On a recent episode of The View, co-host Whoopi Goldberg shared her unbridled opinion on Maya Angelou being minted on the United States quarter. According to the award-winning actress, Angelou receiving recognition in any capacity is the poet’s rightful honor.
Still, America can and should do more to highlight the Black women who’ve enriched our country’s history. “I want to point out that, not too long ago, we were expecting to have Harriet Tubman gracing the $20 bill, remember that?” Goldberg told her co-hosts on the Jan. 11 episode of the daytime talk show.
“But now it looks like the price has been slashed to a quarter because now we have Maya Angelou on a quarter,” she said, adding, “And having Maya anywhere is a magnificent thing. But come on America! You don’t think this is gonna make folks feel a little bit uncomfortable? We were on a $20 bill and now you have all of these powerful women, and you put them all on quarters? Come on!”
Earlier this week, Angelou became the first Black woman to be featured and distributed on a U.S quarter thanks to the American Women Quarters program.
On social media, many agreed with Goldberg’s take. With the slew of social and institutional reforms, citizens wish would be implemented, some believe Angelou’s recognition of a U.S. coin should have taken a backseat on the government’s priority list. View some of the Twitter commentary circling Angelou’s quarter down below.
Maya Angelou was a survivor of sexual violence that left her mute most of her childhood. Writing gave her her voice back. She was a sex worker, a poet, a director, an actress. She was a force beyond anything that can be captured by state iconography that renders her voiceless
— Daniel Kaluuya If You Are Reading This I Swallow (@WrittenByHanna) January 11, 2022
I find it real funny how we say we want voting rights, student loan cancelation, affordable housing, and defunded police and the government heard Maya Angelou on a quarter.
— Alicia T. Crosby (she/her) (@aliciatcrosby) January 11, 2022
Maya Angelou’s image is on the back of a coin that still features a slaveowner on the front. Huh.
— Renée Graham 🏳️🌈 (@reneeygraham) January 11, 2022
We have a Maya Angelou coin. An Ida B Wells barbie doll yet poor Black women are experiencing the brunt of this pandemic and overall societal collapse. Representation feels like nothing but a bandaid placed over a bullet hole
— Daniel Kaluuya If You Are Reading This I Swallow (@WrittenByHanna) January 12, 2022