Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be

Pete Hegseth's aides use AI to scan social media for any positive mention of DEI, feminism, or Black history — and use those findings to block military promotions.

Jul 3, 2026 1:08:15 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Clint Smith joins Tim Miller for a July 4th weekend conversation about what it means to be Black in Hegseth's Pentagon, the whitewashing of America's 250th anniversary, and who is protecting the Smithsonian from MAGA capture. Smith interviewed over two dozen active and retired military officers and found a community caught between pride in their service tradition and fury at a Secretary who blocks Black promotions, uses AI to scrub DEI supporters, and tore down Chappie James's portrait. The single most useful takeaway: America's founding promise — "to some parts sooner, to others later, but finally to all" — is still worth fighting for, even when progress is backsliding.

#Black military officers #Pete Hegseth DEI purge #Smithsonian cultural politics #America 250th anniversary #racial history education #promissory note Constitution #Chappie James portrait removal #Lonnie Bunch Smithsonian #Bayard Rustin civil rights #multiracial democracy #July 4th and Juneteenth #generational Black military service #AI-powered ideological vetting #Trump administration racial policy #DEI in federal government #Clint Smith #Pete Hegseth #Smithsonian #Lonnie Bunch #July 4th #America 250 #DEI purge #Chappie James #Bayard Rustin #Shirley Chisholm #How the Word Is Passed #promissory note #Gerald Ford #Thomas Jefferson #Civil Rights #slavery #World Cup 2026

Clint Smith joins Tim Miller for a July 4th weekend conversation about Black service members under Pete Hegseth, the fight to protect the Smithsonian from MAGA influence, and how to hold onto America's aspirational promise amid its 250th anniversary.

Chapter list
  • Before the conversation with Clint Smith begins, Tim Miller delivers a solo monologue that functions as the episode's thesis statement. He pairs two historical texts — Thomas Jefferson's final public letter, written in 1826 as he lay dying before the 50th anniversary of the Declaration he authored, and Gerald Ford's brief remarks welcoming new Americans on the Bicentennial — to argue that what makes America special is not its current rulers but its founding creed. Jefferson's letter, which Miller describes as one of his favorites, ends with the hope that the American example will cause people 'finally to all' to throw off 'monkish ignorance and superstition.' Ford's speech, by contrast, is entirely outward-facing: 'You've given us a birthday present beyond price — yourselves.' Miller reflects that America was probably failing when Jefferson wrote the letter, is probably failing worse now than when Ford stood at that naturalization ceremony, and that JD Vance and the MAGA movement are trying to turn America into something defined by ethnicity and ancestry rather than creed. The segment ends with Miller making peace with his own melancholy: the celebration on the Mall might be a spectacle, but the idea underneath it is still worth nourishing and fighting for.

  • Tim Miller formally opens the interview by introducing Clint Smith as a staff writer at The Atlantic, author of the poetry collection 'Above Ground,' and author of the bestselling 'How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America.' Miller notes with pleasure that he has now hosted both Smith siblings and teases that Clint's brother gave him some oppo on Clint. The segment is short but establishes the collegial, candid tone that will carry the rest of the conversation.

  • Clint Smith opens by describing the scope of his reporting: over two dozen interviews with currently enlisted and retired officers, both on and off the record. What he found was a community experiencing profound cognitive dissonance — on one side, a centuries-deep tradition of Black military service that tells them their ancestors endured worse; on the other, the daily reality of being told, explicitly and through policy, that their presence in the ranks is illegitimate. The stakes are made concrete when Smith explains the pension architecture: after 20 years, military members receive a lifelong pension that increases with every additional year served, and for many Black officers who have risen from impoverished or working-class backgrounds, this isn't just personal income — it's the economic foundation for an entire extended family. General Gerald Curry, whom Smith profiles, joined the Air Force after seeing his cousin's pristine uniform and stable house at Fort Knox as a child, drawn by the stability the military represented. Against that backdrop, the question of whether to stay or leave is not primarily ideological — it's existential. The answer that Smith heard most often, even from those seething with anger, was a clarifying one: 'I didn't sign up to fight for Hegseth. I signed up to fight for the Constitution.'

  • Tim Miller and Clint Smith discuss the particularly bitter irony that the person dismantling Black military careers is not a decorated general who rose through the ranks but a media personality with no comparable service record. Smith recounts the widespread animus on background: officers who never imagined they would have to tolerate this level of institutional hostility from the head of the Pentagon itself, as opposed to a one-off racist commander at the unit level. The most alarming element Smith describes is the removal of accountability from the top: where once the threat of consequences from senior leadership deterred overt racism, Hegseth's implicit 'blank check' — the signal that you can do whatever you want without consequence — has removed that check. One officer summarized the despair: 'Was everything I fought for in vain?' Smith also speculates, with characteristic generosity, that Hegseth's particular intensity might stem from his own experience of feeling passed over for promotion in favor of a less-qualified candidate who happened not to be a white man.

