It's Columbus Day and not Indigenous Peoples' Day, damn it!!
By Howie Katz
Yesterday was Columbus Day.
Columbus Day commemorates the landing of Christopher Columbus in the New World on October 12, 1492. Columbus Day became an official US holiday in 1937.
Christopher Columbus well deserves to have an official US holiday. His journey was quite a feat. It took a great amount of courage to sail the uncharted waters.. At the time, it was commonly believed the earth was flat and that anyone who dared to go past the horizon would fall off into oblivion.
Everything went well with Columbus Day until the death of George Floyd when BLM and other radical-left protesters demanded that Columbus Day be abolished because he and his crew allegedly mistreated the inhabitants of Hispaniola.
Columbus stands accused of murder, genocide, of enslaving the Hispaniola natives, and of being a colonizer. All of that is utter nonsense. That is Marxist history, not true history.
At the same time statues of Robert E. Lee and other Confederate heroes were defaced and toppled, statues of Columbus received the same mistreatment.
Vandals cheer after they toppled the Christopher Columbus statue at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul
In Providence, Rhode Island, Columbus was splattered in red paint with a “Stop Celebrating Genocide" sign tied around the pedestal and the word “genocide” also spray-painted on the base
In Baltimore, a nob toppled the statue of Columbus and tossed it into the harbor
2 comments:
I once went aboard the full-size replica of the Santa Maria. It took some serious balls to sail that and two smaller ships across an ocean that you were not sure how wide it was and were not sure what you would find on the other side.
Judging historical figures with present-day sensibilities and morality is essentially unfair and unrealistic.
Columbus Day will always be Columbus Day for me.
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