Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forumHere Are 7 Redesigns Of The $20 Bill That Honor Women
(some of the comments at the article are absolutely disgusting, but, sadly, far too familiar to many of us.)
Here Are 7 Redesigns Of The $20 Bill That Honor Women
If you could choose any historical woman to be on the $20 bill, who would it be?
A nonprofit campaign called Women on 20s, seeks to put the face of a woman on the $20 bill by 2020, the 100th anniversary of 19th Amendment, which granted the right to vote to women in the United States. After conducting a survey of a 100 people, around two dozen of whom were historians and experts in women's history, the campaign has landed on 15 potential candidates: Susan B. Anthony, Clara Barton, Rachel Carson, Shirley Chisholm, Betty Friedan, Barbara Jordan, Patsy Mink, Rosa Parks, Alice Paul, Frances Perkins, Eleanor Roosevelt, Margaret Sanger, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman.
"We chose historical figures who had really changed the lives of many people and we also took into account the challenges they faced getting there," Women on 20s Executive Director Susan Ades Stone told The Huffington Post. She added that while the campaign hopes to create a popular movement, any official redesigns will ultimately be up to the U.S. Treasury.
People can visit the campaign's website to vote for the woman they think should replace Andrew Jackson on the 20. Ades Stone urges everyone to vote and tell your friends, especially since this Sunday is International Women's Day.
"This is not just a campaign about getting women on the 20. That's our crowning goal, but we really want this to be an educational campaign and a national conversation," Ades Stone said. "We wanted adults and kids alike to look at these names and think 'I don't know enough about this person, and maybe I should find out more.'"
SOJOURNER-TRUTH
?7
ELEANOR-ROOSEVELT
?7
ROSA-PARKS
?7
CLARA-BARTON
?7
RACHEL-CARSON
?7
ALICE-PAUL
?7
ELIZABETH-CADY-STANTON
?7
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/07/women-on-20s_n_6816928.html?ncid=fcbklnkushpmg00000063
47of74
(18,470 posts)I still have some Turkish Lira from my 2012 trip to Turkey. All Turkish banknotes have a picture of Atatürk (the founder of the modern Turkish state) on them. But it was the back of the 50 Lira note I still have that caught my attention.
The woman pictured there is Fatma Aliye Topuz - a Turkish women's rights activist and novelist.
That's right. A secular nation - albeit one with an over 95% Muslim population - has a woman on a banknote.
It just clicked when I was looking at the notes the other night and fondly remembering my trip to Turkey that here we are trying to decide if we should replace Jackson on the $20 with a woman and the Turks beat us to the punch, as it were. And with the current rates that's about what a 50 TL note is worth now.
niyad
(113,701 posts)47of74
(18,470 posts)I have a soft spot in my heart (probably in my head too) for the Turkish people. Most everyone I ran in to over there was so friendly and I felt safer there than I do sometimes here at home.