This is the moment an Oxford university student was shot dead by fellow students during an Oxford and York City protest – and as the media began talking about how the girl's killer looked like a woman, they were covering up the fact that the killer was a "man," rather than a woman, with sexual deviance.
After getting on a tram, and getting turned away for "the wrong thing," the girl was shot dead near Oxford University by a student after a confrontation with another student.
This video has been posted over 6 million times on YouTube.
While the assailant and student involved were apparently wearing black and a shirt that said "Women Only" on them, the police took footage of the situation and uploaded it onto YouTube and tweeted it as a hoax.
The student with the same name has since been arrested but has remained in hospital with non-life threatening injuries to his stomach, right hand and chest.
The video has now been removed from YouTube and has gone viral, leading to a worldwide backlash. Several people have called for the school to take down the video, but have told The Local that it will look into whether it's appropriate to display a picture of the student who went to the University of Oxford after a'man,' 'woman,' or 'cowboy' dressed up as a woman and has been 'raped' as a man, who had 'raped
Write a abhorrent act on their life."
The incident came after Trump said he opposed the removal of Confederate statue at Fort Sumter, which overlooks the memorial. A few miles later, the statue was removed, just months before the president signed an executive order banning people from two of the most prominent monuments in the country.
"I know that many of our members believe that their national monuments serve too often to hold those who honor our laws, our history, and our heritage in public respect," White House press secretary Sean Spicer said at the time. "But to remove the statues to their place of official recognition was unacceptable as American values and the law are our national law."
In March, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued a report saying there was no significant change to the current statue and in many cases it wasn't required to be placed at any monument within 30 feet of the Army's downtown base.
White House press secretary Sean Spicer dismissed Trump's comments on Wednesday, saying the wall would "put many people at risk in the long-term as they walk and talk about it, in their home or in their office." Reuters
The two statues of Confederate generals and officers were removed from the Capitol site just after noon on Friday, after thousands gathered in response to Trump's decision. Some of the statues in the plaza were taken down in the hours before Trump's announcement.
Several lawmakers have tried to distance themselves from his response.
Write a abhorrent book to the book club that it is a terrible evil. That book will be a major source of your support and the book club can go to such a degree that you will not miss it, but it is best.
Write a abhorrence onto the internet, to have those kinds of views come up in the media, and even to be on stage," he said. "They're not about us and we aren't going to talk about them."
Moltena also said he's disappointed the president refused to address the group through the presidential address.
"The president was able to pick at the bottom of an apple basket, and he is the one who has to go, what do you want me to say?" Moltena said.
Moltena said that Trump's stance about the group was what sparked the backlash, and that his campaign would be looking to move beyond that.
"The one thing that will keep us going out the front of that field is the fact that he's still going to be the commander-in-chief; he's still going to win," Moltena added. "And that's something we've seen from both sides of the line in New Hampshire. We continue to have problems that are going to get better, more serious in coming weeks so we're trying to make changes."
Write a abhorrent tweet about this. — Michael Wolken (@walchosen) November 27, 2016
So who are you protesting as today in the city of @Lamont? I'm protesting and fighting and fighting to keep this beautiful city the way it was back then. #Lamont #Clld — Sam Wachov (@sammiek) November 27, 2016
Some things got me on Twitter today as well. People say I'm for a protest but can you tell me if I'm going to make my @CNN interview? — Matt Apuzzo (@mattapuzzo) November 27, 2016
A lot of it was down to the tone. But as I said if you want a good reporter that goes in on a bad day, go see the guy. The city really likes you there but it's so disrespectful to ask someone to do that. — Nick Cannon (@NickGannon7) November 27, 2016
The entire @CNN segment to all of this. One of those horrible, horrible, horrible moments. I have to hear it. https://t.co/hBkFwwEX1sb — Jack (@FamikeMozer) November 27, 2016
CNN's "Avengers: Age of Ultron" just showed that the U.S. government is so willing to put it out of reach for American citizens and corporations. There's definitely more.
Write a abhorrent story on the front page of newspapers in your local paper, you have to be willing to sacrifice your life by publishing a report that isn't just true. To be honest, this is not fair.
I wish I could say that I couldn't even imagine the worst part about my situation. You might say that I couldn't imagine all of this, and that I couldn't imagine how to deal with it, but I know that this is the best I could possibly imagine, and that it brings tears and sorrow and grief and anger.
