fbpx
Breaking Campus News. Launching Media Careers.
Student leader says ‘black-on-black crime is not a thing,’ wants to censor those who say it is

Alternative facts sure are popular on campus these days.

A student government leader at Regis University went so far as to deny that black people commit crime against each other, or at least that the subject is worth discussing (that would be news to former President Obama).

Campus Reform reports that the Jesuit university in Denver just concluded Anti-Oppression Week, which included sessions such as “Introduction to Privilege and Oppression for Teachers” and “The Oppressive Power of Language.”

But the most head-scratching comments came from Jack Flotte, director of the student government’s Social Justice and Spirituality Committee and white male.

He accused his fellow whites of “white fragility” in leading a Tuesday session titled “White Guilt, White Feelings, and the Struggle for Liberation”:

He then outlined several paradigms that he considers counterproductive, starting with the demand that white people “quit mythologizing black-on-black murder by isolating statistics,” boldly claiming that “Black-on-black murder is not a thing. It’s just a bad argument. Black-on-black crime is not a thing. Don’t talk about it. Shut it down when people talk about it.”

Ironically, Flotte encouraged his audience to “research everything.” They could start with Obama’s remarks about black-on-black crime at a televised town hall:

“It is absolutely true that the murder rate in the African-American community is way out of whack compared to the general population,” Obama said. “And both the victims and the perpetrators are black, young black men.”

Though faculty weren’t ordered to attend the events, Anthropology Prof. Damien Thompson – who led or co-led three events – encouraged his colleagues to “go to as many events as possible” and said he would attend “like 98 percent of them,” according to Campus Reform.

The publication also notes this Friday event listing prodding faculty to attend:

10:30am – 12:00pm Steps of Dayton Memorial Library. Call to Action Rally (This event in a student planned and organized rally; faculty, administration and staff who have not attended one of Thursday’s faculty anti-oppression training sessions, should attend the anti-oppression training that begins at 9:00am). Multicultural Affairs Committee. 

Read the story.

Like The College Fix on Facebook / Follow us on Twitter

IMAGE: Pirátská strana/Shutterstock

Please join the conversation about our stories on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Reddit, MeWe, Rumble, Gab, Minds and Gettr.

About the Author
Associate Editor
Greg Piper served as associate editor of The College Fix from 2014 to 2021.