  • In a sponsor segment that doubles as a media philosophy statement, Tim Miller argues that the kind of reporting Clint Smith and he have been discussing — the long-haul, verified, sourced journalism that uncovers who exactly filed a civil rights complaint against Smith College — requires the infrastructure of real newsrooms. He explicitly broadens the appeal beyond the Times to include ProPublica, local papers, and any reporter working a beat. The segment reflects Miller's genuine concern that social media's firehose of unedited opinion is crowding out the patient, accountable journalism that liberal democracies depend on.

  • Neither Tim Miller nor Clint Smith knew who General Chappie James was before this reporting, which makes the story Smith tells all the more striking. James trained Tuskegee Airmen, flew combat missions in Korea and Vietnam, and had a famous showdown with a young Muammar Gaddafi at the gates of a U.S. base in Libya — a confrontation so dramatic it became military mythology. Ronald Reagan called him a model soldier. Ron DeSantis recently signed a bill naming a Florida bridge in his honor. He was considered as a potential Republican vice-presidential running mate before his death. Yet in the early days of Trump's second term, his portrait was quietly removed from the Air Force Gallery in the Pentagon. For the Black officers Smith interviewed, this was not a bureaucratic footnote — it was a symbolic obliteration of the possibility of their own careers. If even a Reagan Republican 4-star general can be erased, Smith recounts them thinking, there is no path forward for any of them. The despair this generated, he notes, was arguably more devastating than the promotion blockages, because it attacked the imagination of what was possible.

  • Lonnie Bunch built the National Museum of African American History and Culture from nothing — no collection, no staff, no building, no site — over more than a decade, turning it into one of the most popular museums in the country. Now, as Secretary of the Smithsonian, he is the first historian and first Black person to hold that role, and he is using that singular position to defend the institution from an administration that has accused it of talking too much about slavery and being too woke. Smith describes Bunch as 'the Beyoncé of museums,' with people following him through hotel lobbies seeking selfies and autographs at conferences. Trump has attacked the Smithsonian loudly and repeatedly but has never directly named Bunch — and Smith speculates that Trump genuinely likes him. The revealing anecdote is Bunch's lunch with Trump: Bunch prepared himself for termination, certain that Trump would use the meeting to dismantle the institution. Instead, Trump spent the meal asking Bunch whether he should use gold or silver to ornament his new ballroom and discussing curtains. Miller's sardonic observation — 'if only Fred had hugged him more, he could have been a gay theater queen, an interior designer' — captures the absurdity of a president whose aesthetic preoccupations seem to coexist with, and sometimes overwhelm, his ideological ones.

  • Tim Miller breaks for a brief in-house sponsor read, pitching The Bulwark's July 4th promotion: a full annual membership at $86, a 14% discount timed to the holiday. He frames it with a Simpsons riff — 'miniature American flags for some, abortions for others, Bulwark Plus subscriptions for yet a third group' — and mentions his personal July 4th playlist as a free bonus in the show notes. The sale runs through the weekend at thebulwark.com/july4.

  • Tim Miller reads from a New York Times report by Michael Bender to illustrate how the anti-DEI campaign operates not through organic outrage but through coordinated astroturf — the Smith College civil rights complaint was filed by Defending Education, a conservative parents' rights group with no affiliation to the school, after they saw a video of a transgender admiral speaking at graduation. Smith then connects this to the military: Hegseth's aides are using AI-powered searches to comb through the online history of every officer submitted for promotion, looking for any instance of positive engagement with diversity, LGBTQ rights, feminism, or Black history. Those findings are presented to Hegseth as justification for blocking the promotion — regardless of the officer's military record or the thorough evaluation conducted by the formal promotion board. The result is a systematic ideological loyalty test overlaid on the meritocratic vetting process the military has relied on for decades, and one designed to produce a senior officer corps that is more homogeneous in both appearance and thought.

  • Tim Miller poses a genuine challenge: setting aside the racist bad actors, isn't there a legitimate argument that some DEI programs metastasize into administrative overhead while the actual goal — hiring and promoting more Black employees — gets lost? Smith takes the question seriously, agreeing that a thorough, good-faith audit of what DEI programs are actually achieving would be legitimate. But he draws a sharp distinction between that hypothetical exercise and what is actually happening. The administration's anti-DEI effort, he argues, is not a policy audit — it's a structural campaign. Drawing on Adam Serwer's reporting, Smith makes the case that the executive branch is attempting to reconstitute Jim Crow: building a federal, military, and corporate infrastructure that treats Black people as incapable of serving in positions of authority and systematically removes or bars them from those positions. He acknowledges that this framing would have felt hyperbolic to him a few years ago, but argues that the policy record, taken as a whole, is no longer ambiguous about the intent.

