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Post by Wade Moor on Oct 10, 2016 17:41:33 GMT -5
After serving out a dollop of #fuccboigenocide on a slew of worthless plebeians - including Native American Tom O' Hawk - at Sunday Night Slam, Columbus Day has henceforth been renamed Pantheon Day.
Happy Pantheon Day. Enjoy your day off courtesy of the #fuccboigenocide
lmao
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Post by Zombie DankMorris on Oct 10, 2016 18:09:29 GMT -5
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Post by Corey Black on Oct 10, 2016 18:23:04 GMT -5
Leif Erickson Day was yesterday. Columbus can suck it.
#PantheonDay
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Post by Oath Breaker on Oct 11, 2016 1:11:51 GMT -5
There is quite a large debate in regards to whether the holiday should be called Columbus Day or not. There are many reasons for the debate. One major reason is that it is evident that Christopher Columbus was not the first explorer to reach what is now North America from Europe. It is fact that the Vikings traveled to areas in North America including Greenland and Canada. And, many argue that the first people to discover North America were the Native Americans, since they arrived thousands of years earlier.
Hawaii observes the second Monday in October as Discoverers Day in recognition of the Polynesian discoverers of the Hawaiian Islands; Island Pacific Academy treats this day as a holiday and school is closed for the day.
South Dakota, Alaska, and Vermont have replaced Columbus Day with an official state holiday known as Indigenous Peoples' Day. They wanted to recognize the sacrifice and contributions of American Indians rather than celebrate an explorer who opened up the Americas to European colonization and displacement of indigenous peoples.
Oregon does not recognize Columbus Day; schools and public offices remain open. Neither Iowa nor Nevada celebrate Columbus Day as an official holiday, but the states' respective governors are "authorized and requested" by statute to proclaim the day each year.
Several other states have removed Columbus Day as a paid holiday for state government workers, while continuing to recognize it or treat it as a legal holiday for other purposes. These include Arkansas, California, Delaware, Florida, Michigan, Minnesota, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. For California state employees, Columbus Day was exchanged for Cesar Chavez Day on March 31.
As of 2016, more than 40 US jurisdictions celebrate Indigenous Peoples' Day; the majority of these have replaced Columbus Day with this holiday.
Go ahead and take Columbus Day renamed as Pantyhose Day. It's not a real holiday anyway.
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Post by Wade Moor on Oct 11, 2016 1:31:52 GMT -5
There is quite a large debate in regards to whether the holiday should be called Columbus Day or not. There are many reasons for the debate. One major reason is that it is evident that Christopher Columbus was not the first explorer to reach what is now North America from Europe. It is fact that the Vikings traveled to areas in North America including Greenland and Canada. And, many argue that the first people to discover North America were the Native Americans, since they arrived thousands of years earlier.
Hawaii observes the second Monday in October as Discoverers Day in recognition of the Polynesian discoverers of the Hawaiian Islands; Island Pacific Academy treats this day as a holiday and school is closed for the day.
South Dakota, Alaska, and Vermont have replaced Columbus Day with an official state holiday known as Indigenous Peoples' Day. They wanted to recognize the sacrifice and contributions of American Indians rather than celebrate an explorer who opened up the Americas to European colonization and displacement of indigenous peoples.
Oregon does not recognize Columbus Day; schools and public offices remain open. Neither Iowa nor Nevada celebrate Columbus Day as an official holiday, but the states' respective governors are "authorized and requested" by statute to proclaim the day each year.
Several other states have removed Columbus Day as a paid holiday for state government workers, while continuing to recognize it or treat it as a legal holiday for other purposes. These include Arkansas, California, Delaware, Florida, Michigan, Minnesota, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. For California state employees, Columbus Day was exchanged for Cesar Chavez Day on March 31.
As of 2016, more than 40 US jurisdictions celebrate Indigenous Peoples' Day; the majority of these have replaced Columbus Day with this holiday.
Go ahead and take Columbus Day renamed as Pantyhose Day. It's not a real holiday anyway. @godnilla damn this nerd is mad as fuck lmao #staywoke
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Post by John Rabid on Oct 11, 2016 2:43:08 GMT -5
There is quite a large debate in regards to whether the holiday should be called Columbus Day or not. There are many reasons for the debate. One major reason is that it is evident that Christopher Columbus was not the first explorer to reach what is now North America from Europe. It is fact that the Vikings traveled to areas in North America including Greenland and Canada. And, many argue that the first people to discover North America were the Native Americans, since they arrived thousands of years earlier.
Hawaii observes the second Monday in October as Discoverers Day in recognition of the Polynesian discoverers of the Hawaiian Islands; Island Pacific Academy treats this day as a holiday and school is closed for the day.
South Dakota, Alaska, and Vermont have replaced Columbus Day with an official state holiday known as Indigenous Peoples' Day. They wanted to recognize the sacrifice and contributions of American Indians rather than celebrate an explorer who opened up the Americas to European colonization and displacement of indigenous peoples.
Oregon does not recognize Columbus Day; schools and public offices remain open. Neither Iowa nor Nevada celebrate Columbus Day as an official holiday, but the states' respective governors are "authorized and requested" by statute to proclaim the day each year.
Several other states have removed Columbus Day as a paid holiday for state government workers, while continuing to recognize it or treat it as a legal holiday for other purposes. These include Arkansas, California, Delaware, Florida, Michigan, Minnesota, Texas, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. For California state employees, Columbus Day was exchanged for Cesar Chavez Day on March 31.
As of 2016, more than 40 US jurisdictions celebrate Indigenous Peoples' Day; the majority of these have replaced Columbus Day with this holiday.
Go ahead and take Columbus Day renamed as Pantyhose Day. It's not areal holiday anyway. @theripper HAPPY PANTHEON DAY, TOMMY!
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Post by Jayson Price on Oct 11, 2016 11:07:24 GMT -5
@realjaysonprice
Rename this clown Tom-O-Cuck cuz he's watching us fuck everything he loves. #Pantheon, #WeDaBess
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