Emotional Emergency at Emory U

by Jack

Last night disaster struck on the campus of Emory University. Someone had used chalk to write the words “Trump 2016″ on several sidewalks.  In the morning students on their way to class were shaken to the core by the discovery of “Trump 2016.”  Many of them no longer felt safe at school.

The distress soon manifested itself into a small group of protesters.  They proclaimed to all who would listen that they were in pain.  The shouted out, students must love one another.  We can’t have this dangerous chalk writing on sidewalks in Emory!   As they moved into the Chancellors Office the spokesperson was heard to say, “”It is our duty to fight for our freedom. It is our duty to win. We must love each other and support each other. We have nothing to lose but our chains.”

It’s still too early to tell if the stunned and shaken students will have any long lasting psychological effects, but that risk is certainly there.   A student spokesman for the protesters said and I am paraphrasing, “They came to this college learning to think one-way, with love, and suddenly they are exposed to this, ”Trump 2016”?

Oh, the humanity-

These precious little snowflakes have become victims overnight by these sidewalk writing thugs.  And because of it, they now have a shared experience with the downtrodden and oppressed everywhere and at any time in history.

Imagine “TRUMP” written in bold chalk (white chalk no less) right there on the sidewalk next to the student ATM machine and there was another near the cafeteria and yet another near the library.   TRUMP,TRUMP,TRUMP….that name has been burned into their psyche’ and they can’t stop seeing over and over! “It’s like a song that gets stuck in your head, only worse.” said Stephanie Buttons, Freshman at Emory.   She’s no stranger to pain either, once while Easter Egg hunting with her siblings she stepped on a cute little pink egg hidden under leaf. She was five years old and the memory still haunts her. Now in recovery phase she has this to deal with THIS?  “It’s not fair,” said Felix Milktoast, Button’s classmate.

Conservative students at Emery are all under suspicion as the investigation continues.

Q.  Is it just coincidental that terrorists attacked in Belgium and suddenly we have this at Emory?  Think about it.    (Dewey…what say you? Conspiracy or not?)

For more on this story check out today’s Washington Post.

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13 Responses to Emotional Emergency at Emory U

  1. Chris says:

    Well written, and the snark in this case is well deserved. I can’t imagine anyone thinking this is something to protest over. The response by the president of Emory was extremely disappointing. Some college activists lately seem determined to prove conservative critics of “political correctness gone awry” right.

    • Pie Guevara says:

      “I can’t imagine anyone thinking this is something to protest over.”

      No need to imagine, these are your flesh and blood cohorts.

      “Some college activists lately seem determined to prove conservative critics of “political correctness gone awry” right.”

      Some? Political correctness has not gone awry til now? No you may put your head back into the sand.

    • Post Scripts says:

      Thank you for the compliment Chris. Humor, even snarky George Carlin type humor is hard for me to write. But, humor is often the best conduit to reach people, so I’ll keep trying as long as I am not boring people. You and Libby rasied some valid points and I agree with them. I too feel today’s students are a bit too quick on the trigger to make a judgment. This is particulary true when it comes to conservative political speakers. I get it. This is more about the passion of youth and being a rebel. However, it is worth trying to confront and mitigate, if only for their sakes as students. They need to learn about balanced opinions, especially in politics.

  2. Libby says:

    There has been much concern about the current college crop’s extreme inclination to correctness, a sort of reverse-intolerance.

    On the other hand, I can see where a Hispanic might consider “Trump in 2016” comparable to a swastika on the wall of a Jewish grocery. Trump has said some very, very, very bad things.

  3. Tina says:

    Scratch a little deeper and you will find we are right.

    Conservatives/Republicans are asked to speak at American colleges and universities at a much smaller rate that are liberals/Democrats. Young conservative groups forming on college campuses find that the people they invite to speak are often shouted off the stage or protested to the point of being unable to speak or simply dis-invited. This is not as it should be in our institutions of higher learning. Education at the highest levels have become indoctrination centers for the left, left causes, and special interest groups.

    The list of persons being dis-invited, blocked from speaking, or treated badly when speaking on campus includes, Condi Rice, the first black woman Secretary of State (Rutgers), David Horowitz, Carl Rove, Rand Paul, Bush administration official Robert Zoellick, Ben Carson, Anne Coulter, Daniel Pipes, Ben Shapiro…

    Even the liberal LA Times had to acknowledge the problem:

    To gauge how rare it is for a conservative to be invited to speak at a college graduation, I looked at commencement and other announced graduation event speakers for 2012 and 2013 from the top 100 universities and top 50 liberal arts colleges (according to the U.S. News & World Report rankings). Then I tried to identify them as liberal or conservative based on their party affiliation, if I could determine it. For public officials, I looked at the party affiliations of those they served. I then looked up speakers in OpenSecrets.org’s database of campaign contributions, noting whether speakers had donated to candidates from one party or both. If a speaker endorsed a presidential candidate in 2012, I noted that as well, and identified the speaker with that candidate’s ideology.

