It’s hard to see this move as anything other than another deliberate cultural flashpoint. The Trump administration’s decision to reinstall a Christopher Columbus Statue, especially one that had been toppled during the 2020 racial justice protests, was always going to reignite debate rather than foster unity. According to multiple reports, the statue is a replica of the Baltimore monument thrown into the harbor during the George Floyd protests, now placed on the grounds of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building near the White House. What makes the reaction even sharper is the administration’s framing. Officials publicly declared Columbus “a hero” who will be honored “for generations,” a statement that ignores the very real historical trauma experienced by Indigenous peoples across the Americas. For many Native communities, Columbus isn’t a symbol of exploration, he’s a symbol of colonization, violence, and cultural erasure. Installing this statue on federal grounds feels less like historical preservation and more like a pointed ideological gesture. And yes, when the White House starts elevating figures specifically because they provoke cultural backlash, it’s not surprising that people joke about “a Charlie Kirk monument being next”! That’s the environment this administration has cultivated: symbolism chosen not to unite, but to divide. Whether one sees Columbus as a historical figure worth remembering or a deeply harmful symbol, the real issue is the intent behind the installation. At a time when the U.S. could be working toward reconciliation and honest historical reckoning, this move instead doubles down on a narrative that dismisses Indigenous perspectives entirely. If the goal was to spark another round of cultural conflict, mission accomplished. If the goal was to honor history in a way that brings people together, this certainly wasn’t the way to do it.