i always hear the “he’s just a kid” argument when it comes to white men not wanting to take responsibility for their actions... anyway his name is Nicholas Sandmann https://t.co/eKRSgHfK3L
— Sarah Chadwick (@Sarahchadwickk)
January 20, 2019

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i always hear the “he’s just a kid” argument when it comes to white men not wanting to take responsibility for their actions... anyway his name is Nicholas Sandmann https://t.co/eKRSgHfK3L
— Sarah Chadwick (@Sarahchadwickk)
January 20, 2019
I came of age in Covington, the same part of Kentucky where Nick Sandmann and the other MAGA-hat-wearing “Covington Boys” live, when they are not staring down indigenous activists. The question of whether the Cov Cath high school students did anything wrong seems obvious to me, but America takes a long time to come to an agreement. Kentucky, for instance, fought against the Confederacy. But almost 150 years later, when I was the same age as those “tomahawk chopping” teenagers, anonymous pamphlets with Confederate flags printed on them were left in my neighborhood (where only one black family lived: mine). The flea markets in Kentucky are filled with Confederate flag memorabilia, and in the time since I’ve been gone, the same booths sell “all lives matter” bumper stickers, thin blue line American flags, and MAGA hats. What each of these means remains always up for debate.
In Covington, I Was Taught to Doubt My Own Experiences of Racism
Just one county over, about 10 miles from Covington, I graduated from Boone County High School, home of the BCHS Rebels. Guess what our school flag looked like right up until the year I started there...like, literally that school term. If you thought “The Confederate Flag”, well, you’re right.
And when I was a student there, during my senior year, students of the school and people who lived nearby broke into the school and vandalized it over MLK, Jr. weekend...the put up KKK signs and swastikas. I got together with some other students and we put together a proposal that I took directly to the principal. We wanted to come together at the flag pole to stand against the racism.
Mr. Baker, the principal, said no. He said it would be illegal because it would be like having a religious ceremony on the school property. Never mind that it wasn’t at all religious or that I’ve always been anti-religion so that wouldn’t be something I’d include anyway. And never mind the fact that he condoned and allowed Prayer At The Pole every year.
Then, when I was studying to become a teacher, I worked as a practicum student in Simon Kenton High School...which, btw, is in the exact same county as Covington, 11 short miles from CovCath. I was working to become an English teacher and I was warned, by Simon Kenton’s principal, that I wasn’t to teach To Kill A Mockingbird, because the racial elements of the book upset the students...He implied that the very VERY VERY VERY white school population would become violent if made to read the book.
Covington Catholic Smells Like Racist Teen Spirit
Covington Blackface Apology Tour bought to you by:
RunSwitch PR: Scott Jennings, Mitch McConnell
Nick Sandermann’s parents; Julie Weis Sandmann and Ted Sandmann
Diocese of Covington
@CovCathColonels
#CovCath #CovingtonBoys #ColonelCrazies #MAGAkids ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Desperate to escape its status as an also-ran among its news broadcast peers, CNN has decided to coddle the bigots among us. While this might seem like a typical day for CNN, this incident seems...different.
Students in 'MAGA' hats mock Native American after rally
Adam Beam and Brian Melley, Associated Press,Associated Press•January 19, 2019
A diocese in Kentucky apologized Saturday after videos emerged showing students from a Catholic boys' high school mocking Native Americans outside the Lincoln Memorial after a rally in Washington.
The Indigenous Peoples March in Washington on Friday coincided with the March for Life, which drew thousands of anti-abortion protesters, including a group from Covington Catholic High School in Park Hills.
Videos circulating online show a youth staring at and standing extremely close to Nathan Phillips, a 64-year-old Native American man singing and playing a drum.
Other students, some wearing Covington clothing and many wearing "Make America Great Again" hats and sweatshirts, surrounded them, chanting, laughing and jeering.
In a joint statement , the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington and Covington Catholic High School apologized to Phillips. Officials said they are investigating and will take "appropriate action, up to and including expulsion."
"We extend our deepest apologies to Mr. Phillips," the statement read. "This behavior is opposed to the Church's teachings on the dignity and respect of the human person."
According to the "Indian Country Today" website, Phillips is an Omaha elder and Vietnam veteran who holds an annual ceremony honoring Native American veterans at Arlington National Cemetery.
"When I was there singing, I heard them saying 'Build that wall, build that wall,'" Phillips said, as he wiped away tears in a video posted on Instagram. "This is indigenous lands. We're not supposed to have walls here. We never did."
He told The Washington Post that while he was drumming, he thought about his wife, Shoshana, who died of bone marrow cancer nearly four years ago, and the threats that indigenous communities around the world are facing.
"I felt like the spirit was talking through me," Phillips told the newspaper.
State Rep. Ruth Buffalo, a North Dakota state lawmaker and member of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation, said she was saddened to see students showing disrespect to an elder who is also a U.S. military veteran at what was supposed to be a celebration of all cultures.
"The behavior shown in that video is just a snapshot of what indigenous people have faced and are continuing to face," Buffalo said.
She said she hoped it would lead to some kind of meeting with the students to provide education on issues facing Native Americans.
The videos prompted a torrent of outrage online. Actress and activist Alyssa Milano tweeted that the footage "brought me to tears," while actor Chris Evans tweeted that the students' actions were "appalling" and "shameful."
U.S. Rep. Deb Haaland, D-New Mexico, who is a member of the Pueblo of Laguna and had been at the rally earlier in the day, used Twitter to sharply criticize what she called a "heartbreaking" display of "blatant hate, disrespect, and intolerance."
Haaland, who is also Catholic, told The Associated Press she was particularly saddened to see the boys mocking an elder, who is revered in Native American culture. She placed some of the blame on President Donald Trump, who has used Indian names like Pocahontas as an insult.
"It is sad that we have a president who uses Native American women's names as racial slurs and that's an example that these kids are clearly following considering the fact that they had their 'Make America Great Again' hats on," Haaland said. "He's really brought out the worst in people."
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Lemme tell ya. This is in my area. I mean I worked with boys from CovCath when I worked at Subway because it was just down the road. Like I can pee on the school from where I live. And these boys, not just the ones in the video/incident but in the school period, are the most entitled assholes who’ve ever existed. Very few of them are decent at all and NONE of them I’ve ever met (and I’ve met a lot) can imagine what it might be like to be someone else. Except one. His name was Robbie and he’s literally the ONLY boy I’ve ever met from this school who EVER seemed to think of other people. This school raises and specializes in entitled privileged white males. Period.
Let's go #covcath !! #gocolonels 💙🏈#beatlloyd