The 1619 Project, which might already be embedded in school curriculums near you, reinforces the racial monomania of those progressives who argue that the nation was founded on, and remains saturated by, "systemic racism." This racial obsession is instrumental; it serves a radical agenda that sweeps beyond racial matters. It is the agenda of clearing away all impediments, intellectual and institutional, to - in progressivism's vocabulary - the "transformation" of the nation. The United States will be built back better when it has been instructed to be ashamed of itself and is eager to discard its disreputable heritage.
The 1619 Project aims to erase (in Wood's words) "the Revolution and the principles that it articulated - liberty, equality and the well-being of ordinary people." These ideas are, as Wood says, the adhesives that bind our exceptional nation whose people have shared principles, not a shared ancestry.
The Times says "nearly everything that has truly made America exceptional" flows from "slavery and the anti-black racism it required." So, the 1619 Project's historical illiteracy is not innocent ignorance. Rather, it is maliciousness in the service of progressivism's agenda, which is to construct a thoroughly different nation on the deconstructed rubble of what progressives hope will be the nation's thoroughly discredited past.
The rest is terrific, destroying the NYT, but it's behind a pay wall.