“Others, such as MSNBC contributor and Princeton professor Eddie Glaude, have also linked gun violence to a deep-seated cultural problem that must be addressed. Glaude said Americans hold to a “myth” that “we can protect ourselves.”
Nope, we shouldn’t be allowed to protect ourselves. We should depend on that deputy to protect us. Yes, that one hiding behind that patrol car over there.
Thank God we have such honest “deep thinkers” from Princeton and the MSNBC to guide us.
A noted scholar, Eddie Glaude is the chair of the Center for African-American Studies at Princeton University.
Eddie Glaude:
"Colleges and universities are the places where you cultivate the habits of courage or you learn the habits of cowardliness. When the students responded to the non-indictment of Darren Wilson and marched on Prospect Avenue, later organized a die-in response to all of the deaths at the hands of police, and finally sat in at Nassau Hall and in President Eisgrubers office, I was so proud, smiling like the Cheshire Cat from ear to ear."
"My book Democracy in Black is my attempt to give voice to the context of the Black Lives Matter movement."