The Gadsden flag is racist?! Teacher gets BRUTAL 'Don't Tread on Me' lesson



The Gadsden flag is known by most Americans as a symbol of colonial unity against British oppression.

However, it’s now considered “racist” by some, and a 12-year-old boy in Colorado Springs is standing up against that notion.

The boy, Jaiden, has a Gadsden flag patch on his backpack. His school apparently stated that he cannot wear the “Don’t Tread on Me” patch because officials have deemed it racist.

One teacher claimed that the flag’s origins were "with slavery."

Jaiden was then pulled from his classroom for refusing to take it off, before his mother came to the school to defend her son and educate school officials on what the flag actually symbolizes, which, of course, is not slavery.

“The only tie between the Gadsden flag and racism is that they happened concurrently,” Pat Gray tells “The News & Why It Matters” host Sara Gonzales and contributor Jaco Booyens.

“There was a Gadsden flag when there was slavery. That’s your deal? I mean, how are you tying that in, it had nothing to do with it,” he adds.

Gonzales is aware of the flag's actual origins as well.

“She clearly used the word origins. So, she’s saying it originated first because of slavery, which is completely inaccurate. It was of course the American Revolution, and I mean Ben Franklin, this was his brainchild,” she explains.

While it’s very clear that the flag is not racist but a symbol of the American Revolution, it seems to still be lost on the Colorado Springs school staff.

This is made obvious in a leaked email exchange between the school director, Jeff Yocum, and Jaiden’s mother.

“As discussed, I am providing you the rationale for determining the Gadsden Flag is considered an unacceptable symbol,” Yocum writes, before adding a link to a Washington Post article.

“It’s tied to the Confederate flag and other white supremacy groups, including Patriot groups,” Yocum continues, adding that it was “tied to hate groups” as well.

The mother wasn’t having it, responding, “Respectfully, everything can be considered racist and tied to white supremacy. It’s sad because when everything becomes racist, then nothing is. When we actually need to cry racism and oppression and it’s actually happening, no one will take it seriously.”

The mother then linked her articles that claim things like water and math are racist.

“To that mom I say fight, and then get your kid the heck out of that indoctrination camp,” Booyens says.


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New England Journal of Medicine publishes proposal that medical students be segregated by race



The esteemed New England Journal of Medicine has advanced a recommendation by California academics that medical schools should divide up students on the basis of their race.

Although the Bay Area academics behind the proposal, published on April 27, did not specify whether water fountains, bathrooms, and bus seats should similarly be zoned for persons depending on their skin pigmentation, they did, however, call for medical students to receive instruction in racially segregated groups.

This woke proposal, in keeping with the University of California at San Francisco's so-called anti-racist efforts to "decolonize the health sciences," has been met with fierce opposition and called "morally abhorrent."

An indecent proposal

The proposal was penned by a number of academics and administrators from UCSF, including social worker Leanna Lewis; pediatrician Camila Fabersunne; assistant professors of pediatrics Corina Iocopetti and Dannielle McBride; and "inquiry program coordinator" Gabby Negussie-Retta.

The UCSF crew stated as though it were a fact in their proposal that racism is the "root cause of racially disparate health outcomes" and that medical education is founded "on legacies of colonialism and racism."

On the basis of this ideological claim, they stressed that "we need curricula for training physicians to dismantle the systems that perpetuate these inequities. Since traditional approaches to medical education are themselves founded in inequitable systems, new approaches are essential."

Since a scientific, rational approach to problems of disease and injury — and training future doctors to tackle them — is apparently racist, the UCSF crew recommended the embrace of so-called racial affinity group caucuses.

RAGCs are "facilitated sessions involving participants grouped according to self-identified racial or ethnic identity to support integration of antiracism curricula into clinical practice."

The perceived utility of these RAGCs is that each racially segregated group can process critical race theory doctrine within the context of their "own racialized experience," that is without the intrusion of people who don't look like them.

Additionally, Lewis and company intimated that nonwhites can't hack it in existing medical schools, suggesting that non-segregated learning can be "retraumatizing, resulting in imposter syndrome, heightened anxiety, and a reduced sense of belonging."

To remedy this "reduced sense of belonging," the UCSF crew proposed group isolation.

"Some BIPOC people have been socialized to care for the egos of White people, to express their emotions only in ways that are palatable to White audiences, and to tread lightly around 'White fragility,'" said the proposal. "In a space without White people, BIPOC participants can bring their whole selves, heal from racial trauma together, and identify strategies for addressing structural racism."

The academics further noted that the UCSF School of Medicine has successfully piloted this segregationist initiative, using RAGCs for struggle sessions, "optional spaces for students and trainees to debrief about current events," and for re-education attempts.

While Lewis and her fellow segregationists reckon black people and other "people of color" ought to exploit these RAGCs to "build community, deepen their understanding of and healing from racism ... express a full range of emotions," and altogether celebrate their racial perspectives, they conversely figure white people should use these opportunities to escape and/or dismantle their racial perspective.

\u201cRacial affinity group caucuses \u2014 facilitated sessions for learners who join groups according to self-identified racial or ethnic identity \u2014 can help integrate antiracism curricula into clinical practice. https://t.co/YW71FiYfRS\u201d
— NEJM (@NEJM) 1682960400

Backlash

Do Not Harm, a medical group committed to protecting health care from being undermined by a political agenda, condemned the proposal, noting on Twitter that it amounted to "racial segregation in medical education."

"This sends a deeply concerning message about the priorities and principles of what is supposedly the most prestigious journal in American medicine. Our physicians and patients deserve better," said Do Not Harm.