  • Smith draws together the threads of the episode — the military purge, the Smithsonian battle, the DEI campaign — into a unified argument about historical narrative as political power. America, he says, is a place that has done extraordinary good for millions of people and extraordinary harm to millions of others, and both are equally true. The Trump administration's project is to tell only the first half of that story, and the reason isn't cultural sentimentality — it's strategic. When people don't understand that the racial geography of American cities was produced by deliberate policy (redlining, segregation, disinvestment), they assume that inequality reflects the natural capacities of different groups rather than the accumulated effects of structural violence. That misunderstanding, in turn, makes the current hierarchy seem legitimate and natural rather than constructed and contestable. Narrating away history, Smith argues, is how you launder the present.

  • Tim Miller admits to melancholy about the holiday, and Smith meets him there before offering something more sustaining. He tests out the analogy he uses with middle schoolers: just as we hold ourselves accountable for our mistakes without pretending we never made them, we should hold America to the same standard — acknowledge the wrong, learn from it, and try to become better. He notes that the celebration of the 250th is in some ways a celebration of only one iteration of America's birthday; some would argue America's true birthday is 1965, when Black Americans could more fully participate in democratic life. Miller briefly plays devil's advocate, noting that Canada seems to be managing a multiracial democracy reasonably well, and Smith pushes back: Canada's multiracialism is recent and has a fundamentally different historical foundation. Then Smith arrives at the passage that gives the episode its name and its emotional core: from 1619 to 1865, enslaved people fought for a freedom that the vast majority would never see for themselves. They fought anyway, because they knew that someday someone would. Smith says he thinks about those people constantly — about what responsibility their example bestows on him, on his children, and on anyone who benefits from their sacrifice. 'We're all chipping away at this wall,' he says, 'and you don't know if the wall is 6 inches thick or 6,000 miles thick. But what you know is that the more you chip away at it, the less the people who come after you will have to chip away at.'

  • The conversation shifts to the practical challenge of talking to children about hard history on a holiday weekend when Trump is giving a primetime speech. Smith describes his experience with the young readers edition of 'How the Word Is Passed' and the middle school tours he did around it: children, he found, have no trouble holding the both-and-ness of America in their heads at once. They understand intuitively that a country can do great things and terrible things, and they find that more comforting than confusing. It's adults who bring their defensive complications to the conversation. Smith talks about his own kids — a 9-year-old and a 7-year-old who are descendants of both enslaved Americans and Nigerian immigrants, of both pilgrims and colonial subjects — and how he calibrates the conversation to each child's development level. Tim Miller shares his own parallel: growing up white in suburban Denver, the civil rights movement felt like ancient history in black and white; raising his Black daughter in New Orleans, where that history is alive and spatially present, has meant learning it all over again alongside her. Smith closes by arguing that parents need both opportunities (their own proximity to the history) and constraints (their distance from other histories) to guide these conversations, and that the most powerful thing a parent can do is admit they are also still learning.

  • Tim Miller pivots to a lighter segment — quizzing Clint Smith on his own YouTube series — but the historical content remains substantive. On Shirley Chisholm, Smith covers her status as a political foremother for Black women, her progressive policy platform focused on building the social safety net, her work on food stamps and support for working families, and the way she laid groundwork for Kamala Harris's presidential campaign. On Bayard Rustin, Smith's tone becomes more passionate: Rustin was the organizational genius who translated Gandhian nonviolent resistance into the American civil rights movement, who mentored Dr. King, and who logistically built the March on Washington — permits, speakers, food, sanitation for hundreds of thousands of people. He was also openly gay, and for that reason was consistently pushed to the margins by civil rights leaders who feared his visibility would undermine their cause. Smith argues that this erasure was not only unjust but historically consequential, noting that Rustin shared King's evolution toward economic rights and was deeply invested in improving conditions for the working class as a whole. The segment is framed as a history quiz, but functions as a reminder that the history the administration is trying to suppress is precisely the kind of history that reveals how much harder it has always been to hold America's promise together.

  • The episode's closing segment is deliberately light. Clint Smith's brother has apparently told Tim Miller that Smith played youth soccer with exactly one move — slow, slow, fast — and Miller reads this oppo on air. Smith does not deny it. They move to World Cup predictions: Smith lived in Senegal for a period that was deeply formative, and the memory of Senegal beating defending champion France 1-0 in the 2002 World Cup inspired him to go there. He thinks Senegal can make a run in this tournament, though admits they may have already been eliminated by the time the episode airs. (As they tape, Senegal is up 1-0 against Belgium.) Miller confesses he doesn't 'soccer,' which Smith gently rebukes — everyone soccers during the World Cup. Miller counter-confesses to watching it as sleep aid for the soothing British commentary. The episode ends with Smith enthusiastically endorsing the July 4th cookout as a genuine American joy — hot dogs, links, ribs, wings — and offering the cookout as its own philosophical metaphor: 'just a little crispy, covered in carbs, and delicious.' Tim Miller promises to catch Trump's July 4th speech on Sunday night and recap it Monday, then signs off with the show's credits.

