Contextualized!

The Department of the Treasury has just tossed the slave-owning, Indian-genociding founder of the Democrat party off the $20 bill…

..and replaced him with a gun-toting Republican.

(No, it wasn’t my line:  it’s David “Iowahawk” Burge…

…and it was too good not to pay homage)

12 thoughts on “Contextualized!

  1. Jackson had some redeeming qualities, like getting rid of the Bank of the United States, but I’m cool with Tubman. Well done, IowaHawk.

  2. That’s a gun-toting pro-life Republican.
    Really……liberals ignorance of history can work to our advantage. I think this is a good choice. Especially when you consider who all else was brought up for a coin or currency.

  3. Pingback: In The Mailbox: 04.20.16 : The Other McCain

  4. Tubman’s shootin’ iron was a symbol of her reliance on herself, as much as the fact that she took it upon herself to free herself from Democrat slave holders.

    Tubman is the epitome of Conservative ideology put into action. She joins people like MLK and W. E. B. Du Bois as historical heroes that rejected the Democrat idea that minorities must be tended like cattle.

  5. I like to think Tubman would fire up the railroad again to lead black Americans out of the slavery of dependence the Democrat party has imposed on them. I think she would give leftist poverty pimps and Democrat darlings like Al Sharpton and Hillary Clinton the business end of her smoke wagon.

  6. “Never wound a snake; kill it.”
    Harriet Tubman

    Enjoy your new $20 bill.

  7. $1 bill – Washington who was basically a Federalist a party that morphed into the Whigs a party that was assimilated into the Republicans.
    $5 bill – Lincoln our first Republican president.
    $10 bill – Hamilton who was a Federalist see political genealogy above.
    $20 bill – Tubman who was a Republican.
    $50 bill – Grant who was a Republican president.
    $100 bill – Benjamin Franklin who was a Federalist see political genealogy above.

    Looks like the GOP has a clean sweep of the green.

  8. As a supporter of slavery, and an advocate of Indian removal, Jackson was very much a product of his time. Harriet Tubman, on the other hand, transcended hers.

  9. “Never wound a snake; kill it”

    That kind of talk would have Obmama’s security detail paying Tubman a visit.

  10. Nice choice–from a difficult time in our history, a regular woman, not connected to a rich or powerful husband or family, who did the right thing.

  11. Nice choice–from a difficult time in our history, a regular woman, not connected to a rich or powerful husband or family, who did the right thing. And who would be ridden out of any gathering of leftists on a rail.

    FTFY dirtbag.

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