Anonymous wrote:https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Penn
Wasn’t Penn a Quaker who lived peacefully with native Americans? And quakers were antislavery. In fact, Pennsylvania was a haven for freed slaves thanks to the Underground Railroad essentially run by quakers.
Anonymous wrote:https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Penn
Wasn’t Penn a Quaker who lived peacefully with native Americans? And quakers were antislavery. In fact, Pennsylvania was a haven for freed slaves thanks to the Underground Railroad essentially run by quakers.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody should be surprised when Americans no longer take pride in the western democracy and values we established thanks to the continued denigration of our history. Was it a perfect history? No. But it resulted in a democracy built on the rule of law and eventual equality unmatched around the globe…and yet here we are promoting a narrative that we should only feel shame.
Instead of tearing down a statue and erasing history, why not add a component recognizing the Native American past?
We are heading down the wrong path when we rewrite history and tarnish our accomplishments with shame.
Stop dividing; start reunifying.
We are Americans…regardless of when your ancestors arrived and regardless of where you came from. Unify under our american values and celebrate the diversity of all who came here for a better life.
Lastly: stop pretending that America is a miserable failure. It isn’t.
Anonymous wrote:https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Penn
Wasn’t Penn a Quaker who lived peacefully with native Americans? And quakers were antislavery. In fact, Pennsylvania was a haven for freed slaves thanks to the Underground Railroad essentially run by quakers.
Anonymous wrote:Have you been to that "park"? (It's not really a park, it's a plaza between buildings) It's been in need of work by the National Park Service for years, and the addition of exhibits describing the importance of the location to both the native people and the Europeans who settled there is a good thing.
And about the statue - it's a small copy of the 37-foot statue of Penn which is on top of Philadelphia's City Hall building. So calm yourself, no one is being "canceled."
https://www.associationforpublicart.org/artwork/william-penn/
Anonymous wrote:Nobody should be surprised when Americans no longer take pride in the western democracy and values we established thanks to the continued denigration of our history. Was it a perfect history? No. But it resulted in a democracy built on the rule of law and eventual equality unmatched around the globe…and yet here we are promoting a narrative that we should only feel shame.
Instead of tearing down a statue and erasing history, why not add a component recognizing the Native American past?
We are heading down the wrong path when we rewrite history and tarnish our accomplishments with shame.
Stop dividing; start reunifying.
We are Americans…regardless of when your ancestors arrived and regardless of where you came from. Unify under our american values and celebrate the diversity of all who came here for a better life.
Lastly: stop pretending that America is a miserable failure. It isn’t.