Posted on 06/08/2004 1:23:27 PM PDT by ambrose
They keep putting politically correct ladies on the dollar coin (remember the Susan B. Anthony?), and the gold color turns brown like a penny when they get much use.
IMO it is too early to consider this. Well, maybe not too early to consider but far too early to act upon it. His widow's grief is still raw and she opposes it. I am all for the idea of Reagan on currency but I feel that it is too soon. Out of respect for his wife I would say give it a while.
Kennedy died too late in '63 to get a coin for that year. He got it in '64.
My point is that neither of these men would have been so honored had we followed Goldwater's advice and waited 50 years to evaluate them and their legacies.
Hamilton, Madison and Jay wrote the Federalist Papers.
FDR should stay on the dime. I say ditch Andrew Jackson from the $20..
I was saying on another thread that the $20 bill is probably the most printed circulated and used bill there is at the moment.
In addition to new RR money, what would really tick off the RATS would be to start re-naming any Fed Building with 'Kennedy' to REAGAN. They'd go apoplectic! Teddy would croak right in the Senate, it'd be a thing of beauty :-)
And screw FDR & his stinking dime. FDR's policies were only worth ten cents anyway.
Don't bet on it. You're quite right about Kennedy but FDR was revered and is still invariably listed amongst the presidential greats. If anything, he would've gotten more than a dime if the 50 year tradition were reality.
Nancy opposed dumping FDR from the dime, not putting Reagan on any currency.
Trying to dump FDR is what is foolish, as it creates a divisive battle.
And the reason he would've gotten more than the dime is because in FDR's case you would've just had a half century of pent-up ferver to memorialize him burst free all at once in 1995...
Just when Gingrich and the Republicans had taken over both houses of Congress.
A vast number of memorializing endeavors have nothing at all to do with the U.S. Congress. As the article explicitly states, by example, coinage decisions are made by the Treasury Department and you can pretty much bank it that the Clinton Treasury would've had a coin out April 12, 1995. Moreover, the grounds of his Memorial would've likely been set aside for decades just waiting until something could be put on it - as (guess what) they in fact were in actuality..
My apologies then. I misunderstood and thought that Nancy was opposed to the Reagan dime.
Somebody made a good point about a $25 bill, seems like a reasonable idea to me, its about what it costs to fill the gas tank on my small pickup truck!
What party has the goods on money? It seems they`re all Democ-rats...I can think of only Lincoln off hand...Who else is a Republican on money? I think Lincoln is the only one, oh wait Grant, he`s on the 50 buck bill. Then you got the Indian chick and that Susan B.Sarandon coin...Man, Repubs need more money with them on it. Maybe they can put Reagan on that coin and lose the broad.
Put Reagan on the dime. To hell with what the 'rats think.
$20 dollar bill bump
BUMP!!!!
I would like to see Richard Nixon on some of our money as well. Seriously. Nixon should get the dime or the half-dollar. I'd like to see Reagan on the $20 bill and the dollar coin. Harry Truman should be on something too. How about the $5 bill? Got to throw the Democrats a bone here and Truman is the only Democrat president that doesn't make me want to puke. And what about Theodore Roosevelt? He was right up there with Reagan IMHO.
this is just crap. it's arguable that the constitution
would have never been ratified without hamilton's work
on the Federalist Papers. he was a confidante to George
Washington during both the revolution and during his
presidency. he was a key federalist, and was the father
of the central banking system. he is truly a giant in
american history.
Lincoln was never an independent. and jefferson's election
in 1800 may have well represented the birth of parties in
the young united states, but it certainly wasn't viewed as
such at the time. so jefferson was never a "democrat"
the way we use the term today.
I feel awful about Reagan, too, but let's not lose our minds
here.
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