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Topic: Trump making people live in fear
1atlas's photo
Thu 03/24/16 04:33 AM
Dozens of College Students ‘in fear’ After ‘Trump 2016’ Chalked Across Campus » Alex Jones' Infowars: There's a war on for your mind!
http://www.infowars.com/dozens-of-college-students-triggered-after-trump-2016-written-in-chalk/

1atlas's photo
Thu 03/24/16 04:34 AM
How dare the evil villain Trump make social justice warriors live in fear and even cry

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 04:55 AM
Edited by SassyEuro2 on Thu 03/24/16 05:22 AM

Dozens of College Students ‘in fear’ After ‘Trump 2016’ Chalked Across Campus » Alex Jones' Infowars: There's a war on for your mind!
http://www.infowars.com/dozens-of-college-students-triggered-after-trump-2016-written-in-chalk/



waving Hello,

I feel compelled to warn you (before someone tears your head off), Alex Jones is not considered creditable on this site.
Welcome to Political. happy


no photo
Thu 03/24/16 04:56 AM

How dare the evil villain Trump make social justice warriors live in fear and even cry


http://kxan.com/2016/03/23/college-president-students-scared-by-trump-2016-chalk-signs/


kxan.com
College president: Students scared by ‘Trump 2016’ chalk signs
Associated Press

Published: March 23, 2016, 2:00 pm
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally, Thursday, Jan. 21, 2016, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Isaac Brekken)
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign rally, Thursday, Jan. 21, 2016, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Isaac Brekken)

TLANTA (AP) — The president of Emory University has met with 40 to 50 student demonstrators who said they were concerned and frightened after someone wrote “Trump 2016” in chalk on campus sidewalks and some buildings.

Jim Wagner, president of the Atlanta university, wrote Tuesday that the students viewed the messages as intimidation, and they voiced “genuine concern and pain” as a result.

Emory on Wednesday provided The Associated Press with a copy of Wagner’s letter, in which he said students confronted by Trump’s name in chalk “heard a message about values regarding diversity and respect that clash with Emory’s own.”

Emory’s student newspaper, The Wheel, reported that the students this week chanted, “You are not listening! Come speak to us, we are in pain!” shortly before Wagner agreed to meet with them.

http://lintvkxan.files.wordpress.com/2016/03/a91900faff0647038e0f6a706700d37es3keypreview.jpg?w=512/

Dodo_David's photo
Thu 03/24/16 04:59 AM
How will these snow flakes survive once they leave their college bubble and enter the real world?

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 05:00 AM

How will these snow flakes survive once they leave their college bubble and enter the real world?


rofl

Conrad_73's photo
Thu 03/24/16 05:05 AM
if those Snowflakes need the attention of a Psychiatrist from the mere sight of "TRUMP IN 2016" chalked on the ground,it's time they sign themselves over to the care of Nurse Ratched!:laughing:

Conrad_73's photo
Thu 03/24/16 05:11 AM
what are they going to do if he does get elected,if the mere sight of his Name induces IBS in them?laugh

luvmeforlife's photo
Thu 03/24/16 05:13 AM
lol I too fear a name on the sidewalk and hide from my own shadow

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 05:14 AM
Afraid they won't get their as@ kissed or be top priority... Or get media coverage.

Cause little things like NATIONAL SECURITY will come first.

Be afraid, be very afraid!: http://youtu.be/--hMJPUBwMc/

IssuesNo1's photo
Thu 03/24/16 05:16 AM
Just cause you got the monkey off your back doesn't mean the circus has left town. George Carlin
Read more at: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/g/george_carlin.html

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 06:43 AM
ibtimes.com

Donald Trump Graffiti At Emory University Inspires Student Protests, Backlash

By Julia Glum @superjulia On 03/24/16 AT 9:26 AM

Pro-Donald Trump messages scrawled in chalk across the Emory University campus in Atlanta this week sparked protests, inspired a college-wide email from the school administrators and landed a student on Bill O'Reilly's conservative talk show. But by Thursday, backlash had started brewing against the backlash.

It all began Monday, when the vandalism supporting the Republican front-runner appeared on campus stairs and handrails and instantly upset students, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. The chalk graffiti, which in most places read "vote Trump" and "Trump 2016," led to a 50-person protest over the candidate's divisive rhetoric and controversial proposals. The group then met with university president James Wagner, who sent a campus-wide email acknowledging students' freedom of speech but expressing his concern.

"I cannot dismiss their expression of feelings and concern as motivated only by political preference or over-sensitivity. 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," Wagner said, adding that he planned to find the vandals and provide opportunities to discuss social justice.

The story snowballed from there. The Washington Post reported the Emory Latino Student Organization condemned the act on its Facebook page, writing that "while some students only see the name of a potential nominee, others see hostility and venom which promises to destroy lives." Students anonymously told the Emory Wheel they felt afraid and frustrated.

“I legitimately feared for my life,” freshman Paula Camila Alarcon told the Daily Beast.

But some critics have started to say said they disagree with the demonstration — and Wagner's decision to respond. National media outlets joined campus organizations in debating the merits of free speech.

