Page 1 of 1 [ 10 posts ] 

warrier120
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 18 Dec 2016
Age: 21
Gender: Female
Posts: 633
Location: Southern California

04 Jul 2020, 2:13 pm

Donald Trump orders creation of 'national heroes' garden

Quote:
US President Donald Trump has ordered the creation of a "National Garden of American Heroes" to defend what he calls "our great national story" against those who vandalise statues.

His executive order gives a new task force 60 days to present plans, including a location, for the garden.

He insists the new statues must be lifelike, "not abstract or modernist".

A number of US statues have been pulled down since the police killing of an unarmed black man, George Floyd in May.

Monuments linked to the slave-owning Confederacy during the Civil War in America have been especially targeted in the nationwide protests ignited by the death of Floyd in Minneapolis, Minnesota, after a white police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.
President Trump has defended Confederate symbols as a part of American heritage.

In a speech to mark Independence Day at Mount Rushmore, he condemned the anti-racism protesters who toppled statues.

He said America's national heritage was being threatened - an emotive appeal for patriotism.

The garden - to be in a place of natural beauty near a city - is to be opened by 4 July 2026, Mr Trump's executive order says. State authorities and civic organisations are invited to donate statues for it.

President Trump's choice of historical figures to be commemorated in the garden is likely to be controversial.

The list of "historically significant" Americans includes predictably Founding Fathers like George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, but also frontiersman Davy Crockett, evangelical Christian preacher Billy Graham, Ronald Reagan and World War Two heroes Douglas MacArthur and George Patton.

There will also be statues of African American civil rights campaigners Harriet Tubman and Martin Luther King Jr.


Controversially, Mr Trump includes non-Americans who "made substantive historical contributions to the discovery, development, or independence of the future United States".

So the garden can have statues of Christopher Columbus, Junipero Serra and the Marquis de Lafayette.

Columbus and the Spanish Catholic missionary Serra are far from heroic for Native Americans, because their "discoveries" led to the enslavement and exploitation of indigenous people by white colonists.

America's early economic development also relied on slavery - which makes some of the traditional national heroes dubious for African Americans.

The Marquis de Lafayette, a French aristocrat and military commander, led American troops in key battles against the British in the American Revolution.

Symbolic response to protesters

Donald Trump's proposed garden offers insight into who the president considers worthy of celebration. There are America's founders, joined by 19th-Century frontiersmen glorified in old Disney television dramas, World War Two generals and slavery abolitionists.

Republican Party icon Ronald Reagan is the only president from the past 150 years, and Antonin Scalia, whose primary legal legacy is penning scathing conservative dissents to majority opinions, is the only Supreme Court justice. It's the kind of list that could largely be gleaned from grade-school history books of the 1950s, an era that suffuses the president's politics of nostalgia for "American greatness".

In his Mount Rushmore speech, the president lashed out at those he accused of wanting to destroy the nation's cultural heritage. The garden is his symbolic response. At a time when the president is defending statues that honour Civil War rebels who fought US soldiers, Mr Trump is making an affirmative case for those who he believes embody the US values of patriotism, inspiration and courage. While many Americans are now reviewing US history with a critical eye, the garden would be a glossy tribute to the president's view of American "exceptionalism".

It will surely antagonise the president's critics, who see him as a divisive and ill-suited arbiter of American values. It also portends an autumn presidential campaign of pitched cultural warfare.

What did President Trump say in his speech?

It was a highly symbolic setting for the speech: Mount Rushmore, in South Dakota, features the carved faces of four US presidents, two of whom - George Washington and Thomas Jefferson - were slave-owners.

It also stands on land that was taken from the indigenous Lakota Sioux by the US government in the 1800s.

President Trump railed against the "cancel culture" of those who toppled monuments during recent anti-racism protests.

He condemned those who targeted statues as "angry mobs".

Mr Trump accused protesters of "a merciless campaign to wipe out our history, defame our heroes, erase our values, and indoctrinate our children". "We will not be silenced," he said.

