https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-55808324
This strikes me as odd. While Benjamin Franklin wasn't a president, he is a founding father. The rest of them are presidents. If they do want to make an anti-slavery symbol, wouldn't it be more appropriate to put Obama on the £20 note? While Harriet Tubman is an important black figure historically, she was a one trick pony. She never rose to gain any political power. She was certainly never seen as a leader of white and black alike.
I get the feeling that putting her on the $20 bill feels like throwing the black community a bone, rather than acknowledging blacks as equals. Which putting Obama on the $20 would do.
Is my reasoning crazy?
That policy does not and has never existed. This is not a monarchy, but rather a democracy, and there are many non-presidents on our currency. Sacajawea, Franklin, Hamilton at present and many others historically. I don't see 4 out of 7 instead of 5 out 7 as some sort of sea change.
And while I'm not morally outraged by the idea of "throwing the black community a bone", not being a racist myself, I don't see how Barrack Obama would be any less of a blatantly political move. Worse, because his record on race issues is actually pretty mixed, and he never fought against slavery or saved thousands of American lives from tyranny as did Tubman.
If you want to know what makes Blacks feel unequal, white poeple losing their shit over the thought of honoring an abolitionist is one of those things. Or seeing opposition to slavery as a "purely Black issue" as you seem to be implying when you say that Tubman did not accomplish anything for Whites. Of course she did. She helped end the slave trade in a supposed democracy of which Whites are also a part. This also helped take down King Cotton, again, benefiting everyone including lower-class Whites. Monocropping the entire South was not sustainable, and contributed less to the overall economy than it took, especially because slavery was subsidizing costs to the largest plantation owners while squeezing smaller farmsteads who couldn't afford the capital investment.to creaqte such operations.