    In 2012, the political leanings of 84 people were identifiable. In 2013, with speakers still being announced, 69 are.

    In 2012, only one Republican elected official was invited to speak at a top 50 liberal arts college: Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell at the University of Richmond. The top 100 universities invited three Republican officeholders: Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal spoke at both the University of Georgia and the Georgia Institute of Technology, and South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham spoke at Clemson. Missouri Rep. Sam Graves spoke at the University of Missouri.

    No Republican official spoke outside of his home state. When one expands to former Republican political appointees, the picture only changes slightly; Colin L. Powell (who endorsed President Obama in the last election) spoke at Northeastern University, and Condoleezza Rice spoke at Southern Methodist University. There were no conservative speakers at Ivy League commencements and no conservative elected officials who spoke outside of the South.

    Democrats, on the other hand, were everywhere. Sixteen speeches were given by Obama administration officials alone. All told, and including the data on political contributions, there were only three identifiably conservative speakers at the top 50 colleges and 12 at the top 100 universities, compared with a total of 69 identifiably liberal speakers.

    The results for 2013 are similar, though not all the schools had named their speakers when I did my research. With Zoellick’s withdrawal, no current or former Republican public official is scheduled to speak at the top 50 colleges, and only four will address the top 100 universities — with Jon Huntsman the only one outside of his home state. Again, there are no conservatives scheduled to speak in the Ivy League. Newark, N.J.’s Democratic mayor, Cory Booker, who is speaking at Washington University, Cornell and Yale, has as many addresses as all current elected Republicans combined. Factoring in campaign contributions and public endorsements, liberals outnumber conservatives by about 6 to 1.

    America’s liberal arts colleges are especially hostile territory, and the few conservatives who are invited to speak at them, such as David Brooks of the New York Times, tend to be on the moderate side.

    Citizens definitely have the right to speak their minds. Citizens need to realize they are not protected from being offended or hurt. When we take the idea of “personal offense” to the point of attempting to block the free speech expression of others or the peaceful assembly of others then the narrative, from the left in this case and in cases on college campuses all across America, has gone awry.

    College students should be exposed to all kinds of ideals and speech and they should be adult enough to respect the rights granted to all of us in the Constitution. That they aren’t is telling. These emotionally damaged kids were broken long before they got to college. We are infecting kids with silly ideas of fairness that are anything but fair. At the same time we are handing them a list of words that cannot be spoken and ideas that must not be tolerated. The message is clear, don’t think for yourself, get with the program. Our children are being taught that if they don’t think a certain way they are bad and anyone who does think that way is bad. We are instructing them that some words do damage, that they rise to the level of assault. We are training them to be spineless cry babies…it borders on child endangerment…criminality!

    Chris may not think this is a problem. I think it is a huge problem and must be addressed if we are to remain a free nation with a strong, well educated, emotionally stable citizenry.

    • Chris says:

      Well, I don’t think students protesting against certain speakers being invited by their colleges is a problem.

      A college inviting a speaker is bestowing a kind of honor on that speaker, especially if they are giving a commencement address. If a portion of the student body doesn’t believe those people are deserving of such an honor, they certainly have the right to speak their mind on that, and to petition for their college to revoke the invitation–especially if the college is spending money on the speaker.

      I’m more sympathetic to such speakers when they are invited by a private group, like the College Republicans–then I think students have the right to protest, but are being unreasonable when they ask for the speakers to be disinvited. I’m also not a fan of the practice of “shouting down” any speaker. But petitioning for a college to disinvite a speaker that the college is paying to appear? That’s just as much free speech as anything else.

      • Tina says:

        “…If a portion of the student body…”

        It depends on the “portion.” Schools seem to be willing to dis-invite guest speakers to accommodate the few at the expense of others. If you consider the diverse population this practice becomes absurd and impossible to meet…but so far only the intolerant, bossy left seems to be a problem.

        • Chris says:

          Tina: “…but so far only the intolerant, bossy left seems to be a problem.”

          There have been plenty of right-wing attempts to shut down speech on college campuses. For example, the SC legislature attempted to stop the book “Fun Home” from being taught on a college campus by threatening to cut the college’s budget. This was a violation of academic freedom and the first amendment.

          http://amptoons.com/blog/?p=18688

          Left-wing threats to speech get more press these days, but most of the threats I’ve seen seem to be coming from students, whereas this one came from actual lawmakers.

  4. Libby says:

    Tina, there is such a thing as “beyond the pale”, and a lot of “conservatives” have landed themselves there.

    • Tina says:

      Libby you are certainly welcome to think so.

      But your side travels in the less colorful lane quite often. I don’t know how you get further “beyond” than Louis Farrakhan, Angela Davis, Bill Ayers, Rodney Coronado, Eric Holder, Al Gore, Michael Moore…need I go on?

      So I guess we’re even.

  5. J. Soden says:

    Awwwwwwwwwwwwwwww. Poor babies! If the college brats are gonna act like 1st graders, perhaps they should return to Elementary School.

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