President Donald Trump’s birthday is June 14, which also happens to be Flag Day. To celebrate, the president wants to offer free admissions that day to the country’s national parks, a self-serving gesture, no doubt, but one that is no surprise for a man who spent much of his adult life plastering his name on the sides of buildings, airplanes and casino hotels. But that is not a real problem. The public should take every opportunity to take full advantage of the vast offerings of the National Park Service. The problem is that the free admission benefit is being removed next year for Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth, a blatant swipe at African Americans and the nation’s civil rights history. “The raw & rank racism here stinks to high heaven,” Cornell William Brooks, a Harvard Kennedy School professor and a former NAACP president, wrote on social media about the new policy. Other days of free park admission in 2026 are Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Constitution Day, Veterans Day, President Theodore Roosevelt’s birthday (Oct. 27) and the anniversary of t