Taking things from white people

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Shooting near Tennessee State University leaves 1 dead, 9 injured, including children, officials say

https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/12/us/nashville-shooting-near-tennessee-state-university/index.html

Mon October 14, 2024

A man was killed and nine other people were injured in a shooting Saturday in North Nashville near Tennessee State University and investigators believe at least one of the injured participated in the gunfire, officials said.

The shooting happened around 5 p.m., Nashville police and fire officials said at a news conference Saturday evening.

“There’s no indication of any gang relation,” said Don Aaron, a spokesperson for the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department. “It was two groups of people who were beefing and they opened fire on each other with a crowd around.”

The man who died was 24 years old, police said on X. His name, the names of the injured and information about a motive were not immediately released.

At least three of the injured were children who had noncritical injuries, Nashville police said on X. A 12-year-old girl and two 14-year-old girls were taken to an area children’s hospital, according to Aaron. The other victims range in age from a 23-year-old man to a 55-year-old woman, who was in critical condition, Aaron added.

“We believe that the others are going to survive and recover,” Aaron said.

At least one of the injured people “is suspected to have been involved in the gunfire,” Nashville police said on X. Police didn’t immediately say whether they were looking for anyone in connection with the shooting.

Saturday marked the end of homecoming week at Tennessee State University. The school’s football team played its homecoming game Saturday evening at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium, roughly 3 miles east of where the shooting happened. The homecoming parade took place several hours before the shooting, starting at 8 a.m. and concluding around 12 p.m.

“This had nothing to do with TSU or any of our homecoming activities,” Jenai Hayes, a spokesperson for TSU, said of the shooting. “No homecoming events were happening or slated to happen or were occurring during the” time of the shooting, she added.

Investigators didn’t immediately know whether any of the people shot were students, Nashville police Cmdr. Anthony McClain told reporters.

“We think this is something that was kind of a sidebar to the (homecoming) celebration” and “not a direct reflection on the university itself,” McClain said.

The shooting took place several blocks away from campus, the university said in a statement. In a separate incident, three people were injured at Nissan Stadium following “an argument that escalated into a fight in the parking lot,” causing a crowd to run for safety and trample several people, the university said.

“Please keep the affected families in your thoughts and prayers during this difficult time,” the university said.
 
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Black Nationalist Gets $20 Million to Promote ‘Segregation’ in Public Schools

https://www.thefp.com/p/black-nationalist-josh-shapiro-segregation-bill-and-melinda-gates-foundation

Sharif El-Mekki envisions a world where ‘all black students are taught by same-race teachers.’

He is backed by the Gates Foundation, NBC Universal, Nike, and the Bezos Family Foundation.

By Francesca Block

October 16, 2024

Sharif El-Mekki is an adviser to Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro. He also supports school segregation, is a member of the Black Panther Party with family ties to Iran, and runs a nonprofit that has raked in nearly $20 million in donations from the government and nonprofits, including the Gates Foundation.

El-Mekki, a former middle and high school teacher and principal, founded the Center for Black Educator Development (CBED) in 2019, which defines its vision as “a world where. . . all black students are taught by high-quality, same-race teachers,” and where “all teachers demonstrate high levels of expertise in anti-racist mindsets.” CBED argues that employing black teachers to educate black students increases educational outcomes.

Since its founding, CBED has trained thousands of teachers across the U.S. in “education activism,” urging a “commitment to liberation education from the racism inherent in America’s institutions, including our schools.” A CBED information packet titled “The Anti-Racist Guide to Teacher Retention,” developed with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, defines education as “a political act” that “can upend white supremacy and a racist history of using education as an oppressive social force.”

“Every lesson plan is a political document, and every classroom interaction a political statement,” the guide reads.
 
Black Nationalist Gets $20 Million to Promote ‘Segregation’ in Public Schools

https://www.thefp.com/p/black-nationalist-josh-shapiro-segregation-bill-and-melinda-gates-foundation

Sharif El-Mekki envisions a world where ‘all black students are taught by same-race teachers.’

