Trump's Freedom 250 hits the road with museum focused on faith, civics
USA TODAY
Six mobile history museums, part of President Trump's Freedom 250 program, aim to counter 'woke agenda.' Historians say it leaves out key facts.
NASHVILLE ‒ Slipping inside the semitrailer, visitors find a wall-to-wall display of the watershed moments leading up to the American Revolution and its biggest battles.
Tucked in a less visible spot, another exhibit tells visitors the "foundational principles of America are rooted in Western and Judeo-Christian values."
This 53-foot mobile museum is one of six “Freedom Trucks” traversing the country as ambassadors of President Donald Trump’s Freedom 250 program.
At a stop in Nashville during the National Religious Broadcasters annual gathering in February, Marissa Streit, chief executive of the conservative media organization PragerU, was showing visitors through the two-room museum her company helped design.
Streit said references to America's Judeo-Christian roots were an intentional and deliberate part of the truck design, intended to help counterbalance an approach to the nation's history that she said has misled the American public.













