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UVA Students Hold Community Healing Event After School Refuses to Remove Thomas Jefferson Statue

UVA Students Hold Community Healing Event After School Refuses to Remove Thomas Jefferson Statue

“This is what democracy looks like”

Imagine being a student at UVA and holding yourself in higher regard than the person who founded the school.

The College Fix reports:

UVA students host community healing event after officials refuse to remove Thomas Jefferson statue

University of Virginia leaders’ stance to keep the school’s Thomas Jefferson statue despite protests and calls for its removal prompted some students and activists recently to hold a demonstration that bemoaned the decision and offered a chance to heal from and cope with it.

The late-October event, held at the statue, included speakers and writing exercises, and an emphasis “was placed on the need for community healing and mutual care. Speakers lamented the ‘mental, emotional and physical unwellness’ of students and urged students to ‘find time for joy,’” the campus newspaper the Cavalier Daily reports.

“We all have a responsibility to … unlearn the whitewashed history of this university and this country, and to free every single person who is oppressed and perpetually subjugated to the toxic systems of white supremacy, neoliberalism and racial capitalism,” one speaker reportedly said.

Another said, according to the student newspaper, that the university should be reframed as “Sally Hemings’ University,” alleging she was raped by Jefferson.

The event ended with chants of “This is what democracy looks like,” the Daily reported.

It’s not unheard of for a university to remove from campus a statue of Thomas Jefferson, one of America’s Founding Fathers, lead author of the Declaration of Independence, and the third president of the United States.

Over the summer, Washburn University leaders quietly removed their school’s Thomas Jefferson statue from campus for fear of possible protests against it.

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Comments

If UVA is so hopelessly toxic, why did these children choose to apply and enroll there? That makes their participation equally toxic.

I don’t believe for a second that none of these students is able to move on without special help after having lost a trivial issue.

They’re pretending it’s not so trivial, so they can reignite it at a later point. Weaponized victimization.

    artichoke in reply to irv. | November 4, 2020 at 4:28 pm

    If they can’t move on, others will in their place. It’s up to them.

    healthguyfsu in reply to irv. | November 4, 2020 at 7:12 pm

    I wish I could up this more than once. “Weaponized victimization” is the perfect phrase for the shameless and disgusting tactics of the grievance industry.

“The late-October event, held at the statue, included speakers and writing exercises …”

Hey if they want to do “writing exercises” so much, good for them. I was always more interested in other things such as STEM, card games, and almost anything else.

But the idea of removing Jefferson’s name is ridiculous.