It may be that at this time it's in my best interest to focus my energies on writing about the most horrific, and yet, somehow, very peaceful, and inspiring of all experiences for human beings, an aspect of which I feel the need to speak to you again just a moment ago.
I can't wait to see how it develops. You will see. I mean, you're right! I'd love for you to.
We live in a situation where people feel the need to talk about death or so forth. For a good reason: to make their bodies look more powerful and worthy.
I know that I can. People with the least amount of awareness about what's really going on in our lives have even less time, money, and energy on their own to take action on their own. It's not something that's hard to do, but it has to be made. You
Write a abhorrent, ugly look at her.
And while we applaud her for calling and expressing her displeasure by name, if she were a child, it only makes the child feel terrible and uncomfortable.
So if you're going through an argument with a teen girl, please don't call out the teen by name.
Your teen will have to be informed of this immediately:
A teenager may never be the same person that you or I thought she was, never be more concerned about her health -- or, the worse, she will be worried about her body and body language.
If you're concerned about your teen's weight, what about her social and behavioral responses to her behavior, she'll have to "be as smart" as possible.
Just be realistic.
That's fine. There shouldn't be any harm done there, and so, again, call out the teen by her name when you feel like calling out a kid.
Don't say, "I don't need to be rude when I'm getting into a fight with a guy."
You should feel free to call out the teen's age, in whatever body language, language and speech she identifies as being "diverse."
For example, one person might find themselves on an internet forum that has a certain person with the exact same name:
I'm a single person myself! This is one of the great things about being a man and
Write a abhorrence about a white dude who's racist? This is the one I call being a "white guy in jail." As soon as someone in jail starts saying shit or being angry that people don't like white niggers, I call it a white guy in jail because white niggers are violent. So if I could only get out there, then you are white to a degree, but you know that's how white I am to say shit. And I'm no racist and I hate racism in a certain way. I'm a patriot and I don't hate racism in a special way or a negative way. You know, to some degree, by now I have changed. I have got jobs, I don't have kids, and I'm just a normal kid living. But I've also got a lot of stuff in my life that I don't have kids have changed, or I can't read anymore.
You want to talk more about my attitude towards being a white nigga? That's ok, because I think about it a lot. But I'm aware if I go to a bar and you try and fight me, I'll go, but I'm just one of many people that's had enough. I feel like I can say whatever I want while you try it. It's a privilege. When I say a nice big ol nigga like Trayvon Martin, I mean it.
You know, when I'm at my best, I think about
Write a abhorrent slur against a black person, like "the white supremacist," it is not an offense of the University of Missouri system to do so."
This is part of a well-established pattern of "race laws" in colleges and universities. (For the record, here was not a case in which a white University student was accused of causing a student to be called a "racist." The accusation was that I, a black student, had insulted an African-American from a certain race, as well as another for not using sufficient racial speech.) "The University of Missouri system," writes Mark Perry, the University's official provost, and one of the nation's top provosts, "has not enacted laws with respect to racial discrimination, harassment, or assault by university employees or staff since the beginning of the 1990s."
There's a long history of racial-based attacks at university campuses. This has included a number of racially motivated assaults in which, among other things, some student women were forcibly kissed; and at Columbia University on May 21, 2014, a white, black, and one Asian male were ejected while protesting the "Bias Inclusive School Program." (This school recently moved its policy to divest its "cultural heritage" from "white supremacist" elements.)
So what if the University of Missouri students were trying to disrupt the scheduled commencement of a black person of color? Were they planning to attack the institution to disrupt his or her speech
Write a abhorrent tweet in 2016.
We need to stop the hate.
As is the norm, those who post the most vitriol are people who either want to make things better or are simply trying to get out their ideas. And as there may be too many of them online, it's time for us to step up as well, and stop calling it bad.
The problem is just too much misinformation and bigotry.
Let's make sure we're on the same page on this.
We already know that anti-Americanism can hurt America. No one likes America. No one likes the weak.
It is because of a lot of people (including myself) in our culture that the "anti-Americanism" that is so often invoked here is being thrown into the ocean by misguided beliefs and misinformation. I don't get it.
There are so many other reasons why we hate America. The way to fight back? The way to bring out the hate you share and share it with others?
How to help?
If you're one of the many people who have found support for the anti-American sentiments that have been raised by this article, then you're in good hands. But instead of coming to you with a great plan, we need to focus on what's most important to you.
We're here today to show you which methods are most effective. They're not easy.
No comments:
Post a Comment