by Theodore King
In Praise of Columbus
For most of my life
Columbus Day was a day you couldn't get mail and the banks were
closed. I once asked my dad why we have Columbus Day, he said it was
an Italian thing. We aren't Italian, we aren't even in the Knights
of Columbus. So I was indifferent to Columbus Day.
Four years ago I applied
for a job with a pseudo government agency. I was applying for a job
for, which I was qualified, and for which my would be employers were
desparate. Because this was a pseudo government agency there were
many requirements I had to fullfill. I jumped through the hoops. My
interview went well with the lady who does the hiring and I was even
given the chance to meet some of the people that I would be working
with in my new job. Then a fat woman from Human Resources entered
the office with some more paperwork for me to sign, this is a pseudo
government agency after all. She was dating a form and asked, “What
day is it?” I resonded, “It's October 12, Columbus Day.” She
looked at me over her reading glasses with a smirk on her face as if
I were her next eclair and said, “Don't you mean Indiginous
People's Day?”
“No, I mean Columbus
Day. Has been Columbus Day for all my life,” I responded. My
interview was soon over, I left the office and went home. A week
passed and I heard nothing. This seemed odd as they were “desparate”
to fill that post. Well, they weren't THAT desparate as it turned
out and I did not get that job. I can't prove it, but I think the
fat woman from HR held it against me for having the temerity to say
the truth, it was Columbus Day!
Christopher Columubs has
taken a beating in the past 26 years since the 500th
anniversary of his arrival in 1992. Cities across America, run by
liberals, have ditched Columbus Day for “Native American Day” or
“Indiginous People's Day.” Two years agp in Tulsa Mayor G.T.
Bynum, who comes from one of the city's wealthy, ruling families as a
LaFortune, decided to force Columbus to share his seat with the
Indians by renaming the holiday - Columbus/Native American Day. And
last year the Republican controlled legislature here did the same
thing with the new governor's blessing.
I reached out to the
Knights of Columbus at their headquarters in New Haven, Connecticut
asking that they take a stand against this slow erasure of their
namesake from history. I never heard back from them. I also reached
out to the local chapter at Holy Family Cathedral in Tulsa. They
don't care and apparently neither does their home office in New
Haven. The Knights of Columbus do a lot of good work and are
generally a good bunch of guys, but on this pivitol front in the
culture war they are USELESS. Glad I'm not a member. They're
probably glad they don't have me either.
Christopher Columbus was
probably not the first person to discover the new world, but he was
the first person to take back news to a European power (Spain) that
he had found new real estate. It is believed Ireland's Saint Brendan
in the sixth century made the first discovery. In 1976 and 77 a
group of explorers proved that Brendan may have made it to Iceland
from Ireland and then on to Nova Scotia, Canada. They used a replica
of the leather bound sail boat used by St. Brendan and his monks in
the sixth century. This proves an old line about the Irish. God
gave them drink to slow them down so they wouldn't conquer the world.
The Irish are a clever lot. The Vikings likely discovered America
after the Irish had beat them to it.
Three years ago, on
Columbus Day, a local radio talk show host in Tulsa had an interview
with a local writer about a recent news story unrelated to Columbus
Day. At the end of the interview the host asked his guest, who is
very liberal, if he was celebrating Columbus Day or Native American
Day. The writer predictably responded, “As for me and my house,
it's Native American Day.” It was appropriate for this liberal
writer to paraphrase the Book of Joshua, he is also Jewish. Because
Christopher Columbus arrived in the new world in 1492 and
successfully brough back to the old world of Europe news of his real
estate discovery, the ancestors of that writer were able to leave
Europe and find safety in the new world. His immediate family was
able to avoid numerous pogroms against his people and the final
solution of the Third Reich. This historical perspective has likely
elluded that writer but he's a fool anyway.
This leads to a broader
point, because of Columbus millions from around the world were able
to make a new life here in the Americas. Our ancestors were able to
make a fresh start in a new land and avoid the horrors of poverty and
persecution in the old. My own ancestors in Ireland had the option
of coming to America after the British government allowed the
systematic starvation of the Irish people when the potato crops
failed in the 1840s. Today, the ignorantly educated talk of “white
supremacy, patricary” and “white privelage.” Columbus is to
those people the devil. And yet many of these ignorantly, educated
are whites who come from the safety and security of America that
their forefathers established. Self-loathing is a psycological
disorder and should be recognized as such.
What about the American
Indians? How did they fare after the arrival of the white man? Not
well, this is a fact of history and not something to be proud. This
clash of civilizations was going to happen at some point. Whether
anyone wants to admidt it or not, Europeans came from an advanced
civilization and they were going to prevail because of their use of
technology. The other factor was the disunity between native tribes.
In other words, divide and conquer. With this conquest came a new
Christian civilization. When Spain's Hernan Cortes arrived in Mexico
some 27 years after Columbus' discovery, he found a well developed
civilization that practiced human sacrifice on a daily basis. A
practice that he and his men, known as Conquistadors, put to an end.
The vilification of
Columbus has a sinister motive. He was the man who made European
immigration to the new world possible; discredit him and you can
discredit all white people living in the Americas. Make them out to
be interlopers. Frequently, we read or hear commentators
disparagingly refer to "white men" and "old white
guys" as if some sort of cancer. Desparaging comments that
would not be allowed for any other ethnic group.
There is also the agenda
by cultural Marxists to discredit the American founding. Recently,
at my father's alma mater Notre Dame a tapestry of Christopher
Columbus was covered up because the school administration decided he had to be hidden from history. Take one string on a tapestry and pull on it the
rest will come apart. At Tufts Universtiy in Massachusetts there is a movement underway to remove a statue to Thomas Jefferson because he
owned slaves. The real
reason for wanting him removed was his work creating the
Consttitution of the United States. Cultural
Marxists are working within our institutions to undermine our nation. Marxism
will never succeed in this country as long as we have our
Constitution. Get rid of that and you've created a void, a void to be
filled by evil men and women.
Cultural
Marxists operating in our universities and in institutions are a greater long-term threat to our way of life than Al
Queda or members of The Islamic State. Their tactics are different,
but their goal is the same, destroy America.
In his landmark 1969
documentary on western art titled Civilization Lord Kenneth Clark
ended his 13 part series with a warning: "It is lack of confidence,
more than anything else, that kills a civilization. We can destroy
ourselves by cynicism and dissolution just as effectively as by
bombs."
Christopher Columbus is a
part of our heritage and we must honor him. As for his detractors it
is important to note that history is almost never prestine because it
deals with complex beings called humans. The world is a better place
because Columbus made his succesful voyage.