Anyone who cares knew what you meant. I only remembered the somewhat idiosyncratic spelling because my junior high history teacher was named Mrs. Phillip and she emphasized the spelling when we learned about Wheatley.
There's nothing inherently wrong or bad about her representing a "strong black woman". You literally didn't attempt to make any other point than "this is the type of shit feminists get up to."I'm not on the TJ Sotmayor train, so I'm not seeing what the issue is supposed to be.
My point was that Phillis represents the mental, the cognitive, creative attributes and accomplishments. Harriet represents the physical. Again, black folk reduced to the physical. The "strong black woman" mantra, is that something born of the 60s, or some remnant of slavery, again reducing black folk to the physical nature of menial labor? I'm not on the Sotomayor train as well. There are already too many passengers.
Harriet is a good choice, I just think that there were others. And who knows, they probably had a list of women. I was listening to the Secretary of The Treasury speaking on this yesterday. Some would even think Madame CJ Walker (she was all about the dollars) would be good.
Putting the picture of a slave on a piece of fiat currency seems about right.
The symbolism, how right you are.