They say there are no stupid questions in journalism, and I tested that theory as a college newspaper reporter when I asked an MLB legend about the even more legendary Jackie Robinson. Was Robinson picked over more talented Negro League players to integrate baseball, I asked eight-time All-Star and former National League President Bill White, “because he was so nice?”
“Nice?!” he shot back. “Jackie wasn’t nice! Jackie was tough!”
White apparently hadn’t gotten the memo about there being no stupid questions. “Nice?!” he shot back. “Jackie wasn’t nice! Jackie was tough!”
I’d like to believe that my question was not only a function of my youth but also evidence of the way that civil rights history has been taught in the United States. From Rosa Parks to Martin Luther King Jr. to John Lewis and Robinson, we’ve generally been fed a fairy-tale narrative that pits nice, perfectly pleasant and unoffending Black heroes against cartoonishly mean and ignorant white people. And, as in all fairy tales, the nice folks inevitably win.
On Tuesday, as it has since 2004, Major League Baseball is commemorating the day 78 years ago that Robinson played his first game with the Brooklyn Dodgers. But this Jackie Robinson Day lands in the middle of a conservative plot to eliminate talk of pioneering Black heroism and, more specifically, to eliminate mention of the villainy from white people that made Black heroism necessary.
The way that the history of American racism, and Black people’s response to it, has generally been taught is deeply flawed. It’s the equivalent of promoting PG-rated versions of R-rated historical events. But now the Trump administration is on a campaign to outright replace the truth of our history with deliberate distortions and lies, give a G rating to even the most disturbing American history, and essentially outlaw the telling of the truth.
Consider a recent edit the National Park Service made to a webpage that niceifies Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad had been described as promoting “the resistance to enslavement through escape and flight” but was edited to suggest that it was a part of the “American civil rights movement” that bridged “the divides of race.”
The hell it did.
The previous language was restored — it was deleted by mistake, the park service stated — but a descendant of Tubman was right to ask, “Why do they want to erase our Black history? Why are we such a threat to certain Americans?” It wasn’t hard to answer her own question: “The answer is racism.” On one page managed by the National Park Service, according to The Washington Post, the phrase “enslaved African Americans” was changed to “enslaved workers.”
As mentioned in a previous column, somebody at the Defense Department, reportedly responding to President Donald Trump’s and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s anti-DEI fixation, briefly removed a webpage that described Robinson’s time in the U.S. Army as a second lieutenant.
Years before Rosa Parks would do the same, Robinson had refused a bus driver’s order that he move to the back of a bus. Not only did he not accept the humiliation of being assigned to the rear, but in an argument that ensued, he told another soldier, “If you call me a n—– again, I’ll break you in two.”








