Catholic School Expels Whites for Private Conversation About Blacks, Students Fight Back

Eric Striker
Daily Stormer
December 10, 2016

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When it comes to Catholic schools in the United States, there’s one confession Pope Francis doesn’t want to hear: their market is composed entirely of white families who are willing to pay a hefty price to escape racial integration.

Catholic schools hit their enrollment high during the 1960s in spite of falling religious observance, when literal gun-point racial integration of public schools was undemocratically dictated to the states by the federal Zionist government. As time went on, Catholic schools became less and less religious in order to accommodate non-Catholic or irreligious whites who lived in racially-mixed inner cities but did not want their children to be raped, assaulted or murdered.

In a sense, urban whites are forced to pay twice to educate their children: once on tax day for a service they can’t use, and again to bribe some clerics to provide an alibi to legally keep diversity away. This model is unsustainable for many whites in an age of declining incomes, and thus they find it cheaper to simply move to an all-white suburb where the public services are usable. For this reason, Catholic schools have been declining in recent years.

The reason why Catholic schools exist is an open secret, which is why they are extra-sensitive about racial issues and want to stay out of the Judenpresse’s crosshairs. They often take extreme, overreaching measures against innocuous student activity or behaviors. Catholic schools, as private institutions, feel they have the right to violate your Fourth Amendment rights and disrupt your education in the middle of a school year if you are victimized by the Jewish media or targeted for smears by Marxist groups.

Saints they are not. It seems that the trumpeters of “forgiveness” are not willing to extend such penance for those who commit one of the post-modern heresies.

Washington Post:

The families of two white Chicago teens who were expelled from their Catholic school last month over “racially insensitive” text messages shared on social media are now seeking $1 million in a lawsuit against school officials.

The lawsuit accuses Marist High School and two officials at the private Catholic school of unjustly expelling the students over text messages that were meant to be private. The complaint, filed Monday in Cook County Circuit Court on behalf of the girls and their fathers, acknowledges that the comments were “at most, racially insensitive” and argues that the school used the girls as “scapegoats” amid social media backlash over the comments.

The girls, both minors, are identified only as Jane Doe and Jane Roe in the complaint; their fathers are identified as John Doe and John Roe.

Larry Tucker, the Marist High principal, and Beth O’Neill, one of the private school’s deans, are named as defendants.

According to the complaint, the two girls and 30 other students were part of a group exchanging text messages in which they talked about the Black Lives Matter movement and a protest following the Nov. 5 shooting death of a black man in Chicago.

Joshua Beal, of Indiana, was shot by an off-duty police officer during a confrontation in Chicago’s Mount Greenwood neighborhood, where Marist High School is located — and where Black Lives Matter was planning a protest. Police said Beal was shot after he didn’t drop his weapon.

“I F—— HATE N——,” one student wrote.

“HAHAHAHA,” responded another.

“same,” another message read.

“there’s a difference between black people and n——, f— the n——,” another said.

According to the complaint, someone from the group took photos of the texts and posted them to the high school’s official Facebook page. Someone also shared the images on Twitter and tagged Tucker, the principal.

The plaintiffs’ attorney, Steve Glink, told The Washington Post that the whole incident was taken out of context and that the girls are being unjustly punished.

“These are young girls. They agree that they said something inappropriate,” Glink said. “But they’re getting the death penalty, and this is not a death penalty case, especially in a parochial school.”

Glink said the person who took screenshot photos did not include some context in the conversation and chose only the racial part of the messages.

On Nov. 7, Tucker and O’Neill wrote a letter to parents, saying they were “devastated” by the controversy sparked by the texts, which they said “contradict” the school’s mission.

They also wrote that school officials had met with a “diverse group of student leaders” for a “meaningful dialogue” about the situation.

Three days later, they wrote a second letter telling parents that the two girls had been expelled. Three other girls were suspended, but it was unclear if they were also expelled.

The incident also resulted in an invasion of the students’ privacy, the complaint alleges, noting that group text was started after the girls participated in a religious retreat known as Kairos, the purpose of which is to allow students to express themselves in a private forum without any fear of retaliation.

The plaintiffs also noted a 2014 incident in which a Marist student athlete, who is black, advocated on Twitter for the killing of white people. The lawsuit claims that the comments were simply glossed over and the student athlete was not disciplined.

The lawsuit claims that the texting controversy ruined the reputation of the girls, who had been “outstanding students.”

“They’re model citizens. They’re very academically superior,” Glink said. “One of the girls was on the cover of [the school’s] brochure.”

The lawsuit requests that each of the girls be allowed to return to school or be given a full refund of the $65,000 their families had paid in tuition, books and other expenses.

They also requested $1 million in damages for invasion of privacy resulting in damaged reputations, emotional distress and public scorn for being labeled as racists.

Glink said school officials have offered to let the girls take online classes, have home tutoring and take their final exams at home, so they can finish the semester. But they’re not allowed to come back after that.

He added that the girls’ families have looked into public schools, but they’re only allowed to attend alternative schools or home tutoring, not the mainstream classes, Glink said. They also have been “effectively blackballed” from other parochial schools in the area.

The precedent here is sickening: if you have a private conversation that uses salty language to condemn blacks threatening to come to your school and murder you, Monsignor Gaylord is willing to arbitrarily expel his best students due to fear of (((journalists))) and SPLC – who happen to be the exact same people who tortured and murdered Jesus.

Ecce Homo by Antonio Ciseri c. 1880

Many credits from Catholic schools are not valid in public schools. The parents of the girls are reporting that all the religious and private schools in the area have blacklisted their kids. These parents made huge sacrifices to get their kids to be able to attend Marist High School just to be sold down the river.

Now they’ll hopefully be forced to pay $1 million to the family.

The only reason these clerics behave in this fashion is because they fear Jews more than they do whites. It’s time that starts to change.