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EFFORTPOST Cumskin forcibly evicted from his OWN home to accommodate heya hoyas :marseycherokee: :marseyextinction:. Rightoids melt down :marseychudgenocide:, even Redditors are conflicted :marseyslipperyslope:

https://patriots.win/p/17s5avs7Qm/breaking-the-biden-administratio/c

From an article, pasted below for YOUR convenience :marseyjanny2:

The National Park Service has announced its plans to remove a William Penn statue from “Welcome Park” in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

“The National Park Service proposes to rehabilitate Welcome Park to provide a more welcoming, accurate, and inclusive experience for visitors,” a January 5 press release from the Park Service says, asking the public for input on the “proposed design for the rehabilitation of Welcome Park.”

The plan has received some criticism online.

According to US History.org, Penn “founded the Province of Pennsylvania, the British North American colony that became the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.” The site adds of Penn: “The democratic principles that he set forth served as an inspiration for the United States Constitution.”

According to US History.org, Penn became a Quaker, a group that “refused to bow or take off their hats to any man, and refused to take up arms.”

“William Penn was an English Quaker best known for founding the colony of Pennsylvania as a place for religious freedom in America,” Biography.com reports.

What is Welcome Park? According to the Cultural Landscape Foundation, “Situated in East Philadelphia close to the Delaware River, the plaza was conceived as an ‘open air' museum by Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates. The project is the only site in the city dedicated to interpreting the life and ideas of its founder, William Penn.”

Here's what you need to know:

According to the National Park Service's press release, Welcome Park “was designed by the internationally acclaimed design firm Venturi & Scott Brown Associates. The park is located on the site of William Penn's home, the Slate Roof House, and is named for the ship, Welcome, which transported Penn to Philadelphia. The design and construction of Welcome Park was funded by the Independence Historical Trust and was completed in 1982.”

The park service release explains:

The proposed rehabilitation of Welcome Park includes expanded interpretation of the Native American history of Philadelphia and was developed in consultation with representatives of the indigenous nations of the Haudenosaunee, the Delaware Nation, Delaware Tribe of Indians, the Shawnee Tribe, and the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. The reimagined Welcome Park maintains certain aspects of the original design such as the street grid, the rivers and the east wall while adding a new planted buffer on three sides, and a ceremonial gathering space with circular benches. The Penn statue and Slate Roof house model will be removed and not reinstalled. In a separate and future effort, new exhibit panels will be installed on the south site wall to replace the Penn timeline.

The public “is invited to submit comments on this proposed design for the rehabilitation of Welcome Park for a 14-day period from January 8th – 21st, 2024 through the National Park Service's Planning, Environment and Public Comment (PEPC) at https://parkplanning.nps.gov. Comments submitted through social media, phone calls, email or mail will not be accepted. All public comments must be received through PEPC by midnight Sunday, January 21st, 2024,” the release said.

The Cultural Landscape Foundation explains of Welcome Park:

Comissioned by the Friends of Independence Mall National Historic Park and opened in 1982, the design is laid out as a giant map of the original grid-iron street plan of Philadelphia constructed atop a marble ground plane. It includes miniature representations of significant features related to Penn, including the City Hall statue and his original slate-roof house. Within the plan, individual trees mark the four historic squares that were part of Penn's original utopian plan of 1683.

The park is enclosed by two perimeter walls which are primed with a chronological, interpretive narrative that provides a biography of Penn. His farewell address to the city is engraved on the base of the statue model.

Penn is so closely associated with Philadelphia that a statue of Penn stands on top of City Hall.

Penn “was the son of an admiral and landowner, and he was educated in theology and the law,” Biography.com reports.

According to that site, Penn “was jailed several times for his resistance to the Church of England,” and in 1681, “he received a royal charter to form a new colony in America, to be named Pennsylvania; he envisioned this territory as a peaceful refuge for members of all religious beliefs.”

In the newly named Pennsylvania, Penn formed “the new colony's government, writing its constitution, distributing land to settlers and establishing positive, peaceful relations with the local Indians,” according to Biography.com.

He eventually returned to England, the site reports. According to a biography of Penn on Pennsbury Manor's website, “Penn also navigated a peaceful relationship with the Lenape (Native Americans) in the area. Paying for land, inclusion in the jury system, and learning their language were just a few of the ways Penn approached and solicited the cooperation of the Lenape.”

According to US History.org, “Welcome Park is named for William Penn's ship, the Welcome.”

TLDR:

“The National Park Service proposes to rehabilitate Welcome Park to provide a more welcoming, accurate, and inclusive experience for visitors,” a January 5 press release from the Park Service says, asking the public for input on the “proposed design for the rehabilitation of Welcome Park.”

