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I saw what you typed, i am asking for clarification. If your real problem is wanting to end identity politics, then you would be equally engaged in getting men on money replaced with wild life and since men have been on money your whole life you would have been bothered your whole life by it. It is reasonable to think You would have a history of criticizing men on money. I'm just asking if you do.
Or did your disgust with identity politics and who was on our money just show up after there was a chance that an real woman might make it on a bill?
My comment was about the
process for putting people (or water fowl) on money. Or the criteria, if you will.
I would say generally we have used the criteria of putting "our greatest Americans" on money. This leads us to Washington, Lincoln, Jefferson, Ben Franklin, even Roosevelt on the dime, etc. Hamilton was first secretary of the treasury so there's some sense in that. Conventional politics and sentimentality are bound to enter the "who are the greatest Americans" and as values change we end up with some people we would not think are so great today - Grant, Jackson, Kennedy, Eisenhower, maybe wouldn't make the list now. It's probably not a bad idea to require someone to be dead for 50 years and be chosen by a bipartisan panel of experts or some such if you really care about avoiding these sorts of things.
As much as you try desperately to claim otherwise, I don't object to a woman being on money -- if we have an objective process and objective criteria that results in a woman being on money. I object to reducing the process and criteria for who is on money to identity politics. I'd rather go with assorted water fowl and spare our children the debate over whether to put Ru-Paul or Bruce Jenner on the $5.
If you're saying that we are applying an objective scale of greatness here I struggle to believe a panel of objective historians would rank, say, Patsy Mink over say, James Madison.