Toshiya Statam, 15, is seen in several videos being pulled down the bleachers at Thornridge High School during a basketball game. She says it all started over her hoodie. One security guard told her to take it off, which she did but then she was told to leave the school.
And.....it's negroes.
ReplyDelete"Toshiya" sounded like an Asian name to me.
ReplyDeleteI was mistaken.
The moniker Toshiya Statam say's I'm finding the security guard innocent of all charges.
ReplyDeleteOk, Pretty Wife's grandparents, Aunt, Uncle and cousins all lived on E 170th Street but about a 1/2 mile farther east. We would travel from the northern suburbs down to South Holland (a respectable white community) till the '90's when the melanin over represented moved in to escape the inner city rot. The neighborhood changed in less than a decade and brought ruin upon a once proud high school and community. Again this country does not have a race problem it has a problem race.
ReplyDeleteSpin
PS: The quarry that the 80/90/94 splits is a driver and a five iron from there. Look it up on google earth.
Everyone (every.single.one.) that uses the NewSpeak "stakeholder" should ride the Transylvanian Stake.
ReplyDeleteAt my two sons school, they are not allowed to wear hats or beanies. Even though multiple parents have raised concerns over why, no one has give a logical answer. Only for "security " reasons. I have personally seen the school system, exercise a power trip and do some very illogical things because they know students will naturally clash. My youngest son was suspended for wearing a t-shirt supporting veterans and the 2nd amendment. It was a long battle, but ultimately we won and he is allowed to wear that and similar garments. The school system is absolutely horrible in general.
ReplyDeleteOf course it is horrible; that, and HR departments, are run by females and the men who fear them.
DeleteYeap, and nothing else can be said about the castration of business or schools than this.
DeleteDindus gonna dindu, but public school is child abuse regardless. Not to mention unconstitutional, but that's a distant second on the list of problems with public education.
ReplyDeleteWhen #2 son was in high school; we attended the high school basketball game. I saw him in the stands, amongst his buddies, with a dew rag on. I walked over to him and yanked that thing off his head and then calmly went back to my seat. The reaction from the "boys" was OMG! The reaction from the other fathers; YOU GO DUDE!
ReplyDeleteI give up. What's a "dew rag"?
DeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteat one point, years ago, my youngest was wearing his jeans about half-mast, like so many would-be thugs (who have never been on a yard) have done. I explained what I knew it meant, and how I felt about it; my Loki started defending it, at which point I said, "Fine, around here (in our house) I have nothing further to say, but I guaran-fucking-tee that if I ride by and see you out with your homies looking like that, I'll stop my bike and yank those fuckers right down to your ankles, right there!" He knew that if I was on the bike, there was a damn good chance of having one or two of my Club brothers along, and at least one prospect, which always adds to the entertainment factor. He stopped wearing his pants like that.
Shit's gonna boil over soon. Kids are being taught that there is no consequences for any action whatsoever, and adults just have no idea how to act anymore. Both parties are at fault here. Society and it's rules of behaviour are breaking down. 4th world country here we come.
ReplyDeleteIt spit on the guard? Assault and battery. And elitist supremacy.
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