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Trump DOJ Scrubs Jan. 6 Records as Political Trust Keeps Fracturing

25th May 2026
Americans are no longer just arguing about January 6 itself, because the dispute has shifted into something deeper about whether the official record of major national events can be changed depending on who is in political control and how those institutions choose to present history afterward. The Trump administration’s decision to remove January 6 prosecution records from the Department of Justice website has reopened that divide, with officials describing the material as “partisan propaganda,” alongside efforts to unwind several January 6-related cases and the creation of a $1.776 billion compensation fund tied to claims of political persecution. But what stands out in the reaction is not simply disagreement over the policy itself, but how quickly the public splits into entirely different versions of what the event even represents, with one group treating January 6 as fully documented through live coverage and court proceedings, while another argues the public record has always been incomplete and shaped by selective framing, editing choices and political interpretation over time. The comments beneath the story reflect that divide in a more raw form, where the argument is no longer just about interpretation but about what counts as a valid starting point at all, with people essentially talking past each other because they are no longer working from the same assumptions about what was seen, what was recorded, and what has been emphasised or left out since. That fracture in shared reference points has wider consequences because once people stop assuming there is a neutral institutional record of events, it begins to affect how decisions are made in other areas, including how businesses interpret political and regulatory stability, how investors judge longer-term risk in uncertain environments, and how households respond when official accounts feel less consistent even if day-to-day economic conditions have not materially changed. It tends to show up first in quieter behaviour, with more hesitation in long-term planning, slower commitment to major decisions, and a gradual shift in how people interpret official information, with these changes building over time through repeated small judgments rather than any single visible break. What the reaction to this story ultimately exposes is not just disagreement over January 6, but a growing sense that institutional accounts no longer function as a shared baseline, and once that assumption weakens, every new political or social dispute tends to carry more weight because fewer people accept the same version of the facts at the start.

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