Friday, April 30, 2021

DailyKenn.com — A Cypress College instructor was video recording debating a student. During the conversation the teacher is heard repeatedly interrupting the student as he attempts to explain that police officers should be viewed as heroes. 


"All of them?" she rudely interrupted.  

Eventually, the student was able ask, "Who would you call?" in the event of an emergency. 

The instructor answered, "I wouldn't call anybody" and "I don't trust them."

She seemed to believe that today's police system is systemic racism because it stemmed from slave patrols in the South. 

However, according to britannica.com, the American police system was modeled after the London Metropolitan Police which, as educated people know, is in England and not in the South. 

Excerpted from bitannica.com ▼

The first police department in the United States was established in New York City in 1844 (it was officially organized in 1845). Other cities soon followed suit: New Orleans and Cincinnati (Ohio) in 1852; Boston and Philadelphia in 1854; Chicago and Milwaukee (Wis.) in 1855; and Baltimore (Md.) and Newark (N.J.) in 1857. Those early departments all used the London Metropolitan Police as a model. Like the Metropolitan Police, American police were organized in a quasi-military command structure. Their main task was the prevention of crime and disorder, and they provided a wide array of other public services. There were no detectives. 

Take away ...

• Why are such delusional people allowed to instruct our nation's brightest young people? 

Excerpted from dailywire.com ▼

A professor at Cypress College in Southern California berated a student during a Zoom class for calling the police “heroes.”

During a communications class, Braden Ellis gave a presentation about “cancel culture” and why it is “so destructive and tearing our country apart.”

Ellis told The Daily Wire that during his speech, he mentioned how activists attempted to “cancel” the children’s show “Paw Patrol” in light of the anti-police sentiment stemming from the Black Lives Matter movement. Following the death of George Floyd at the hands of police, professors, activists, and journalists alike took to social media to decry why “Paw Patrol” was bad for reinforcing the idea that police are helpful.

Ellis claims that his professor allotted a 10-minute question and answer session for students to respond to the presentation. The professor took the designated time to scold Ellis for his views.

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