SJWs Vandalize Middlebury With Anti-Racism Graffiti, But Only Because They're Oppressed

ashley.rae | October 23, 2017
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Middlebury College, which recently made the news when protesters put a professor in a neck brace as part of protests against Charles Murray's alleged "racism," has been vandalized with the word “racism.”

The Middlebury Campus reports on Oct. 14, eight locations on campus were found to be vandalized with phrases such as “RACIST,” “shame,” “f-ck Middlebury” and “I Hate Midd.” The “RACIST” graffiti was spelled out on the pillars of the Mead Chapel.

According to one of the chairs of the Middlebury Community Council, the graffiti on campus is a justified example of the outrage against racism that allegedly exists on campus.

Kyle Wright told the Middlebury Campus, “The graffiti that was left, presumably, by members of our community on various buildings and public spaces this past weekend sends a clear and important message: We, as a community, have not done a good enough job in making people who feel marginalized and excluded welcome at Middlebury.”

Wright also claimed that the school should give into the demands of the vandals and do more to address the reported racism on campus.

“That is a fact that we must collectively reckon with. This consideration of our shortcomings should be the primary focus in moving forward from this instance of vandalism,” he continued.

Wright also said the school should use the vandalism incident to address racism:

"A comprehensive response on behalf of the administration regarding the concerns raised by this graffiti is overdue” he said. “Perhaps there are equally effective formats to convey that message that do not put undue burden on the college staff — such as members of Facilities Services — who, I believe, are not directly implicated in those concerns."

The Middlebury Campus notes College President Laurie L. Patton wrote a piece on Oct. 18, after the vandalism, claiming does indeed exist on campus:

In the last few weeks, administrators have heard numerous new reports, both on and off campus, of racism. Racism is present at Middlebury, and it will not be tolerated. We must come together as a community to address it. I argued in my inaugural address that inclusivity must be an everyday ethic — not a “problem” to be solved, but a form of excellence to be pursued.

Building this everyday ethic means addressing our own racism first. That task will look unlike anything we have seen before. All of us need to understand what people of color are experiencing, and we need to live with and respond to one another differently.

While Middlebury College claims there is still racism allegedly alive and well on campus, the college merely sanctioned the students who were involved in the violent protests against Murray. They did not suspend or expel any of the students who put a professor in a neck brace, allegedly as part of the fight against white supremacy.

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