DEI
Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion — organizational programs aimed at broadening access and representation for historically marginalized groups; in this episode, used as an umbrella term that the administration is using to justify removing Black and female officers.
Promissory note
A legal document promising future payment; Dr. King used the term metaphorically for the Constitution, arguing it promised freedom and equality to all Americans that had yet to be delivered to Black people.
Tuskegee Airmen
The first Black military aviators in the U.S. Army Air Corps, who trained during World War II at Tuskegee Army Air Field in Alabama, breaking racial barriers in military aviation.
Cognitive dissonance
The psychological discomfort of holding contradictory beliefs simultaneously; used here to describe Black officers' experience of pride in military service alongside anger at the institution's current hostility toward them.
MAGAfy
Informal verb coined in this episode meaning to reshape an institution — such as the Smithsonian — to reflect MAGA ideology and exclude content the Trump administration finds objectionable.
Intergenerational
Spanning or relating to multiple generations; used to describe both the multi-generational tradition of Black military service and the intergenerational transmission of economic advantage or disadvantage.
Meritocracy
A system in which advancement is based on ability and achievement rather than background or identity; Tim Miller and Clint Smith argue the military's formal promotion boards are actually meritocratic, making Hegseth's politically motivated interference especially egregious.
Steelmanning
Presenting the strongest possible version of an opposing argument, the opposite of a straw man; Tim Miller uses this term when he pushes Clint Smith to address the most credible critique of DEI programs.
A. Philip Randolph
African-American labor and civil rights leader who, along with Bayard Rustin, organized the 1963 March on Washington; a major figure in the history of labor rights and racial equality.
Nonviolent resistance
A strategy of protest and civil disobedience that rejects the use of force; Bayard Rustin brought Gandhian nonviolence principles from India to Dr. King, forming the tactical backbone of the civil rights movement.
Socioeconomic mobility
The ability to move between different levels of social and economic status; discussed in the context of the military as one of the most reliable historical pathways for Black Americans to improve their economic standing.
Naturalization ceremony
A formal proceeding in which immigrants are officially granted citizenship; Gerald Ford chose to attend one on the 200th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, an act Tim Miller contrasts with Trump's self-aggrandizing 250th celebration.
Brazen
Done openly and unashamedly, showing no remorse; used repeatedly to characterize Hegseth's overt disregard for Black officers' service.
Pedigree
A person's background, ancestry, or record of achievement in a field; used to describe both General Chappie James's decorated military career and Lonnie Bunch's extensive career as a historian and museum curator.
Seminal
Highly original and influential, forming the basis of future developments; used to describe the March on Washington as one of the defining moments of the civil rights movement.
Bellicose
Demonstrating aggression and willingness to fight; used to describe Trump's combative public persona, which Clint Smith notes often contrasts with his more conciliatory one-on-one behavior.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Intro: Tim Miller Reads Jefferson and Ford on America's Promise

Before the conversation with Clint Smith begins, Tim Miller delivers a solo monologue that functions as the episode's thesis statement. He pairs two historical texts — Thomas Jefferson's final public letter, written in 1826 as he lay dying before the 50th anniversary of the Declaration he authored, and Gerald Ford's brief remarks welcoming new Americans on the Bicentennial — to argue that what makes America special is not its current rulers but its founding creed. Jefferson's letter, which Miller describes as one of his favorites, ends with the hope that the American example will cause people 'finally to all' to throw off 'monkish ignorance and superstition.' Ford's speech, by contrast, is entirely outward-facing: 'You've given us a birthday present beyond price — yourselves.' Miller reflects that America was probably failing when Jefferson wrote the letter, is probably failing worse now than when Ford stood at that naturalization ceremony, and that JD Vance and the MAGA movement are trying to turn America into something defined by ethnicity and ancestry rather than creed. The segment ends with Miller making peace with his own melancholy: the celebration on the Mall might be a spectacle, but the idea underneath it is still worth nourishing and fighting for.

History
Tim Miller Reads Jefferson and Ford on America

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 History

Tim Miller opens the episode by reading two texts: Thomas Jefferson's 1826 letter lamenting he can't attend the 50th anniversary of the Declaration, and Gerald Ford welcoming new Americans on the 200th anniversary. Together, they articulate America's dual promise — to welcome those who come seeking freedom and to export the idea of self-government to the world.

Chapter 2 · 09:30

Welcome: Introducing Clint Smith

Tim Miller formally opens the interview by introducing Clint Smith as a staff writer at The Atlantic, author of the poetry collection 'Above Ground,' and author of the bestselling 'How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America.' Miller notes with pleasure that he has now hosted both Smith siblings and teases that Clint's brother gave him some oppo on Clint. The segment is short but establishes the collegial, candid tone that will carry the rest of the conversation.

Claims made here

Pete Hegseth has blocked or delayed the promotion of more than 12 Black and female senior officers at the Pentagon.

