Posted on 11/14/2015 2:34:05 PM PST by Kaslin
Yeah, these delicate snowflakes ought to go to Paris and plead their case with the French on how bad they have it!
Black Lies Matter
I don’t know who Steve Deace is...but this article is spot on.
.
I’m so glad this university left the Big 12.
Let them be an embarrassment to the SEC.
CGato
They sure do.
Me too!
Yesterday, Friday the thirteenth, besides the attacks in Paris, there was a 7.0 Earthquake off of the coast of Japan, there were two terrorist attacks in Lebanon that killed over 40 People and another terror attacked in Baghdad that killed more people.
Now I’d like to ask those whiny college students just where they think their micro aggressions fit in on the scale of importance.
They are totally self-absorbed.
I would love to repost this , but I won’t give these asshats any more than the 2 minutes of fame that they had.
In looking at the “students” pictured...what’s their median IQ ? 80 or so. I would be willing to bet none of them are above 100.
Further, let us ask what is their major course of study. We can take the money that none of them are in engineering, math, or a hard science.
If I had Photoshop or equiv, and the time to mess with it, I’d ‘shop a bunch of snowflakes riding in a little short bus, with a Tigers logo on the side.
I started out a Physics major in college, but switched to a Math major. I never even saw a black take a real Math or Physics course. I assume they took the remedial Math course that satisfied the graduation requirements.
At the time I understood why, but had no hard evidence. Herrnstein and Murray provided the evidence.
Bell Curve?
Yes.
I was a Physics major, and there were a few blacks in the early going (100 and 200 level) but they were in other majors. When you got into the 300 and 400 level physics and math courses there were zero blacks, few if any women. It was whites, (includes Jews, if you want to count them separately, I do not) Oriental Asians and India Indians.
It was the same in the 500 and 600 level graduate courses too. The classrooms had 30 seats or more, at most there were only 10 to 15 students in a class. This was at Cornell in the 90’s.
Nobody partied on friday/saturday night, nobody missed class, nobody did anything but maybe watch football on Sunday afternoon. We studied, we didn’t have time to do anything else.
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