There's a lot of complaining going on about Nebraska's quarter selection. Not surprisingly, few people are actually offering concrete solutions describing what they would have done. Sure, two or three people actually liked the Standing Bear quarter. But why is selecting some dude nobody has ever heard of better than honoring an entire period of history of which most Nebraskans are very proud? Many of the bitchers say that we should portray Nebraska as it exists today rather than dwelling on the past. Fine. You go right ahead and do that. But tell me: how the hell are you going to fit Omaha, Crawford, and Grand Island, farming, industry, and retail, and natural resources and everything else onto a single quarter? Go ahead, tell me.
As for Chief Standing Bear, I'm sure he was a great guy, but he couldn't have been
too great because he was never brought up in any of my politically correct history classes. If we are going to choose an Indian, shouldn't we at least choose one that somebody has heard of? The whining from Indian groups is rich.
"I think this would have given an opportunity to make amends for the Manifest Destiny tragedies that befell our people," Judi Morgan gaiashkibos, the director of the Nebraska Commission on Indian Affairs, told the paper. She called Heineman's decision "unconscionable" and an "insult to Nebraska's first citizens."
Well holy crap, Ms. gaiashkibos, you're telling me that a friggin' quarter will cure everything? Damn, let's just make quarters for everybody: for blacks (slavery), Jews (Holocaust), Japanese (internment camps), and any other group we can think of. Then everything will be better!
And don't give me that "first citizens" baloney. Nebraska wasn't Nebraska back then. "First residents" is slightly more accurate, but even that is hooey. Your ance
stors just booted out whoever was here before them, and so on. It's the way humans work. (And recent archaeological and anthropological evidence suggests it has been working that way for much longer than previously thought, especially in the Americas.)
Mark Peniska, the chairman of the Ponca Tribe, questioned whether Heineman was under pressure not to choose a Native person. "If it was just a political move, that would upset me," he said.
I wonder if Mr. Peniska is saying this for comedic effect, or if he really is an idiot. Heineman under pressure
not to choose a Native person? That's hilarious! On the contrary, he was under tremendous pressure to do just the opposite. In fact, I was shocked when Standing Bear wasn't chosen. Once SB made the final two, I thought he was an automatic. If he were going to be left out, he should have been left out much earlier in the process to help ease the PC backlash.
I happen to think the final quarter design is quite appropriate. It represents how most people just see Nebraska as a place to drive through, and those who choose to stay are just a bit behind modern times.