Tim Miller no source cited

Hegseth removed the portrait of General Chappie James, the first Black 4-star American general, from the Air Force Gallery at the Pentagon.

Tim Miller no source cited

Chapter 3 · 10:25

Black Soldiers Under Hegseth: Blockades, Bitterness, and the Pension Calculus

Clint Smith opens by describing the scope of his reporting: over two dozen interviews with currently enlisted and retired officers, both on and off the record. What he found was a community experiencing profound cognitive dissonance — on one side, a centuries-deep tradition of Black military service that tells them their ancestors endured worse; on the other, the daily reality of being told, explicitly and through policy, that their presence in the ranks is illegitimate. The stakes are made concrete when Smith explains the pension architecture: after 20 years, military members receive a lifelong pension that increases with every additional year served, and for many Black officers who have risen from impoverished or working-class backgrounds, this isn't just personal income — it's the economic foundation for an entire extended family. General Gerald Curry, whom Smith profiles, joined the Air Force after seeing his cousin's pristine uniform and stable house at Fort Knox as a child, drawn by the stability the military represented. Against that backdrop, the question of whether to stay or leave is not primarily ideological — it's existential. The answer that Smith heard most often, even from those seething with anger, was a clarifying one: 'I didn't sign up to fight for Hegseth. I signed up to fight for the Constitution.'

Claims made here

Clint Smith interviewed over two dozen currently enlisted and retired military officers and civilians for his Atlantic piece on Black service members under Hegseth.

Clint Smith no source cited

After 20 years of military service, members receive a pension they receive for the rest of their life, with the amount increasing the longer they serve beyond 20 years.

Clint Smith no source cited

Government
Black Soldiers Under Hegseth: A System of Erasure

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Government

Black and female military officers are being blocked from promotions they earned, subjected to DEI loyalty tests run by AI, and watching their history erased from Pentagon walls. Hegseth hasn't just introduced hostility — he's removed the top-level accountability that once kept racist behavior in check, effectively writing a blank check for discrimination throughout the ranks.

Government
Data point 20 years

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026

After 20 years of military service, members receive a pension for the rest of their lives — a powerful incentive shaping whether Black officers stay or leave despite hostile conditions.

Society & Culture
The Military as Black America's Economic Ladder

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Society & Culture

The U.S. military has functioned as one of the most powerful and consistent vehicles for Black upward social and economic mobility in American history, creating multi-generational military families. That context makes Hegseth's erasure campaign not just a moral offense but an attack on the economic lifeline of entire extended Black families.

Chapter 5 · 21:35

Ad Read: New York Times and the Value of Investigative Journalism

In a sponsor segment that doubles as a media philosophy statement, Tim Miller argues that the kind of reporting Clint Smith and he have been discussing — the long-haul, verified, sourced journalism that uncovers who exactly filed a civil rights complaint against Smith College — requires the infrastructure of real newsrooms. He explicitly broadens the appeal beyond the Times to include ProPublica, local papers, and any reporter working a beat. The segment reflects Miller's genuine concern that social media's firehose of unedited opinion is crowding out the patient, accountable journalism that liberal democracies depend on.

Claims made here

General Chappie James helped train Tuskegee Airmen during World War II and served as a fighter pilot in both Korea and Vietnam.

Clint Smith no source cited

General Chappie James had a famous confrontation in Libya where he drew his gun on a young Muammar Gaddafi and forced him to retreat from a U.S. military base.

Clint Smith no source cited

History
General Chappie James: The Portrait That Meant Everything

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 History

Chappie James was a Tuskegee trainer, Korean and Vietnam fighter pilot, Reagan's model soldier, and the first Black 4-star general in U.S. history. He once pulled a gun on a young Muammar Gaddafi and made him back down. When the Trump administration removed his portrait from the Pentagon's Air Force Gallery, Black officers didn't just see a picture disappear — they saw their own futures erased.

Chapter 6 · 22:53

Chappie James: The Portrait That Meant Everything

Neither Tim Miller nor Clint Smith knew who General Chappie James was before this reporting, which makes the story Smith tells all the more striking. James trained Tuskegee Airmen, flew combat missions in Korea and Vietnam, and had a famous showdown with a young Muammar Gaddafi at the gates of a U.S. base in Libya — a confrontation so dramatic it became military mythology. Ronald Reagan called him a model soldier. Ron DeSantis recently signed a bill naming a Florida bridge in his honor. He was considered as a potential Republican vice-presidential running mate before his death. Yet in the early days of Trump's second term, his portrait was quietly removed from the Air Force Gallery in the Pentagon. For the Black officers Smith interviewed, this was not a bureaucratic footnote — it was a symbolic obliteration of the possibility of their own careers. If even a Reagan Republican 4-star general can be erased, Smith recounts them thinking, there is no path forward for any of them. The despair this generated, he notes, was arguably more devastating than the promotion blockages, because it attacked the imagination of what was possible.

