixed feelings between legislators, former military personnel who spent time there, and the local community.
“I understand that the reason behind the change is behind the change, and I have to accept it because what was set by the elected leadership at the time,” Jimmy said. According to the local media. “But I hate that many people who have positive experiences in Fort Prague, who were born children there, and wedding parties there, and they will not have this rope from Fort Prague by name.”
This week, Trump’s new defense minister has regained Al Qaeda’s name to Fort Prague. But this time, he said that the base will be named after the first class Roland Prague, who fought in World War II, instead of a confederation.
“This is true,” said Higseth. “Brag returned.”
Republican lawmakers representing Al Qaeda expressed his enthusiasm about change.
“The Fort Prague of PFC. Roland L. Prague, who got the silver star and purple heart in World War II, was always the right decision,” wrote Senator in North Carolina, Ted Bod, on Facebook.
But at the national level, many changes in Trump’s name have proven controversial. A survey of Marquit University suggested that 71 % of adults do not support changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico, and its support is only 29 %.
Some changes have sparked discussions about who should see his vision of American history officially.
A Alaska survey poll suggested that 47 % of Trump’s voters in Alaska preferred to change the name. But in general, Alaska opposed the change of the name with a bilateral margin to one, according to the Juneau Express newspaper.
Democrats and Republicans gathered at the Alaska legislative body together to pass a decision urging Trump not to change the name of Denali.
A representative of Alaska, a representative of Alaska, a democratic and indigenous member, said Koyukon Athabascan.
Time will determine whether Trump’s symbolic name is bearing. But the arguments related to them do not show any signs of decline.
This week, the White House prevented the Associated Press correspondent from the Oval Office this week because the wire service kept the Gulf of Mexico in the famous style guide. The executive editor of the University of Associated Press described that the “worrying” decision and said it violates the rights of freedom of expression in the constitution.
Meanwhile, Google – which now uses the name GULF Of America on its maps for American users – began to delete negative reviews to change the name.
Mrs. Brash, a professor of political discourse at the University of Wisconsin, said that the renamination of the Gulf of Mexico to the Gulf of America may be land (or water) only on paper, but symbolic is indescribable.
It goes beyond geography to strike a tendon on how the country sees itself – and its history.
“I actually think this is more than just rename a water body on the map,” she said. “It is a decision to communicate about how we think about the nation’s story.”
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2025-02-16 08:01:00
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