To: mrsmel
Good, they're rightAgreed. Within any college, there's due process to expel a student or an organization. Even TV "news commentators" are saying that the stupid song wasn't a directed threat toward anyone, thus it's protected free speech.
I would question why anyone who was on that bus would film it and release it to the media. I thought even in the US people are allowed to be tasteless in private.
7 posted on
03/13/2015 4:54:57 AM PDT by
grania
To: grania
And to top it all off--even after some of the members withdrew or were expelled (whichever it was), and that fraternity chapter closed, black students are still calling for some kind of punishment for the leaders of the national fraternity-just like in Ferguson, the COP and a judge resigning wasn't enough for the "protestors", they wanted more-enough is never enough, even too much already isn't enough-it's not about "justice", it's about forcing whites to toe a PC line that no other group has to toe in this country-if they did, the Black Panthers would have been charged for specifically and publicly calling for death to whites, including white babies, instead of having been given a media platform to do so. This is all about app 13% of the population demanding power over all the rest, by setting standards that everyone but them has to follow.
8 posted on
03/13/2015 5:05:08 AM PDT by
mrsmel
(One Who Can See)
To: grania
I would question why anyone who was on that bus would film it and release it to the media. I thought even in the US people are allowed to be tasteless in private.
Obviously they didn’t know everyone on that bus. The video was not released to the media directly. It is so easy today to have something filmed privately and then sent around the world in seconds.
To: grania
Within any college, there's due process to expel a student or an organization. The university didn't expel SAE. There was no SAE chapter to expel; the national organization revoke the chapter's charter. All OU did was take their property back in the form of the frat house.
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