Columbus, for a good long time in America, was taught as a noble explorer who valiantly braved treacherous oceans to discover the new world. That narrative usually then does a giant time skip from 1492 to the Pilgrims landing at Plymouth Rock in 1620, with nary another thought put to Columbus or his genocide.
However, that narrative as of late has luckily come under much greater scrutiny, with a lot more being taught (at least in colleges) about how Columbus was actually a violent, exploitative and feckless man, upon whom even his contemporaries said "this guy is fucking nuts."
Much like with doing away with the "lost noble cause of the confederacy" angle, pushing this greater understanding of history is ruffling the feathers of many conservatives who want the American lineage to be one of only shining examples: That you don't have to assess your current actions, because the spotless glories of the past have ordained you with the power to take action beyond reproach. Revealing that some part of what created you was actually stained with blood, destruction, and murder perpetrated on innocent people calls that whole narrative into question.

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