“Fearless Girl” is first.
So that the descendants of those who fought on the Lancastrian side of the English Civil War will not be micro-aggressed, they can begin by changing the bombastic triumphalistic name of the city.
....After the violent events in Charlottesville, New York City will conduct a 90-day review of all symbols of hate on city property...
Start with Gracie Mansion and DeBlasio’s office at City Hall.
Nice pretending to do somethinf while
city goes to sht. Venezuela has got sht on NYC now!
NYC is a left wing haven. A dem could take a dump on Lady Liberty’s head and still get elected mayor over a Republican. This is typical in a place like NYC, but it does make the entire Dem party look bad outside of their little leftie safe places. I guess they’ve given up on winning outside of urban enclaves.
The mayor is a symbol of hate
Mr. Mayor, tear down your new wall.....
Tear down every Che Guevara poster in every coffeehouse in Manhattan.
You can begin with your ugly, Leftist face Bill DeBlasio.
Let’s get rid of the George Washington Bridge and the Lincoln Tunnel. Lincoln wanted to send former slaves to Liberia.
Who will define and determine what is a “symbol of hate”?
Ulysses S. Grant was a Republican.
I hope they try to delete Columbus streets, parks, statuary, what have you. The many Americans of Italian descent will go bonkers, it will be fun to watch.
Must be closing down all the mosques there then.
I would rather him go after the @ssholes on Canal Street who tried to sell me a counterfeit Alma LV bag for 90 bucks and wouldn’t haggle. LOL!
Of course De Commio is the one going to define which symbols fall into this category.
Fahrenheit 451 is soon to become reality. I am disgusted with what liberals are doing to this country. They say the are destroying symbols of hate by displaying the worse kind of hate.
The statue of William Earle Dodge in Bryant Park should be toppled. Look at this blatant racist’s bio, from wikipedia.
William Earle Dodge Sr. (September 4, 1805 February 9, 1883) was a New York businessman, referred to as one of the “Merchant Princes” of Wall Street in the years leading up to the American Civil War. Dodge saw slavery as an evil to be peaceably removed, but not to be interfered with where it existed.[1][2]