The park is located on the site of William Penn's home, the Slate Roof House, and is named for the ship, Welcome, which transported Penn to Philadelphia.

The proposed rehabilitation of Welcome Park includes expanded interpretation of the Native American history of Philadelphia and was developed in consultation with representatives of the indigenous nations of the Haudenosaunee, the Delaware Nation, Delaware Tribe of Indians, the Shawnee Tribe, and the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma. The reimagined Welcome Park maintains certain aspects of the original design such as the street grid, the rivers and the east wall while adding a new planted buffer on three sides, and a ceremonial gathering space with circular benches. The Penn statue and Slate Roof house model will be removed and not reinstalled. In a separate and future effort, new exhibit panels will be installed on the south site wall to replace the Penn timeline.

So basically they're removing the a statue and biography of the founder of their city on the site of his house to put more recognition of Native Americans lmao :marseysaluteusa: And this guy was a Quaker, who were basically the turbolibs of their day. Staunch pacifists and always at the forefront of antislavery groups and progressive political causes.

:!brainletmaga: on dot lose are not happy :marseyxd:

:!soyjakmaga: Before any one claims slavery, Penn was a Quaker. The Quakers were against slavery.

:marseytinfoil2: It's all white people. All white history. They want it erased and they want us exterminated. They have the means to do it now, and they are beginning the process.

:marseyagree: That's right crakkka now step into the gas chamber :marseyevilgrin:

Another subthread under the top comment, no idea what they're talking about here. Acquitted for what? Any Penncels :marseyyinzer: :marseynittanylion: want to weigh in?

:marseyobjection: He also was acquitted under jury nullification

:marseyspyglow: Based quakers. Jury nullification is an important tool telling the judiciary and courts that the laws in place are bullshit.
To avoid the risk of jury nullification, I think Biden, Obama, Pelosi, etc. will have to be jailed and executed without a jury trial

:marseymutt: can't stop thinking about big, black...booty!? :marseyshock:

:marseytwerkinit: Wouldn't it be more appropriate to replace Penn's statue with a bronze sculpture of a massive twerking BIPOC?


ON TO REDDIT


I found a thread in /r/philadelphia to get a fair and balanced opinion, surely the redditors are supporting this full-throatedly?

:marseyakshually: Pennsylvania had a native population of 10,000 when William Penn arrived. It was virtually uninhabited, except for a few settlements in river valleys. The current site of Center City was not home to any Lenape villages to my awareness. This is the fetishization of a very tiny population. If we're going to acknowledge those who preceded Penn, the Swedes and the Dutch should be on the same footing.

:marseymalding: I didn't realize that genocide was fine if the population was deemed small enough.

:soyjakanimeglasses: lol what? they're renovating it. sorry for reminding you we live on genocided land.

This is so funny to me, turns out Philly was NOT founded on the ashes of a thriving native metropolis, but because they kind of generally lived in the area, this guy was a genocidemaxxxer and evil :marseypilgrim: :marseyshooting:

:marseychudegg: Insane how quickly it went from Confederate statues in the south, to president statues in New York, to now an anti-slavery religious freedom Quaker in Philadelphia. What's next?

:marseythonk: Not that we like the guy but trump literally warned of exactly this

:marseypearlclutch: These chuds were upmarseyd! And the first guy has a "rittenhouse" flair. I assume its a suburb or neighborhood in Philadelphia, but it's still funny.

Also, this starts a long :marseylongpost: fight under a subthread, which I'm too :marseyantiwork: lazy to reproduce here, but here is the link to beginning

:marseytabletired: I wish cities would simply ADD new statues to underrepresented people rather than tearing every historic statue down.

:marseynerd: This really isn't a historic statue. It went up in the 1980s, and it's just a copy of the one up on city hall, which I'm pretty sure you can see from the park.
It has minimal aesthetic, historical, or educational value, and statues in general aren't really a particularly effective tool for public history education (as evidenced by this thread).
Making whats currently a pretty barren and ironically unwelcoming park a more pleasant public space that offers more complex and current onsite historic interpretation is a good move. I don't see how just jamming more statues onto the site would accomplish that - from what I can tell, the current statue is coming down because its footprint is the best spot to provide space for seating, which is currently lacking.

:marseywise: The 1980s were 40 years ago already.
There was a time Trajan's Column was new construction.

:marseynerd: There are actually metrics in the historic preservation community for deciding what has preservation value based on age and cultural importance.
Nothing about this statue makes the cut. It's not that old, it's not a rare or uncommon example of something, it's not a unique work. It's a really replaceable object.

:marseyeyeroll: Yes, William Penn has absolutely no cultural importance here in Pennsylvania.
And, yes, if you replace things every few decades then they never get old.

One Redditor has already given up this battle and gone onto the next one:

Maybe we should start thinking of a new name for "Pennsylvania."

