Middle school teacher reportedly fired after playing high-pitched ringing noise for 40 minutes as class punishment. One student called it 'torture.'



A Texas middle school teacher was fired after playing a high-pitched ringing noise in class as punishment for students — one of whom called it "torture" — the New York Post reported.

The teacher played a “dog whistle” YouTube video during one period of class at Leland Edge Middle School in Nevada, Texas, on March 2, the Post said, citing Community Independent School District. The school is about an hour northeast of Dallas.

Image source: KXAS-TV video screenshot

The paper added that the district on Tuesday confirmed the teacher was fired and added that it was “possible” the former employee would face criminal charges.

What are the details?

The Post said the unnamed first-year teacher had been under investigation since a student told the district police department about the noise the same day it was played in the classroom.

One parent told KXAS-TV the teacher used the noise as student punishment.

“I would understand if the teacher used it for a split second to gain the attention of the class but not for the excess of 40 minutes," parent Janice Lohrs told the station. "Not when kids are begging you to stop."

Lohrs' daughter Zoey added to KXAS that after the teacher "put on the ringing noise, everyone was covering their ears. One of them walked out of the classroom, one of them was yelling that it was torture, and one was trying to unplug the computer."

Zoey is sensitive to high-pitched noise, and it leads to migraines for her, the station said, adding that her mother said Zoey's condition is documented at school — and that the teacher was aware of it.

"I would really like her held accountable for her actions; this is not OK," Lohrs added to KXAS. "You have my kid for eight hours a day. It's supposed to be a safe place."

Athletes who take a knee or raise a fist in protest at Tokyo Olympics will face punishment: IOC



The International Olympic Committee announced Wednesday that its ban on athletes demonstrating in official venues will remain in place for this summer's Tokyo Olympics, and reiterated that kneeling or raising a fist in protest will be grounds for punishment.

What are the details?

The IOC's "Rule 50" states that "No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas." But the committee agreed to revisit the rule amid pressure after American athletes made it a commonplace occurrence to protest their own national anthem as a way to call for racial justice in the U.S.

In a report detailing the reasoning behind its decision to keep the rule, the IOC explained that over the past year it conducted a survey of more than 3,500 international athletes across the globe and found that "a clear majority of athletes believe that it is not appropriate for athletes to demonstrate or express their views" at the podium (67%), field of play (70%), or during the opening ceremony (70%).

IOC's Athletes' Commission chief Kirsty Coventry led an online presentation of the Rule 50 results, Reuters reported. The former Olympic swimming champion for Zimbabwe told the audience, "I would not want something to distract from my competition and take away from that. That is how I still feel today."

When asked if athletes would be punished for violations of Rule 50 such as raising a fist or taking a knee at the podium at the Tokyo Olympics, Coventry replied, "Yes, that is correct."

She added, "That is also because of the majority of athletes we spoke to — that is what they are requesting for."

The committee added in its report:

"Although the restriction imposed by Rule 50 may appear too sweeping, especially if compared to some sports organizations which allow expression in support of social (as opposed to political) causes, there are significant difficulties that an organization as diverse and universal as the IOC would face in distinguishing between admissible and inadmissible causes. For this reason, a blanket of neutrality is deemed an appropriate and proportionate solution, including from a human rights perspective, given the risk of politicizing the IOC and alienating countries or athletes."

The Tokyo Olympics begin July 23, 2021 and run through Aug. 8.

Anything else?

The IOC's decision comes less than a month after the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee announced that it will allow athletes to raise their fists or kneel during the national anthem at Olympic trials without sanctions.

Universities’ Insane COVID Rules And Snitch Culture Are Training The Next Generation To Embrace Totalitarianism

Restriction, surveillance, and punishment—that is the reality for college students. Due to the emerging American social credit system, young people are too scared to fight back.

Prince Harry suggests COVID-19 is payback from 'Mother Nature'



U.S.-based British royal Prince Harry suggested in a recent interview that the coronavirus could be retribution from "Mother Nature," as he urged his fellow man "to really take a moment and think about what we've done" to the earth.

What are the details?

During a virtual sit-down with environmentally focused streaming platform WaterBear, the Duke of Sussex explained, "Somebody said to me at the beginning of the pandemic, it's almost as though Mother Nature has sent us to our rooms for bad behavior, to really take a moment and think about what we've done."

"It's certainly reminded me about how interconnected we all are, not just as people but through nature," he continued. "We take so much from her and we rarely give a lot back."

Reuters noted that "the prince, who has been criticized in the past for his use of private jets, urged people to imagine being a raindrop in order to help repair the Earth."

The 36-year-old put it this way: "Every single raindrop that falls from the sky relieves the parched ground. What if every one of us was a raindrop? If every single one of us cared? We do, because we have to, because at the end of the day nature is our life source."

The New York Post reported that the duke recently bought a $14 million Los Angeles mansion where he lives with his wife, Meghan Markle, and their toddler son, Archie.

Harry also spoke to WaterBear about his initial concerns about having children due to the threat of climate change, saying, "The moment you become a father, everything really does change because then you start to realize, well, what is the point in bringing a person into this world when they get to your age and it's on fire?" He added, "We can't steal their future, that's not the job we're here for."

Prince Harry tells everyone to 'imagine being a raindrop' during woke promo to launch nature doc www.youtube.com

Anything else?

Earlier this year, Harry and Meghan stepped away from their royal duties to Harry's family after making the move to North America.

The two took heat from Trump supporters in September after they weighed in on the U.S. election during an interview with TIME in what many observers interpreted as an endorsement of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

When asked about their comments, President Donald Trump replied, "I'm not a fan of hers, and I would say this — and she probably has heard that — but I wish a lot of luck to Harry, 'cause he's gonna need it."

Trump on Meghan Markle: “I wish a lot of luck to Harry cause he’s gonna need it.” https://t.co/fzgLGZfm4Q
— The Daily Wire (@The Daily Wire)1600901887.0