Tear this Goddamn bitch down

Duff Miver

Registered User
Forum Member
Jul 29, 2009
6,521
55
0
Right behind you
01-statue-of-liberty-facts.jpg



Just look at what she says -

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Fuck that. Mexicans , Arabs, Syrians, Indians, Muslims, Chinese, and who knows what else.
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Well.....I suppose we could change that for the Trump version

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Skulnik

Truth Teller
Forum Member
Mar 30, 2007
21,729
1,003
113
Jefferson City, Missouri
01-statue-of-liberty-facts.jpg



Just look at what she says -

images



Fuck that. Mexicans , Arabs, Syrians, Indians, Muslims, Chinese, and who knows what else.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.


Well.....I suppose we could change that for the Trump version

images

Influence[edit]





Bronze plaque inside the Statue of Liberty
Paul Auster wrote that "Bartholdi's gigantic effigy was originally intended as a monument to the principles of international republicanism, but 'The New Colossus' reinvented the statue's purpose, turning Liberty into a welcoming mother, a symbol of hope to the outcasts and downtrodden of the world."[8]

John T. Cunningham wrote that "The Statue of Liberty was not conceived and sculpted as a symbol of immigration, but it quickly became so as immigrant ships passed under the torch and the shining face, heading toward Ellis Island. However, it was [Lazarus's poem] that permanently stamped on Miss Liberty the role of unofficial greeter of incoming immigrants."[9]

The poem has entered the political realm. It was quoted in John F. Kennedy's book A Nation of Immigrants (1958)[10] as well as a 2010 political speech by President Obama advocating immigration policy reform.[11]

Parts of the poem also appear in popular culture. The Broadway musical Miss Liberty, with music and lyrics by Irving Berlin, an immigrant himself, used the final stanza beginning "Give me your tired, your poor" as the basis for a song.[12][10] It was also read in the 1941 film Hold Back the Dawn as well as being recited by the heroine in Alfred Hitchcock's wartime film Saboteur.[10] Harpist and singer Joanna Newsom indirectly references the poem in her 2015 song "Sapokanikan," in contrast to the forbidding colossus of Percy Bysshe Shelley's "Ozymandias."[13]
 
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