The group's founder, Dr. Stanley Goldfarb, a professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania’s medical school, blasted the New England Journal of Medicine and called on it to "apologize for running such an illiberal and extremist article," reported the Daily Mail.

"'It is difficult to understand how such offensive language made it past the gatekeepers of this prestigious institution," Goldfarb wrote in a letter to the journal. "In these same pages, authors and editors have been covering the unprecedented exodus of physicians and other staff leaving the clinical profession due to demoralization, burnout, and toxic work environments."

"Have you considered the possibility that divisive and highly politicized pieces such as this might be worsening this crisis, in addition to moving medical education toward segregation?" added Goldfarb.

He further highlighted that the proposal's authors simultaneously stated that nonwhite medical students "are incapable of succeeding in the presence of students of other races" and "white people are inherently menacing."

Goldfarb indicated that this "morally abhorrent" proposal will likely be subjected to federal challenge and has started a petition to prompt the journal to apologize.

The New York Post reported that Goldfarb previously indicated that so-called "anti-racism" policies, such as those advocated by Lewis and the UCSF crew, are "lowering standards, reducing students to the color of their skin and corrupting medicine in general."

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Black man made fake threat against black people in Buffalo to see if racists would 'agree with him': Report



Federal agents have arrested a black man in Buffalo, New York, for making a false threat against black people to see whether racists on social media would support him.

According to WIVB-TV in Buffalo, Rolik Walker, 24, of Buffalo, was arrested for a tweet he supposedly published on May 16 from an anonymous account. In the tweet, he reportedly threatened that he and his "associates" would be "targeting" Buffalo-area grocery stores and that they were "only looking to kill blacks."

Walker, who is black, allegedly issued the tweet under the Twitter handle @ConklinHero just two days after white man Payton Gendron, 18, from Conklin, New York, allegedly shot and killed 10 black people and injured three others at a Tops Friendly Markets grocery store in Buffalo. The violent crime has been deemed a "racially motivated hate crime."

An FBI affidavit claims that Walker "stated that the purpose of the post was to see what everyone would say and if anyone would agree with him.”

Court filings state that Walker attempted to obscure the origin of the @ConklinHero account by using an app that masks IP addresses.

Prosecutors also claim that Walker told law enforcement that he created a second anonymous Twitter account “in an effort to rectify the earlier post.” In the second post, Walker supposedly replaced "only looking to kill blacks" with "ants, spiders and things of that nature." Police say they did recover from his cellphone a screenshot of a post from the second account that claims he didn't mean any harm.

On Thursday, U.S Attorney Trini E. Ross announced that Walker had been arrested and charged with making an interstate threat. The charge carries a sentence of up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Walker appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael J. Roemer on Thursday and was given a conditional release. He has been assigned an attorney.

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Music journalist suggests country fans are racists, says they and 'other supporters of racial slurs' are buying Morgan Wallen tickets in droves



Music news outlet Consequence of Sound rolled with a story headline Tuesday that reads, "Country Fans, People Who Like N-Word Buy Ungodly Amount of Morgan Wallen Tickets."

And if the headline isn't inflammatory enough, a sentence in the first paragraph of Wren Graves' story gets more specific: "Country fans, and various other supporters of racial slurs, have bought over 700,000 Wallen tickets since the tour was announced three weeks ago."

"Country fans, and various other supporters of racial slurs": How do you feel about that, country music fans?

What's the background?

Wallen made big headlines earlier this year after a video surfaced of him using the N-word — and then his label, Big Loud Records, suspended him indefinitely and radio stations dropped his music.

But less than a week later — akin to a collective "Oh, yeah?" — it was reported that Wallen's sophomore effort, "Dangerous: The Double Album," was skyrocketing in sales.

In fact, just a month later, the "Dangerous" album shattered a 64-year music chart record as it spent its eighth-straight week in the Billboard 200's No. 1 slot.

Wallen, as you might expect, apologized for his use of the N-word: "The video you saw was me on hour 72 of a 72-hour bender, and that's not something I'm proud of, either. Obviously, the natural thing to do is to apologize further and continue to apologize, because you got caught, and that's not what I wanted to do ... I let so many people down who mean a lot to me, who have given so much to me. It's just not fair. I let my parents down, and they're the furthest thing from the person in that video. I let my son down, and I'm not OK with that."

Now what?

And after all that, Consequence of Sound seems perplexed and distraught, noting in its story that Wallen's "massive arena tour has become the hottest ticket of 2021" — and then appearing to stick it to country music fans for contributing to Wallen's success.

COS added that nearly all of his tour dates have sold out, and that Billboard has declared "Dangerous" the top-selling album of the year. The outlet also said that while Wallen pledged $500,000 to black-led organizations in response to his N-word controversy, a September COS article said he was several hundred thousand dollars short of that promise.

What did observers have to say?

Commenters on the COS Facebook page seemed mixed in their reactions to the outlet's "People Who Like N-Word" story.

Some appeared to align with the outlet's take, with one commenter responding "good headline" and another saying "Lol @ the title. That is accurate." Another ally said "country has been, and continues to be, the bottom feeder of popular music."

But others were annoyed and took COS to task:

  • "Or...I don't know...judging someone because of a drunken mistake is stupid.....But go ahead and bash him and listen to Chris Brown or other artists who have done far far far worse," one user replied.
  • "Country fans aren’t the only ones who like that word or use it daily...or in songs," another commenter offered.
  • "People who like the N-word buy ungodly amounts of rap music," another commenter said.
  • "Y’all are race baiting; pretty f***ed up," another user declared.
  • "This is a s**tty take LMAO this publication is a joke," another commenter wrote.
  • "Unfollowing this ridiculous publication," another user decided. "Worthless."