He is backed by the Gates Foundation, NBC Universal, Nike, and the Bezos Family Foundation.

By Francesca Block

October 16, 2024

Sharif El-Mekki is an adviser to Pennsylvania governor Josh Shapiro. He also supports school segregation, is a member of the Black Panther Party with family ties to Iran, and runs a nonprofit that has raked in nearly $20 million in donations from the government and nonprofits, including the Gates Foundation.

El-Mekki, a former middle and high school teacher and principal, founded the Center for Black Educator Development (CBED) in 2019, which defines its vision as “a world where. . . all black students are taught by high-quality, same-race teachers,” and where “all teachers demonstrate high levels of expertise in anti-racist mindsets.” CBED argues that employing black teachers to educate black students increases educational outcomes.

Since its founding, CBED has trained thousands of teachers across the U.S. in “education activism,” urging a “commitment to liberation education from the racism inherent in America’s institutions, including our schools.” A CBED information packet titled “The Anti-Racist Guide to Teacher Retention,” developed with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, defines education as “a political act” that “can upend white supremacy and a racist history of using education as an oppressive social force.”

“Every lesson plan is a political document, and every classroom interaction a political statement,” the guide reads.

Do you consider this a bad thing or a good thing?
 
...
Since its founding, CBED has trained thousands of teachers across the U.S. in “education activism,” urging a “commitment to liberation education from the racism inherent in America’s institutions, including our schools.” A CBED information packet titled “The Anti-Racist Guide to Teacher Retention,” developed with the Pennsylvania Department of Education, defines education as “a political act” that “can upend white supremacy and a racist history of using education as an oppressive social force.”
...

Ah, in other words Marxist school to train the new Red Guard.
 
Shooting near Tennessee State University leaves 1 dead, 9 injured, including children, officials say

https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/12/us/nashville-shooting-near-tennessee-state-university/index.html

Mon October 14, 2024

A man was killed and nine other people were injured in a shooting Saturday in North Nashville near Tennessee State University and investigators believe at least one of the injured participated in the gunfire, officials said.

The shooting happened around 5 p.m., Nashville police and fire officials said at a news conference Saturday evening.

“There’s no indication of any gang relation,” said Don Aaron, a spokesperson for the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department. “It was two groups of people who were beefing and they opened fire on each other with a crowd around.”

The man who died was 24 years old, police said on X. His name, the names of the injured and information about a motive were not immediately released.

At least three of the injured were children who had noncritical injuries, Nashville police said on X. A 12-year-old girl and two 14-year-old girls were taken to an area children’s hospital, according to Aaron. The other victims range in age from a 23-year-old man to a 55-year-old woman, who was in critical condition, Aaron added.

“We believe that the others are going to survive and recover,” Aaron said.

At least one of the injured people “is suspected to have been involved in the gunfire,” Nashville police said on X. Police didn’t immediately say whether they were looking for anyone in connection with the shooting.

Saturday marked the end of homecoming week at Tennessee State University. The school’s football team played its homecoming game Saturday evening at Nashville’s Nissan Stadium, roughly 3 miles east of where the shooting happened. The homecoming parade took place several hours before the shooting, starting at 8 a.m. and concluding around 12 p.m.

“This had nothing to do with TSU or any of our homecoming activities,” Jenai Hayes, a spokesperson for TSU, said of the shooting. “No homecoming events were happening or slated to happen or were occurring during the” time of the shooting, she added.

Investigators didn’t immediately know whether any of the people shot were students, Nashville police Cmdr. Anthony McClain told reporters.

“We think this is something that was kind of a sidebar to the (homecoming) celebration” and “not a direct reflection on the university itself,” McClain said.

The shooting took place several blocks away from campus, the university said in a statement. In a separate incident, three people were injured at Nissan Stadium following “an argument that escalated into a fight in the parking lot,” causing a crowd to run for safety and trample several people, the university said.

“Please keep the affected families in your thoughts and prayers during this difficult time,” the university said.

https://x.com/NatCon2022/status/1847633641653915859

 
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