Claims made here

Ronald Reagan called General Chappie James a model soldier and a hell of a pilot.

Clint Smith no source cited

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a bill to name a bridge after General Chappie James.

Clint Smith no source cited

Chapter 7 · 27:00

Lonnie Bunch and the Defense of the Smithsonian

Lonnie Bunch built the National Museum of African American History and Culture from nothing — no collection, no staff, no building, no site — over more than a decade, turning it into one of the most popular museums in the country. Now, as Secretary of the Smithsonian, he is the first historian and first Black person to hold that role, and he is using that singular position to defend the institution from an administration that has accused it of talking too much about slavery and being too woke. Smith describes Bunch as 'the Beyoncé of museums,' with people following him through hotel lobbies seeking selfies and autographs at conferences. Trump has attacked the Smithsonian loudly and repeatedly but has never directly named Bunch — and Smith speculates that Trump genuinely likes him. The revealing anecdote is Bunch's lunch with Trump: Bunch prepared himself for termination, certain that Trump would use the meeting to dismantle the institution. Instead, Trump spent the meal asking Bunch whether he should use gold or silver to ornament his new ballroom and discussing curtains. Miller's sardonic observation — 'if only Fred had hugged him more, he could have been a gay theater queen, an interior designer' — captures the absurdity of a president whose aesthetic preoccupations seem to coexist with, and sometimes overwhelm, his ideological ones.

Claims made here

Lonnie Bunch is the founding director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the first Black person to serve as Secretary of the Smithsonian.

Clint Smith no source cited

History
The Man Standing Between Trump and the Smithsonian

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 History

Lonnie Bunch is the founding director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the first Black Secretary of the Smithsonian. Trump has repeatedly attacked the institution, but has never directly named Bunch — and when they met for lunch, Trump skipped the culture war and spent the time asking Bunch about chandeliers. Bunch is navigating the impossible: protecting the institution he built without provoking the president who could destroy it.

Chapter 9 · 34:00

The MAGA Anti-DEI Machine: AI, Smith College, and the Scale of the Purge

Tim Miller reads from a New York Times report by Michael Bender to illustrate how the anti-DEI campaign operates not through organic outrage but through coordinated astroturf — the Smith College civil rights complaint was filed by Defending Education, a conservative parents' rights group with no affiliation to the school, after they saw a video of a transgender admiral speaking at graduation. Smith then connects this to the military: Hegseth's aides are using AI-powered searches to comb through the online history of every officer submitted for promotion, looking for any instance of positive engagement with diversity, LGBTQ rights, feminism, or Black history. Those findings are presented to Hegseth as justification for blocking the promotion — regardless of the officer's military record or the thorough evaluation conducted by the formal promotion board. The result is a systematic ideological loyalty test overlaid on the meritocratic vetting process the military has relied on for decades, and one designed to produce a senior officer corps that is more homogeneous in both appearance and thought.

Claims made here

The federal civil rights investigation into gender policies at Smith College was filed not by any student or affiliate of the college, but by Defending Education, a conservative parents' rights group.

Tim Miller New York Times reporting by Michael Bender

Defending Education targeted Smith College after learning that Dr. Rachel Levine, a transgender physician and retired 4-star admiral, was a graduation speaker.

Tim Miller New York Times reporting by Michael Bender

Hegseth's aides use AI-powered online searches to find any instance where military promotion candidates have said anything positive about DEI, LGBTQ rights, feminism, or Black history, and use those findings to block promotions.

Clint Smith no source cited

Government
The AI Loyalty Test for Military Promotions

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Government

Hegseth's staff use AI-powered searches to scour the records of every promotion candidate for any positive statement about diversity, feminism, or Black history. Those findings are handed to Hegseth and used to deny promotions — not based on military performance, but based on ideological purity. The result is a senior officer corps being reshaped to look and think the same.

Chapter 10 · 39:00

Steelmanning the DEI Critique — and Why This Isn't It

Tim Miller poses a genuine challenge: setting aside the racist bad actors, isn't there a legitimate argument that some DEI programs metastasize into administrative overhead while the actual goal — hiring and promoting more Black employees — gets lost? Smith takes the question seriously, agreeing that a thorough, good-faith audit of what DEI programs are actually achieving would be legitimate. But he draws a sharp distinction between that hypothetical exercise and what is actually happening. The administration's anti-DEI effort, he argues, is not a policy audit — it's a structural campaign. Drawing on Adam Serwer's reporting, Smith makes the case that the executive branch is attempting to reconstitute Jim Crow: building a federal, military, and corporate infrastructure that treats Black people as incapable of serving in positions of authority and systematically removes or bars them from those positions. He acknowledges that this framing would have felt hyperbolic to him a few years ago, but argues that the policy record, taken as a whole, is no longer ambiguous about the intent.