"Now college kids collapse at the mention of the word ‘Trump,’" read the headline of a New York Post editorial. "Yes, intolerance is running amok on campus — thanks to the scholarly goons who claim to oppose it."

My alma mater in the news- Emory kids protest when someone writes TRUMP with sidewalk chalk https://t.co/zwTRwq76px pic.twitter.com/MjeDOZLpu1

http://www.ibtimes.com/donald-trump-graffiti-emory-university-inspires-student-protests-backlash-2342636/


mightymoe's photo
Thu 03/24/16 08:50 AM
trump isn't making anyone "live in fear", they do that themselves...

Smartazzjohn's photo
Thu 03/24/16 08:53 AM
“I legitimately feared for my life,” freshman Paula Camila Alarcon told the Daily Beast.

If support for a candidate with their name written chalk makes a person fear for their life it's an irrational fear making it nothing more than a phobia. If someone were to say seeing "Bernie for president" written in chalk made them fear for their life they would be mocked by the main stream media and called irrational.

Perhaps since her fear is irrational it should be labeled "politiphobia", republiphobia" or "Trumpiphobia". The left loves to label conservatives as phobic for merely disagreeing with them even when the fear is rational as in the case of radical Islamic terrorism. The left also calls conservatives phobic for ideological differences as in the case same sex marriage. Not agreeing with same sex marriage doesn't mean you are fearful yet you are INCORRECTLY labeled "homophobic".

Conrad_73's photo
Thu 03/24/16 10:01 AM
I think the Marines have an appropriate Name for them!laugh

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 10:53 AM
“I legitimately feared for my life,” freshman
Paula Camila Alarcon told the Daily Beast.
Good....now, hopefully, any future employer of hers will google her name during the hiring process and conclude that they dont need anyone like her stinking up their employee pool....

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 11:03 AM

ibtimes.com

Donald Trump Graffiti At Emory University Inspires Student Protests, Backlash

By Julia Glum @superjulia On 03/24/16 AT 9:26 AM

Pro-Donald Trump messages scrawled in chalk across the Emory University campus in Atlanta this week sparked protests, inspired a college-wide email from the school administrators and landed a student on Bill O'Reilly's conservative talk show. But by Thursday, backlash had started brewing against the backlash.

It all began Monday, when the vandalism supporting the Republican front-runner appeared on campus stairs and handrails and instantly upset students, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. The chalk graffiti, which in most places read "vote Trump" and "Trump 2016," led to a 50-person protest over the candidate's divisive rhetoric and controversial proposals. The group then met with university president James Wagner, who sent a campus-wide email acknowledging students' freedom of speech but expressing his concern.

"I cannot dismiss their expression of feelings and concern as motivated only by political preference or over-sensitivity. 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," Wagner said, adding that he planned to find the vandals and provide opportunities to discuss social justice.

The story snowballed from there. The Washington Post reported the Emory Latino Student Organization condemned the act on its Facebook page, writing that "while some students only see the name of a potential nominee, others see hostility and venom which promises to destroy lives." Students anonymously told the Emory Wheel they felt afraid and frustrated.

“I legitimately feared for my life,” freshman Paula Camila Alarcon told the Daily Beast.

But some critics have started to say said they disagree with the demonstration — and Wagner's decision to respond. National media outlets joined campus organizations in debating the merits of free speech.

"Now college kids collapse at the mention of the word ‘Trump,’" read the headline of a New York Post editorial. "Yes, intolerance is running amok on campus — thanks to the scholarly goons who claim to oppose it."

My alma mater in the news- Emory kids protest when someone writes TRUMP with sidewalk chalk https://t.co/zwTRwq76px pic.twitter.com/MjeDOZLpu1

http://www.ibtimes.com/donald-trump-graffiti-emory-university-inspires-student-protests-backlash-2342636/




It all began Monday, when the vandalism supporting the Republican front-runner appeared on campus stairs and handrails and instantly upset students, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported. The chalk graffiti, which in most places read "vote Trump" and "Trump 2016," led to a 50-person protest over the candidate's divisive rhetoric and controversial proposals. The group then met with university president James Wagner, who sent a campus-wide email acknowledging students' freedom of speech but expressing his concern.


I think a few of these big babies had mommy & daddy buy them some chalk ..spock And then they called 50 friends to come to a play day.

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 11:07 AM
Edited by RebelArcher on Thu 03/24/16 11:07 AM
"I cannot dismiss their expression of feelings
and concern as motivated only by political
preference or over-sensitivity. 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," Wagner said, adding that he planned t
find the vandals and provide opportunities to
discuss social justice.
It was me.. I did it...come at me bro laugh

no photo
Thu 03/24/16 11:22 AM
"..... motivated only by political
preference or over-sensitivity. 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," Wagner said,.. "

And kiss the enrollment, academic standards & money good bye.
Just like the other colleges that fear (washable) chalk & free speech & whiney junior commies

Smartazzjohn's photo
Thu 03/24/16 11:54 AM
I bet the words were written with "white privilege" chalk!!!laugh

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