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Home Front: Politix
A Harriet Tubman $20? That's Just the Beginning
2021-02-16
[Politico] Less than a week after taking office, the Biden administration announced it would restart Obama-era plans to redesign the $20 bill, replacing the portrait of President Andrew Jackson with that of abolitionist Harriet Tubman, after more than four years of uncertainty about the note’s future. The decision has revived a fervent debate about who belongs on our currency, and whether the change is just another example of so-called cancel culture at its worst.

It’s not hard to understand why some Americans might see the redesign as a radical break from tradition. For the past century, U.S. banknotes have featured a static set of Founding Fathers and presidents, government buildings and national memorials. This 20th-century consistency created the illusion that significant design alterations would sever our currency’s ties to its past.

But this is a misperception. In the 1800s, currency redesigns were not at all uncommon. In fact, banknotes changed regularly, and featured a vibrant range of people, scenes and symbols. The United States did not have standardized designs depicting only a handful of political figures until the 1920s.

What this history suggests is that we should not shy away from rethinking our currency today. Instead, the new $20 bill should be merely a starting point, encouraging us to think more expansively and creatively about the images that appear on our money—as we have in our past and as other nations do today.

Money, after all, is a powerful means of communication. It is a missive we send around the world—an ambassador of sorts. It is also part of our national identity and can help to remind us of our common purpose. Our money should not only reflect our country’s origins, but also who we have become over the past 250 years—as well as who we aspire to be.

Posted by:Besoeker

#11  ^ Exactly - Physical "Cash", days have come and are to be shortly gone.

When was the last time you used a "coin operated vending machine", or a "Bill Exchanger"...rarely ?

Today and in the future - "will that be debit, credit or cyber cash coin" ?

Posted by: Tangier Tokay3181   2021-02-16 23:48  

#10  Funny thing is the powers that be would like to get rid of cash entirely.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2021-02-16 23:33  

#9  Little MG memory magic: Thirty years on, I can hear a NO cashier -- young black girl -- calling AJ "Ol' Ugly" like it was yesterday. Completely innocent and apolitical, too. Must've dreamed it. Also, getting in early for putting Joe on any damn coin whatsoever as long as it's got a square hole in it.
Posted by: Gomez McCoy6360   2021-02-16 20:59  

#8  Barry on the newly minted 3 dollar bills
Posted by: Bob Grorong1136   2021-02-16 20:00  

#7  Just use a picture of Tubman holding her rifle and I'm cool with her on the $20. (In fact I prefer her to Jackson even without the gun. Of course I really dislike Jackson.)
Posted by: Glenmore   2021-02-16 19:59  

#6  I doubt many folks here of any hue or cry have anything against Tubman. I'd be fine with putting her on the flag if that passed in an honest vote. Problem is, Tubman on the twenty's just a wedge, a token that'll end up being the currency analog of the Sowell documentary that aired last night on San Diego PBS. At ten o'clock. First and last airing, according to the schedule.
Posted by: Gomez McCoy6360   2021-02-16 19:04  

#5   Freedom Fighter, Courageous in the extreme, went armed, devout Christian.

What am I missing? Oh yea, she's not white.

Andrew Jackson on the other hand while tasked by oath on a bible to protect and defend our constitution was secretly robbing the Cherokee lands while he plotted to remove them like the Japanese removed our soldiers in the Bataan Death March.

But, he is white.
Posted by: Omaing Stalag1261   2021-02-16 18:11  

#4  George Floyd on the $10,000 bill
Posted by: George Smiter of the Wee Folk2712   2021-02-16 16:22  

#3  All abolishionists were Republicans
The Republican Party was founded as an abolishionist party
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom    2021-02-16 15:54  

#2  If the Republicans make enough noise that Tubman was actually a Republican the Democrats will kills this idea.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2021-02-16 10:48  

#1  I'm assuming that Tubman will buy considerably less than Jackson.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru PB   2021-02-16 09:31  

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