8 more cities adopt to abolish Columbus Day

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umop-apisdn
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The I in Team
And call it indigenous peoples day. Only in a America does a school teach you about a bloodthirsty pirate who committed genocide.

These 8 Cities Just Abolished Columbus Day

These 8 Cities Just Abolished Columbus Day
Following a growing trend, the city council of Albuquerque, New Mexico has voted six to three to recognize October 12th – typically known to most as “Columbus Day” within the USA– as Indigenous Peoples’ day in a new proclamation. Albuquerque has the highest concentration of Indigenous people in New Mexico.

In the past two months, eight cities got rid of Columbus Day in favor of adopting Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Three of those cities adopted Indigenous Peoples’ Day this week.

  1. Albuquerque, New Mexico – The city’s formal declaration”encourages businesses, organizations and public entities to recognize Indigenous Peoples Day, which shall be used to reflect upon the ongoing struggles of Indigenous people on this land, and to celebrate the thriving culture and value that our Indigenous nations add to our City.”
  2. Lawrence, KS – Since September, students from Haskell University in Lawrence, Kansas have been taking initiative and pushing for the city to honor their ancestors by declaring October 12th Indigenous Peoples’ day. Just this Wednesday, they won.http://revolution-news.com/lawrence...h-indigenous-peoples-day-scraps-columbus-day/
  3. Portland, ORPortland’s City Council declared Indigenous Peoples’ day on Tuesday, something tribal leaders have been seeking since 1954.
  4. St. Paul, MNIn August, St. Paul followed Minneapolis by declaring Indigenous Peoples’ Day instead of Columbus Day. Minneapolis passed its own resolution last year.
  5. Bexar County, TXThe resolution was passed Tuesday, and local activists intend to press for the same thing in San Antonio.
  6. Anadarko, OKIn September, Anadarko declared Indigenous Peoples’ Day. Anadarko Mayor Kyle Eastwood signed the proclamation while surrounded by tribal leaders from the Apache, Choctaw, Delaware, Wichita and others.
  7. Olympia, WAMayor Pro Tem Nathaniel Jones presented Olympia’s proclamation at a rally in August. Nearly 150 people showed up to support the initiative.
  8. Alpena, MIIn September, Mayor Matt Waligora declared Indigenous Peoples’ Day. The city says they desire “to develop a strong and productive relationship with all indigenous peoples, including the Saginaw Chippewa Tribe, based on mutual respect and trust.”
These cities are following in the footsteps of Seattle and Minneapolis. Meanwhile, Oklahoma City came close to passing it in September and will try to pass it again on October 13th, the day after the holiday.

City Council Member Rey Garduño wrote and proposed the proclamation, with guidance from local activists. The campaign was initiated last year during an “Abolish Columbus Day” demonstration at City Hall.

Although these changes have been quite recent, the struggle for the recognition of Indigenous Peoples Day has been going on since 1954, when the idea was first proposed in Portland, OR.

The Albuquerque Police Department have a notorious record of harassing and killing oppressed people. Their law enforcement divisions have shot 50 people resulting in 28 fatalities since 2010. In Albuquerque, Indigenous people compose 4.6 of the city’s population, but 13% of its consistently homeless population.

This name change is a fantastic trend that needs to grow fast, but it needs to be followed up by concrete action and legislation. Nationwide (and worldwide – particularly in Latin American countries that have suffered from US-backed coups), Indigenous people suffer from economic inequality, health problems, and human rights abuses. It’s time we celebrate their culture and tradition rather than their oppressors’, and it’s time we give back to those we’ve taken so much from.
 

Shogun

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Columbus didn't commit genocide.
He was indirectly responsible for genocide, but he didn't commit genocide.
 

JahFocus CS

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Columbus didn't commit genocide.
He was indirectly responsible for genocide, but he didn't commit genocide.

He oversaw the slaughter of at least thousands of Indigenous people and initiated the Indian slave trade. That personal culpability plus his "indirect responsibility" (i.e., the genocidal institutions he set up and laid the groundwork for) is more than sufficient for saying that he committed genocide.
 

Shogun

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He oversaw the slaughter of at least thousands of Indigenous people and initiated the Indian slave trade. That personal culpability plus his "indirect responsibility" (i.e., the genocidal institutions he set up and laid the groundwork for) is more than sufficient for saying that he committed genocide.
False.

Columbus, by pretty much any modern standard, was an evil dikk. The thing is, his voyage of exploration was a commercial venture. Ferdinand and Isabella funded his voyage as an investment. When he landed in what he though was the Indies, he didn't find any of the wealth he expected.

Point is, the return on the King's/Queen's investment was going to be native slaves. Killing them all would have been counterproductive to his goal.

I'm not defending Columbus as someone worthy of a holiday. But, people should have a sounds understanding of history. To be honest, and I'm not doubting or attacking you, I'd be interested to read your source on his overseeing "the slaughter of at least thousands." Link, please?

Edit:
Nevermind, I fairly quickly proved my undestanding wrong.

9.11 - Columbus' History of Genocide

You win :manny:

fukk Columbus.
 
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JahFocus CS

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False.

Columbus, by pretty much any modern standard, was an evil dikk. The thing is, his voyage of exploration was a commercial venture. Ferdinand and Isabella funded his voyage as an investment. When he landed in what he though was the Indies, he didn't find any of the wealth he expected.

Point is, the return on the King's/Queen's investment was going to be native slaves. Killing them all would have been counterproductive to his goal.

I'm not defending Columbus as someone worthy of a holiday. But, people should have a sounds understanding of history. To be honest, and I'm not doubting or attacking you, I'd be interested to read your source on his overseeing "the slaughter of at least thousands." Link, please?

:why: As if being a commercial venture precludes what he did from constituting crimes against humanity and genocide? Chattel slavery was commercial. Wars are commercial. All oppression has some material basis, someone who gains from it.

You can refer to page 442 here.

Honestly all you need to do is refer to Columbus' journals and Google anything with the terms "Columbus" and "genocide" or "Taino" or "Arawak" together...

There were millions of Natives in the Caribbean islands. From the perspective of Columbus and his terrorists, more than enough to kill a ton of and enslave the others.
 

tmonster

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Point is, the return on the King's/Queen's investment was going to be native slaves. Killing them all would have been counterproductive to his goal.
false, they killed plenty trying to find gold
they settled for slaves when they could not find gold
they did not plan on exporting the entire population of the Caribbeans
there are first hand accounts of their actions
 

BocaRear

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He didn't even discover America :DAFUQ33:,

how the fukk you "discover" a place and there's already people living on it?:wtf:
 
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