George Washington is portrayed as some great leader and a role model but this is largely mythological. The man was a slave owner and was nicknamed destroyer of towns by the Native Americans. That man pulled teeth out of the mouths of his slaves to make dentures for himself, and the stories we hear about him in grade school are entirely fabricated by biographers, and like the other racialized mythology of past leaders it is heavily contested and even seems colonial in nature. The United States has only ever been governed by horrible dictators and the people suffer under their political leaders since their effects have had lasting painful effects on all of the citizens. As someone who lived through the egregious human rights abuses of Biden, Trump, Obama, Bush, and other zionist imperialist warlords, I would not want to see any of their faces on a currency I need to use in my daily life.

This conversation has an elephant in the room with Harriet Tubman scheduled to appear on United States money. This seems unlikely because not only was Harriet Tubman involved in a resistance organization and worked to free slaves from captivity, which would go against the state ideology of capitalism. The regime we have now is the same that is responsible for those atrocities, so putting Harriet Tubman on the money is the equivalent of Apartheid South Africa putting Nelson Mandela on the money hundreds of years after he lived. The regime is not going to put someone on the money who would have once been considered a radical by their regime and likely killed immediately if authorities caught wind of what they were doing. It’s true that minorities are allowed to be involved in politics in this country, but only if they are complete traitors to the well-being of their race and uphold capitalism above the wellbeing of their own people. This is why Cuban and Vietnamese gusanos are celebrated while local-born activists are met with disdain and violently oppressed, jailed or assassinated by police, let alone allowed to get involved in political systems. I am very hard pressed that a woman who fought against exploitation and slavery would ever be celebrated by the American regime by being put on the money, and I don’t believe the delays around her face being printed on money are truly issues of logistics.

So who should be on the money? Martin Luther King seems like a good option as well as Malcom X and Assata Shakur, but those have the same issue as Harriet Tubman that the regime will not glorify someone they are actively trying to kidnap from Cuba and kill, if they did not already order an assassination of them. Native American leaders such as Sitting Bull who we could look up to, also have the same issue that the government tried to kill them. There isn’t a good leader in this country that the government has not tried to kill or subdue in some way. They’re also killing the environment, which brings me to my conclusion.

When there is no political leader that does anything good for society, the next option is to simply put plants and animals on the money. This is not offensive and I do not have to look at some horrible slave owning fascists every time I pay for something. Imagine every time you look at your money, you see Hitler or Ron Desantis staring back at you. This is what we currently have whether we choose to accept the historical truth behind those individuals or not, and the flora and fauna are a much better choice. Bison, ferrets, bobcats, white tailed deer or other flora and fauna unique to North America would help promote environmentalism and take the politics and propaganda out of the currency.

  • HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 month ago

    Russia did city scenes from 1995 onward. This managed to backfire when they used the “wrong” version of a scene (ISTR it was a cathedral when the crucifix was removed during Soviet times). So America would illustrate New Orleans by showing Katrina wreckage and a slave ship docking in the same picture.

    Many socialist states used idealized worker/soldier figures (i.e. some recent DPRK notes, 1938 series Soviet notes, 1980/1990 PRC notes). Could America do “fat commodities trader in a $2000 suit”?

    Scientists and engineers might be good choices because the technical accomplishments can often stand outside of a political context. But then you end up with Steve Wozniak on the $50.

    If you cycle the designs frequently, you can lip-service many constituencies.

  • Honestly I’d like to just see workers of several industries, but they could have a “hero” on the front and workers on the back.

    The coins have special mention to two under-recognized American workers.

    1 dollar coin: Front - Lucy Parsons (a mix of African American, “white” and indigenous; part of the Haymarket Affair and founder of the IWW) Back - Indigenous laborers.

    2 dollar coin: Front - Paul Robeson (defended the Soviet Union at the cost of his career) Back - Black laborers.

    5 dollar bill: Front - “Captain” John Brown (anti-slavery hero, we also need a white dude) Back - Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen of the USSA Red Army.

    10 dollar bill: Front - Emma Goldman (Jewish, immigrant, and workers’ rights activist. Back - Scientists and Engineers

    20 dollar bill: Front - Fred Hampton (needs no introduction) Back - Factory and office workers

    50 dollar bill: Front - Elizabeth Gurley Flynn (Founder of the ACLU, agitator, likely a lesbian, died in the USSR who threw a massive funeral for her) Back - People of the pen… writers, artists and lawyers.

    100 dollar bill: Front - César Chávez (well known) Back - Farmers/Agricultural workers.

    500 dollar bill: Front - Helen Keller (or perhaps Angela Davis if she passes before the revolution) Back - Doctors, nurses, medical professionals.

    I tried to make half of them women.

    • ☭CommieWolf☆@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 month ago

      Personally I’d have it feature just as many if not more Indians as there are African Americans. Also perhaps Eugene Debbs or Bill Haywood, one of the early IWW people.