88
61
12

I feel like this could be red pill eve, but I need your help to address this fact check list my family wrote during the debate with great sources and quotes. I already addressed the Fine People one and Proud Boys, but we'll be discussing the whole list tomorrow. Thanks for any help!

  • [ ] Pre-existing conditions
  • [ ] Health Care plan
  • [ ] Packing the court
  • [ ] Roe v. Wade
  • [ ] Governors - phenomenal job?
  • [ ] COVID vaccine timing
  • [ ] COVID shutdown timing
  • [ ] Divorce during COVID?
  • [ ] Jobs — lost or gained?
  • [ ] School masks — “Not a national emergency”
  • [ ] Ohio and Michigan had the best year last year
  • [ ] “Ate your lunch”
  • [ ] Very fine people on both sides
  • [ ] 1 in 1000 African Americans killed by COVID?
  • [ ] Crime bill
  • [ ] Law Enforcement support for Trump?
  • [ ] Top 40 cities run by Dems
  • [ ] Critical Race Theory
  • [ ] Crime stats
  • [ ] 400 million dollar cut in local law enforcement?
  • [ ] Kelly Anne Conway — violence supports Trump campaign?
  • [ ] VA healthcare and military
  • [ ] “Weaker, sicker, more violent under Trump” Poorer…
  • [ ] Hunter Biden - dishonorable discharge, cocaine, got money
  • [ ] 3.5 million dollars from Moscow
  • [ ] Drilling in parks
  • [ ] Drop a nuclear bomb on a hurricane
14

I teach at a New England boarding school, probably one of only 2 or 3 conservative/libertarian teachers among a faculty over 60. There are definitely conservative students at the school, and over the years I've tried to quietly support them as we all experience wave after wave of leftist BS from every quarter.

I'm getting sick of being 'closeted' among my colleagues and students, but I'm well aware that speaking out could cost me my job, and that includes my entire life (housing on campus, my family, etc.). I generally just ask questions and am known as a skeptic.

Today, I thought of an idea that I wanted to run past all you fine pedes. Rather than make some kind of loud protest that would convince no one and just get me blacklisted and maybe fired, what if I joined with students in a simple silent action, kind of like a dignified sit-in from the civil rights era? I could picture a school meeting where someone speaks about 'the murder of George Floyd'... what if a group of us simply stood up silently in that moment? We wouldn't leave ('disrespectfully storming out') and we wouldn't speak out... we'd just 'Stand Up for Truth.' It would get a lot of questions but we wouldn't say anything, just stand, look, and then sit back down. I could see us doing this throughout the year, cued by a few choice ridiculous statements (about Trump, Kyle, Floyd, etc.)

What do you think? Pointless and not worth losing my job over? Or could it be an effective method of showing disagreement without starting a riot like they do?