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Vol. I Β· No. 167 Β· 808 Reports Wednesday, June 17, 2026
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PBS interview probes Glaude book on race and U.S. anniversaries

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Topics in This Edition

Race in AmericaU.S. historyImmigration policyNational identity

Summary

PBS NewsHour's Geoff Bennett interviews Princeton professor Eddie Glaude Jr. about his May 2026 book 'America, U.S.A.: How Race Shadows the Nation's Anniversaries.' Glaude opens with his rejection of loving the nation-state, recounts a childhood racial incident, differentiates his approach from Baldwin and Du Bois, and links 1920s Klan influence on immigration quotas and Sesquicentennial events to recurring patterns in 1965 legislation and today's debates. He rejects sentimentality in favor of confronting a fundamental choice between freedom ideals and white republic commitments. The interview draws on Glaude's personal narrative and historical analysis; no other guests or data graphics appear.

Editorial Assessment

The segment accurately captures Glaude's thesis and book context but offers limited verification of specific historical assertions, such as direct Klan authorship or 1926 convention details on exposition grounds. Viewers miss primary documents on the 1924 Act's sponsors and support base, or Coolidge speech text, which could nuance the 'rebel yell' framing. The format privileges one scholarly voice critiquing national myths without engaging conservative or classical liberal counter-narratives on assimilation or exceptionalism. Strong on thematic continuity from founding contradictions through 20th-century anniversaries; thinner on falsifiable claims or recent 2026 parallels.

Key Moments

missing context

Immigration Act of 1924 was basically written by the Klan

Klan supported and lobbied for the Johnson-Reed Act amid nativism; primary sponsors were Rep. Albert Johnson and Sen. David Reed, with historians noting Klan influence was real but not decisive in passage.

unsupported

Klan approved for annual convention on Philadelphia Exposition grounds in 1926, planning to celebrate flag and burn cross

Sesquicentennial Exposition occurred but no corroborating records of Klan event or cross-burning on grounds in available historical accounts.

verified

Double consciousness of the nation (beacon of freedom and white republic) produces madness from the founding

Glaude's interpretive extension of Du Bois; aligns with his book's documented focus on anniversary contradictions across 1826–2026.

missing context

Coolidge 1926 speech parallels MAGA in emphasizing one revolution and restoring enduring principles

Coolidge delivered a July 5, 1926, Philadelphia address celebrating Declaration principles; exact phrasing and evangelical twist comparison is Glaude's framing.

Notable Concerns

  • Specific Klan convention claim at 1926 Sesquicentennial unconfirmed in primary records
  • 1924 Act described as 'written by the Klan' overstates direct authorship versus broader nativist/Klan support

Sources Consulted

  1. America, U.S.A. by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
  2. Book Review: 'America, U.S.A.,' by Eddie S. Glaude Jr.
  3. As the U.S. turns 250, this historian has blunt advice: 'America has to grow up'
  4. A Century Later, Restrictive 1924 U.S. Immigration Law Continues to Reverberate
  5. β€œAmerica First:” The Ku Klux Klan Influence on Immigration Policy in the 1920s
  6. Immigration Act of 1924
  7. Sesquicentennial Exposition
  8. The 1926 'sesqui': Philly's great failure
  9. Address at the Celebration of the 150th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  10. Sesquicentennial International Exposition (1926)
  11. Geoff Bennett (@geoffrbennett)
  12. PBS News Hour - Segments - Podcast