Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 3, 2016
Last week, student at Emory University required emergency counseling after they saw “Trump 2016” written in chalk.
I’m serious.
Terrified collegians are hunkered down in their safe spaces – traumatized by whoever wrote “Trump 2016” and “Accept the Inevitable: Trump 2016” on campus sidewalks.
“That was a bit alarming,” one panicked student told The Emory Wheel. “What exactly is inevitable? Why does it have to be accepted?”
Another student whimpered that she did not feel safe.
“I’m supposed to feel comfortable and safe [here],” she told the campus paper. “But this man is being supported by students on our campus and our administration shows that they, by their silence, support it as well…I don’t deserve to feel afraid at my school.”
The Emory Latino Student Organization posted a Facebook message calling the drawing “an act of cowardice.”
“They did not do this merely to support the presidential candidate, but to promote the hate and discrimination that goes along with him,” they wrote.
…
Dozens of students protested the chalk drawings in the university’s quad – demanding the administration take action against the pro-Trump supporter.
“You are not listening! Come speak to us, we are in pain,” students shouted as reported by the campus newspaper. “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.”
…
Emory University President Jim Wagner later met with the protestors and acknowledged in an email that they had voice “genuine concern and pain in the face of this perceived intimidation.”
“I cannot dismiss their expression of feelings and concern as motivated only by political preference or over-sensitivity,” he wrote in an email to students. “Instead, the students with whom I spoke heard a message, not about political process or candidate choice, but instead about values regarding diversity and respect that clash with Emory’s own.”
President Wagner vowed to launch an investigation and round up the pro-Trump graffiti artists, the newspaper reported.
He said if the individuals are students they will go through a conduct violation process and if they are not students they will face trespassing charges.
Meanwhile, Fox Sports reports that the university’s student government association is providing “emergency counseling for students triggered by the Trump 2016 campus chalkings.”
Not a joke.
Real thing that happened.
Meant to cover it last week when it happened, it got lost – I keep telling you people I need a staff.
This week, however, I’m on it, as the Chalkocaust continues to heat-up – heat up like the ovens of Auschwitz, goyim!
It’s happening all over again!
Trump support at @KUnews. Is this the post-racial paradise folks pretend exists? ? #RockChalkInvisibleHawk #myPWI pic.twitter.com/zjba3jtYoc
— Shegufta (@therealshegufta) March 29, 2016
The poor kebabess! All she wanted to do was live in America and feed of the wealth of our ancestors, and now she has to see a mean man’s name written in chalk!
What have we become?????
Students at several college campuses are clashing with their administrations and debating the limits of free speech after finding chalk messages voicing support for Donald J. Trump scrawled on campus property.
Last week, at Emory University in Atlanta, officials scrambled to respond to a student demonstration after roughly 100 messages were found on campus. The students felt that there was an anti-diversity subtext to the so-called chalking written on campus about Mr. Trump, the Republican front-runner whose divisive comments about Muslims, women, Hispanics and disabled people have offended his critics but have tended to embolden his supporters.
…
The debate over pro-Trump chalking has attracted its critics, who feel that students who are upset by the chalk should get a thicker skin. The case at Emory especially garnered attention after the school’s student government offered emergency funds to student groups wanting to respond to the incident, and offered open hours to meet with students. (The school offers counseling services to all students, Ms. Seideman said.)
One high-profile critic is Newt Gingrich, a former House speaker and a longtime Georgia congressman. He is also an Emory alum.
“As an Emory alum I am worried about the fragility and timidity of some students. In the age of ISIS how can a name in chalk be frightening?” Mr. Gingrich wrote on Twitter on Thursday, adding, “Emory has me worried because I thought college was a place to grow up and explore ideas not a place to hide and be intimidated by trivia.”
Isabelle Saldaña, a 21-year-old junior at Emory, said that the discussion about diversity and inclusion on college campuses shouldn’t be limited to chalking. She said minority students have been in conflict with their administration for over a year over what they see as a lack of fair treatment in comparison with other groups on campus, and the percentage of minority faculty members.
“It’s less about the actual chalkings,” she said. “This isn’t something that’s unique to Emory. This is a national conversation, even an international conversation, on the value of black and brown people.”
We’re still waiting for evidence for this value, Isabelle.
It appears that all you people do is commit crime, live on welfare and whine about how people are mean to you.
College students have long clashed with school officials – and each other – over issues of censorship, but Mr. Trump has been something like an accelerant on a simmering fire, said Samantha Harris, a lawyer and the director of policy of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education.
“With the Trump candidacy, this is the first time we’ve sort of seen calls for censorship of, literally, support for a candidate,” Ms. Harris said. “For a long time there’s been a sense by students that they have a right not to be uncomfortable. You do have a right not to feel unsafe. The question is: What does unsafe mean?”
…
“One thing we see a lot of on campuses is the conflation of emotional and physical safety,” Ms. Harris said. “If I chalk ‘Trump 2016’ and someone says, ‘that makes me feel unsafe,’ that does not automatically convert it into a threat.”
Still, some school officials, like those at the University of Kansas, are moving to distance themselves from the messages, without calling into question the right of a student to write them.
“The chalking was not approved by any K.U. administrator, nor were we aware of it,” Erinn Barcomb-Peterson said of pro-Trump chalkings on campus. “The university does have a policy regarding chalking but in recent years has erred on the side of free speech when determining how to enforce the policy.”
We need more of this, ASAP.
Like, every campus in the country.
Right now.
You are totally allowed almost anywhere on most college campuses, even if you don’t go there. It’s public space. There is also not usually a law against chalking in public places, but if you’re worried, Google it (I seriously doubt you’d get charged with anything anyway, but I don’t want to encourage people to do anything that might be illegal).
It’s nice outside, kids. You’ll enjoy it.
Bring a friend.
You can chat-up some college girls while you’re at it.
I’ve created a private thread on the forum to discuss this very serious matter.
If you do this and take pictures (and you’re a forum member) you will get the coveted “#Troll” title, which is reserved only for the greatest heroes.
Hail Victory.