The president, who has been heavily criticised for his handling of the US coronavirus pandemic, made little reference to the disease that has now claimed almost 130,000 American lives.

The US recorded its largest single-day rise in coronavirus infections on Friday, bringing the total to more than 2.5 million - the most of any country.

Masks and social distancing were not mandatory at the Mount Rushmore event, despite warnings by health officials.

Native American groups criticised Mr Trump's visit for posing a health risk, and for celebrating US independence in an area that is sacred to them.

Many Native Americans do not celebrate Independence Day because they associate it with the colonisation of their tribal homelands and the loss of their cultural freedoms.



And so here we go again... :evil:


_________________
I am no longer using WP. Please PM me if you want to talk.


TheRobotLives
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 7 Dec 2019
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,092
Location: Quiet, Dark, Comfy Spot

05 Jul 2020, 3:06 pm

Ben Franklin is someone I admire.


_________________
Then a hero comes along, with the strength to carry on, and you cast your fears aside, and you know you can survive.

Be the hero of your life.


Campin_Cat
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 6 May 2014
Age: 63
Gender: Female
Posts: 25,953
Location: Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.

05 Jul 2020, 10:08 pm

SO cool----I hadn't heard about this garden!!












_________________
White female; age 59; diagnosed Aspie.
I use caps for emphasis----I'm NOT angry or shouting. I use caps like others use italics, underline, or bold.
"What we know is a drop; what we don't know, is an ocean." (Sir Isaac Newton)


cyberdad
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Feb 2011
Age: 56
Gender: Male
Posts: 36,036

06 Jul 2020, 1:26 am

Stormy Daniels picks a little something for the "mushroom" section of the garden'

Image



CockneyRebel
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Jul 2004
Age: 50
Gender: Male
Posts: 116,820
Location: In my little Olympic World of peace and love

06 Jul 2020, 7:07 am

Are there any Germanyballs in his garden? I want one for a pet. :heart:


_________________
The Family Enigma


Misslizard
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 18 Jun 2012
Age: 60
Gender: Female
Posts: 20,481
Location: Aux Arcs

06 Jul 2020, 9:24 am

A garden is a nice idea, but I imagine the biggest and only statue will be of him. :roll:


_________________
I am the dust that dances in the light. - Rumi


Fnord
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 6 May 2008
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 60,792
Location: Stendec

06 Jul 2020, 9:34 am

Misslizard wrote:
A garden is a nice idea, but I imagine the biggest and only statue will be of him.
Carved from a single yuge piece of carnelian, no doubt...
Image


_________________
 
I have no love for Hamas, Hezbollah, Iranian Leadership, Islamic Jihad, other Islamic terrorist groups, OR their supporters and sympathizers.


Misslizard
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 18 Jun 2012
Age: 60
Gender: Female
Posts: 20,481
Location: Aux Arcs

06 Jul 2020, 12:55 pm

Fnord wrote:
Misslizard wrote:
A garden is a nice idea, but I imagine the biggest and only statue will be of him.
Carved from a single yuge piece of carnelian, no doubt...
Image

Yes, and here is the prototype.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emp ... s_No_Balls


_________________
I am the dust that dances in the light. - Rumi


Karamazov
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 2 Mar 2012
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,979
Location: Rural England

06 Jul 2020, 12:58 pm

Misslizard wrote:
Fnord wrote:
Misslizard wrote:
A garden is a nice idea, but I imagine the biggest and only statue will be of him.
Carved from a single yuge piece of carnelian, no doubt...
Image

Yes, and here is the prototype.


The bigger the statue of himself he puts up, the more room there is for insulting graffiti. :idea:



SocOfAutism
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 2 Mar 2015
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,927

06 Jul 2020, 2:19 pm

I was delighted about this idea! There were so many people on that list who are underrepresented, even though they were important in the development of our American culture. I’m also so pleased to see arts and sports people on the list. I just hope it’s not built too far away from me so I can go see it!