Street Novelist
All-American
Nobody celebrates Columbus Day.
I know quite a few Italians who celebrate it, but I'm guessing they probably don't count to you.
Nobody celebrates Columbus Day.
I saw that episode of The Sopranos as well.I know quite a few Italians who celebrate it, but I'm guessing they probably don't count to you.
Nobody celebrates Columbus Day.
I did notice more banks open this year on Native American Genocide, err Columbus Day.
I was just exploring some civil war and american history monuments when I was on tour in Des Moines. There were wreaths and flowers all around a bust of Christopher Columbus. A lot of Italians still take a lot of pride in Columbus.
My post was a joke. I am not overly PC on Columbus Day. That is a great eyeroll.
I was just exploring some civil war and american history monuments when I was on tour in Des Moines. There were wreaths and flowers all around a bust of Christopher Columbus. A lot of Italians still take a lot of pride in Columbus.
@ED, it's not really in the article, but it's the point of this thread: to stoke a controversy.
And 'native genocide' is an accurate descriptor of Columbus and colonialism. Why should we roll our eyes at that? Is that more of that patented "we must protect our American culture"? The "American culture" I was taught prized values that demand a critical evaluation of the darker aspects of our own history. We look down, with reason, on the regimes that insist on sanitizing their own history.
Any kind of genocide is wrong (obviously), but it was kind of the "way of the world" back then. Same with colonialism. It gets old when many expect Americans to constantly apologize for genocide that we (today's Americans) had nothing to do with. The United States is far from the only country to take part in genocidal activity. We are, however, one of the few countries that have tried to right our historical wrongs.
Any kind of genocide is wrong (obviously), but it was kind of the "way of the world" back then. Same with colonialism. It gets old when many expect Americans to constantly apologize for genocide that we (today's Americans) had nothing to do with. The United States is far from the only country to take part in genocidal activity. We are, however, one of the few countries that have tried to right our historical wrongs.
@ED, it's not really in the article, but it's the point of this thread: to stoke a controversy.
No it wasn't, please don't put "words in my mouth"@ED, it's not really in the article, but it's the point of this thread: to stoke a controversy.