Hoagieville

Jawnson Town

Yinzers! Go shit up this thread with Western Pennsylvania slang :slapfight:

!chuds another statue being taken down, this time its actually NOT a Confederatecel who had no business being there in the first place :marseyshock: :!marseyshock:

138
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BuT thEy wERen'T wHIte sO thEy dOn'T coUnT! /s

It's disgusting how easy it is to erase the indigenous peoples and even more disgusting that you have been downmarseyd for calling it out.

Literally insane

His post history:

https://old.reddit.com/user/Kynykya4211/?sort=controversial

Thank you for speaking out, and there are many of us who agree with you. Your opinion may not be popular but that doesn't mean it's incorrect. JKR has become a discount Voldemort. She wounded too many fans with her egregious lack of empathy and respect.

Found some more people:

Deciding to stop venerating historical figures who held other humans in horrific bondage is defensible. Meanwhile, the right is editing middle-school textbooks to remove any racial context from the story of Rosa Parks, and banning books that mention non-cis people in any kind of positive light.

“Calling the reason our country exists a bad thing is good, chud! You should really care about THE RIGHT NOT LETTING ME TELL KIDS THEY CAN CUT THEIR PEEPEE OFF!”

He also warned that your magnets stop working once you get them wet, so be careful out there folks!

I doubt Joe Biden could pull a magnet off a refrigerator

Wingcucks fighting

We need to replace the statue at City Hall with a big fat lady statue

someone brings up arligton

They just removed a Civil War memorial in Arlington National Cemetery. I thought they were going to put the statues IN cemeteries.

What you fail to add to this observation was that it was a memorial in the American national cemetery of military honor that was there to honor the traitors that fought AGAINST the US in the civil war. Also that it was built in 1914, not anywhere near the civil war. Also that it had a literal image of an enslaved person following their slaver to battle on it.

Its funny how youre not supposed to put up statues of traitors… except if they wore feathers and attacked women and children and the government for being “settlers”

Remember, 1914 is only 50 years after the civil war. So it would be like building a vietnam veterans statue tody

You have to understand -- 1913 was the huge 50-year-reunion for Gettysburg veterans, well, the white ones, and a lot of bullshit Lost Cause mythology was erected then. It was "eh, we all were honorable ... now what were we fighting about?"

B-word half the texts you endorse say George Washington fought the British to keep slavery. this guy is saying if your citizens were forced to fight for their government, if the leaders had the “wrong intentions” youre not allowed to honor the people forced to slaughter and by slaughtered by their own people

Also its funny how the guy claims that the statue doesnt honor black soldiers while having a slave in the statue. If anything it's claiming the confederates were wholesome chungus diversity globohomo

https://old.reddit.com/user/oliver_babish/?sort=controversial

This guy has 200 k karma and has been a redditor for ten years

Not debating that that memorial should have been moved from Arlington, as it is a cemetery for US military veterans, but 1914 would fall on the 50 year anniversary of the war, with plenty of people and their children still alive. We just put up a WWI monument in DC an entire 100 years after the war.

It was a monument to reconciliation -which took some time in our country. The Civil War was a sad chapter, it was brother against brother, but our reconciliation was one of our greatest achievements. There were many Union veterans in attendance at the dedication of the monument. The people who erected it fought and died for our country in WWI, their children fought nazism in Europe. It is an American monument. It is also an exceptional work of art in its own right and was created by the most prominent Jewish sculpture of the 19th century, who was buried next to it

People start to justify it by appealing to Quaker ideology that they are spitting on

He was a Quaker. He would have hated any statues of him. Quakers don't even like having headstones on their graves.

Apparently you know nothing about Quakers

Oh good grief. Statues exist to celebrate national heroes, not teach history.

I hate to break your heart but William Penn claimed ownership of 12 enslaved people. I was shocked to learn this a few years ago. Quakers didn't prohibit slavery until the late 1600s. Edit: you can downmarsey it, but it's still true: https://billypenn.com/2020/08/17/william-penn-owned-enslaved-people-these-are-some-of-their-names-e

Late 1600's? That's still 200 years sooner than his countrymen

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Also Arlington was the estate of Robert E Lee's wife, and the Supreme Court ruled that the feds had seized it illegally. The Lee family, once vindicated, then sold the property to the government for a nominal sum as a gesture of reconciliation. Wish the progressives had half as much class.

:#marseysoutherner:

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Lincoln was also really good at managing the North's reaction after the war. He famously told the Confederate soldiers after the war to go home and for no one to take their weapons or horses off of them. He wanted the country to rebuild as quickly as possible without slavery which unfortunately the South was kinda ungrateful during the Reconstruction era but w/e

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Wingcucks fighting

:marsey#noyou:

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