Chapter 11 · 42:40

America's Selective Storytelling as a Power Move

Smith draws together the threads of the episode — the military purge, the Smithsonian battle, the DEI campaign — into a unified argument about historical narrative as political power. America, he says, is a place that has done extraordinary good for millions of people and extraordinary harm to millions of others, and both are equally true. The Trump administration's project is to tell only the first half of that story, and the reason isn't cultural sentimentality — it's strategic. When people don't understand that the racial geography of American cities was produced by deliberate policy (redlining, segregation, disinvestment), they assume that inequality reflects the natural capacities of different groups rather than the accumulated effects of structural violence. That misunderstanding, in turn, makes the current hierarchy seem legitimate and natural rather than constructed and contestable. Narrating away history, Smith argues, is how you launder the present.

Government
America's Narrow Storytelling Is a Power Move

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Government

The administration isn't just being selective about history out of nostalgia — it's a deliberate power move. If people don't know why one neighborhood in D.C. looks different from another, they assume inequality is the natural order of things rather than the result of deliberate policy. Controlling the story is how you control the present.

Chapter 12 · 45:00

America 250: The Aspiration Is Still Noble, Even as We Backslide

Tim Miller admits to melancholy about the holiday, and Smith meets him there before offering something more sustaining. He tests out the analogy he uses with middle schoolers: just as we hold ourselves accountable for our mistakes without pretending we never made them, we should hold America to the same standard — acknowledge the wrong, learn from it, and try to become better. He notes that the celebration of the 250th is in some ways a celebration of only one iteration of America's birthday; some would argue America's true birthday is 1965, when Black Americans could more fully participate in democratic life. Miller briefly plays devil's advocate, noting that Canada seems to be managing a multiracial democracy reasonably well, and Smith pushes back: Canada's multiracialism is recent and has a fundamentally different historical foundation. Then Smith arrives at the passage that gives the episode its name and its emotional core: from 1619 to 1865, enslaved people fought for a freedom that the vast majority would never see for themselves. They fought anyway, because they knew that someday someone would. Smith says he thinks about those people constantly — about what responsibility their example bestows on him, on his children, and on anyone who benefits from their sacrifice. 'We're all chipping away at this wall,' he says, 'and you don't know if the wall is 6 inches thick or 6,000 miles thick. But what you know is that the more you chip away at it, the less the people who come after you will have to chip away at.'

Claims made here

The first enslaved people arrived in the British colonies that would become the United States in 1619, and slavery did not formally end until 1865.

Clint Smith no source cited

Society & Culture
America 250: The Aspiration Is Still Noble

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Society & Culture

America has never fully lived up to its founding promise — and right now it's backsliding. But the aspiration of a multiracial, multiethnic, multi-faith democracy at this scale has never been attempted anywhere else. Clint Smith refuses to abandon that project, even as he acknowledges how far we are from it.

History
Fighting for Something You'll Never See

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 History

From 1619 to 1865, enslaved people fought for an emancipation the vast majority never lived to see. Clint Smith argues that the responsibility passed down to him — and to all of us — is to keep chipping away at the wall of injustice, knowing we may not see the breakthrough ourselves. That's not despair. That's the longest tradition in American history.

History
Data point 1619

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026

The first enslaved people arrived in the British colonies that would become the United States in 1619, and from that moment they were fighting for freedom — mostly without living to see it.

Chapter 13 · 52:40

Talking to Kids About America's History

The conversation shifts to the practical challenge of talking to children about hard history on a holiday weekend when Trump is giving a primetime speech. Smith describes his experience with the young readers edition of 'How the Word Is Passed' and the middle school tours he did around it: children, he found, have no trouble holding the both-and-ness of America in their heads at once. They understand intuitively that a country can do great things and terrible things, and they find that more comforting than confusing. It's adults who bring their defensive complications to the conversation. Smith talks about his own kids — a 9-year-old and a 7-year-old who are descendants of both enslaved Americans and Nigerian immigrants, of both pilgrims and colonial subjects — and how he calibrates the conversation to each child's development level. Tim Miller shares his own parallel: growing up white in suburban Denver, the civil rights movement felt like ancient history in black and white; raising his Black daughter in New Orleans, where that history is alive and spatially present, has meant learning it all over again alongside her. Smith closes by arguing that parents need both opportunities (their own proximity to the history) and constraints (their distance from other histories) to guide these conversations, and that the most powerful thing a parent can do is admit they are also still learning.

Education
Talking to Kids About American History

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Education

Children on middle school tours have no trouble accepting that America has done both great things and terrible things. The complexity only becomes a problem when adults impose their defensiveness onto the conversation. Clint Smith's approach — with students and with his own kids — is age-appropriate honesty, not erasure or sanitizing.

