U of Oregon Students Demand Not To Be Punished for Being Disruptive Jerks

Nick Kangadis | November 9, 2017
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Has anybody else had just about enough of this crybaby B.S. running rampant on college campuses?

Student protesters at the University of Oregon — go figure — wrote an open letter to UO president Michael Schill and trustees of the school demanding the school “cease the punitive measures” for storming the stage during a “State of the University” address by Schill.

The student protesters call themselves the "Student Collective." What a nice little Socialist name.

Basically, the children, who call themselves adults and protesters, don’t want to be punished for essentially shutting down a once-a-year speech by a school administrator.

Here’s part of what the letter said:

During the demonstration, activists took the stage and presented a list of demands created by a coalition of students. Your actions since this event have potentially endangered these students by calling out their actions in a national venue, and have escalated tensions in such a way as to obscure the concerns which precipitated the protest.

These spoiled brats weren’t “potentially endangered” at all. They’re just mad because someone stood up to their entitled line of garbage. We’re all “potentially endangered” every minute of our lives. Any one of us could get hit by a bus tomorrow, but we go on with our lives. It’s when you’re actually endangered that things become a little more serious.

Of course, there were words in the letter like “marginalized” and “oppressed.” These are just descriptor words for soft, weak students raised by soft, weak parents and taught by soft, weak indoctrinators — ahem — excuse me, professors.

If these children were so “marginalized” and “oppressed” as they say they are, they wouldn’t be allowed to have a student group where they can persecute the rest of the students with their mindless meanderings.

“We ask that you cease the punitive measures against students and engage in a dialogue without the cloud of threat or intimidation,” the letter read.

The possibility of being punished, at a school, for being a jerk is now considered a threat or intimidation?

It used to be that when a student got in trouble at school the parents always took the side of the teacher or administrator. Before knowing anything, parents used to ask the child, ‘What did you do?’ Now, the student is always the victim, and the parents now ask, ‘What did they do to you?’

We’re living in the Twilight Zone. It’s time to wake these kids up and show them that the real world isn’t a “safe space.”

H/T: Washington Free Beacon

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