Chapter 14 · 58:50

Crash Course: Shirley Chisholm and Bayard Rustin

Tim Miller pivots to a lighter segment — quizzing Clint Smith on his own YouTube series — but the historical content remains substantive. On Shirley Chisholm, Smith covers her status as a political foremother for Black women, her progressive policy platform focused on building the social safety net, her work on food stamps and support for working families, and the way she laid groundwork for Kamala Harris's presidential campaign. On Bayard Rustin, Smith's tone becomes more passionate: Rustin was the organizational genius who translated Gandhian nonviolent resistance into the American civil rights movement, who mentored Dr. King, and who logistically built the March on Washington — permits, speakers, food, sanitation for hundreds of thousands of people. He was also openly gay, and for that reason was consistently pushed to the margins by civil rights leaders who feared his visibility would undermine their cause. Smith argues that this erasure was not only unjust but historically consequential, noting that Rustin shared King's evolution toward economic rights and was deeply invested in improving conditions for the working class as a whole. The segment is framed as a history quiz, but functions as a reminder that the history the administration is trying to suppress is precisely the kind of history that reveals how much harder it has always been to hold America's promise together.

Claims made here

Shirley Chisholm was the first Black woman to seek the Democratic presidential nomination.

Clint Smith no source cited

Bayard Rustin helped Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. conceive and implement the strategy of nonviolent resistance, drawing on Gandhian principles from India.

Clint Smith no source cited

Senegal defeated defending world champion France 1-0 in the 2026 World Cup group stage.

Clint Smith no source cited

History
Crash Course: Bayard Rustin and the March on Washington

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 History

Bayard Rustin was the organizational genius behind the March on Washington — handling permits, logistics, speakers, and hundreds of thousands of attendees. He was also the man who taught Dr. King Gandhian nonviolence. But because he was openly gay, civil rights leaders pushed him to the margins, afraid his visibility would undermine the movement. His erasure is one of the civil rights era's great injustices.

Sports
Data point 1-0

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026

Senegal defeated reigning world champion France 1-0 in the 2002 World Cup, which Clint Smith described as one of the greatest upsets in World Cup history.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

History
Fighting for Something You'll Never See

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 History

From 1619 to 1865, enslaved people fought for an emancipation the vast majority never lived to see. Clint Smith argues that the responsibility passed down to him — and to all of us — is to keep chipping away at the wall of injustice, knowing we may not see the breakthrough ourselves. That's not despair. That's the longest tradition in American history.

Government
The AI Loyalty Test for Military Promotions

Clint Smith: Make America What It Set Out to Be · Jul 3, 2026 Government

Hegseth's staff use AI-powered searches to scour the records of every promotion candidate for any positive statement about diversity, feminism, or Black history. Those findings are handed to Hegseth and used to deny promotions — not based on military performance, but based on ideological purity. The result is a senior officer corps being reshaped to look and think the same.

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Claims & Sources

2 / 16 cited (12%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Pete Hegseth has blocked or delayed the promotion of more than 12 Black and female senior officers at the Pentagon.

Tim Miller no source cited

Hegseth removed the portrait of General Chappie James, the first Black 4-star American general, from the Air Force Gallery at the Pentagon.

Tim Miller no source cited

Clint Smith interviewed over two dozen currently enlisted and retired military officers and civilians for his Atlantic piece on Black service members under Hegseth.

Clint Smith no source cited

After 20 years of military service, members receive a pension they receive for the rest of their life, with the amount increasing the longer they serve beyond 20 years.

Clint Smith no source cited

General Chappie James helped train Tuskegee Airmen during World War II and served as a fighter pilot in both Korea and Vietnam.

Clint Smith no source cited

General Chappie James had a famous confrontation in Libya where he drew his gun on a young Muammar Gaddafi and forced him to retreat from a U.S. military base.

Clint Smith no source cited

Ronald Reagan called General Chappie James a model soldier and a hell of a pilot.

Clint Smith no source cited

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed a bill to name a bridge after General Chappie James.

Clint Smith no source cited

Lonnie Bunch is the founding director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the first Black person to serve as Secretary of the Smithsonian.

Clint Smith no source cited

Hegseth's aides use AI-powered online searches to find any instance where military promotion candidates have said anything positive about DEI, LGBTQ rights, feminism, or Black history, and use those findings to block promotions.

Clint Smith no source cited

The federal civil rights investigation into gender policies at Smith College was filed not by any student or affiliate of the college, but by Defending Education, a conservative parents' rights group.

Tim Miller New York Times reporting by Michael Bender

Defending Education targeted Smith College after learning that Dr. Rachel Levine, a transgender physician and retired 4-star admiral, was a graduation speaker.

Tim Miller New York Times reporting by Michael Bender

The first enslaved people arrived in the British colonies that would become the United States in 1619, and slavery did not formally end until 1865.

Clint Smith no source cited

Shirley Chisholm was the first Black woman to seek the Democratic presidential nomination.

Clint Smith no source cited

Bayard Rustin helped Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. conceive and implement the strategy of nonviolent resistance, drawing on Gandhian principles from India.

Clint Smith no source cited

Senegal defeated defending world champion France 1-0 in the 2026 World Cup group stage.

Clint Smith no source cited