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Started By
Message
re: Lake Charles is woke AF
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:56 am to DLauw
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:56 am to DLauw
quote:
I remember almost all the 8th grade class from Sacred Heart (black catholic school about 6 or 7 blocks away) were freshmen the next year at Saint Louis when I started. A bunch were on work scholarships.
It's changed considerably. Class of '09. Yes I graduated with a bunch of the dummies who wrote this. Lake Charles Boston no longer exists and the amount of students from Sacred Heart is now extremely low. In my class we had 6 kids from Sacred Heart out of our class of 125. They offer a scholarship if you are black regardless of income.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:58 am to Jim Rockford
Pretty bold admonishing hate while propping up the Catholic values of faith and love thy neighbor.
This post was edited on 6/23/20 at 10:59 am
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:01 am to Areddishfish
So were they virtue signalers in 09 or working towards it??
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:17 am to KemoSabe65
Several of these kids went to a particular "gifted children" summer program. Most (although by no means all) people I have known with that background have turned out pretty far left.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:20 am to Jim Rockford
How much you wanna bet scholarships aren't awarded equally on basis of race?
How much you wanna bet there are white kids with way better scores and grades paying tuition, while blacks with lesser scores get a free ride?
I mean, we are for equality correct?
How much you wanna bet there are white kids with way better scores and grades paying tuition, while blacks with lesser scores get a free ride?
I mean, we are for equality correct?
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:24 am to Jim Rockford
The leader of the group who wrote this is a college instructor at Texas State. Big shocker there.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 12:36 pm to Jim Rockford
They want fries with their shakes?
Posted on 6/23/20 at 12:47 pm to ProjectP2294
quote:
If they don't like what St Louis is teaching, maybe they could just not pay to go there?
Nobody gives a frick about what a bunch of St Louis grads have to say about anything.
Never met a bigger bunch of entitled pussies in my life.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 12:56 pm to Ric Flair
quote:
When I ask this question, it’s more so to identify mutual friends. “Oh, you went to Brother Martin, do you know xyz?”
I see what you mean but let’s not pretend like people don’t ask that question just to judge a person that they just met by where they went to high school. Some people have no bad intentions but some will legit ask it with no intentions of a follow up question about XYZ mutual person.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 12:57 pm to The Third Leg
GOAT response gif to most of what’s written in 2020
Posted on 6/23/20 at 9:57 pm to turnpiketiger
quote:
see what you mean but let’s not pretend like people don’t ask that question just to judge a person that they just met by where they went to high school. Some people have no bad intentions but some will legit ask it with no intentions of a follow up question about XYZ mutual person.
I know guys who went to Lagrange and Washington Marion in Lake Charles (not just Barbe), and also Grace King in The NOLA area (not just BM, Jesuit, etc). You seem overly sensitive. I went to a LA public high school myself and turned out okay.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:02 pm to The Mick
I ain't never seen a big boy grilling on the roof
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:10 pm to WestlakeTiger
quote:
N obody gives a frick about what a bunch of St Louis grads have to say about anything.
Never met a bigger bunch of entitled pussies in my life
I agree with this post.
This is nothing but a post to accumulate shares and likes on ig
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:44 pm to Prominentwon
Bunch of entitled fricks. All spoiled.
Honestly at Louis has lots of problems and has for 2 or more years now. If they continue down this path or give into these idiots, my kids will just go to Barbe.
If I wanted my kids to go to a school with the demographics they want, I would send my kid to LG. Their stupid bullshite of 47% white and 47% black makes zero logical sense. Only want 3% Asian and 3% Indian and demand caps on those, frick these entitled count.
Most of these people saying that crap are the ones in theatre or go to summer camps i.e. the weird fricking kids. Hopefully St Louis understands who pays the bills.
Honestly at Louis has lots of problems and has for 2 or more years now. If they continue down this path or give into these idiots, my kids will just go to Barbe.
If I wanted my kids to go to a school with the demographics they want, I would send my kid to LG. Their stupid bullshite of 47% white and 47% black makes zero logical sense. Only want 3% Asian and 3% Indian and demand caps on those, frick these entitled count.
Most of these people saying that crap are the ones in theatre or go to summer camps i.e. the weird fricking kids. Hopefully St Louis understands who pays the bills.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 10:49 pm to Jim Rockford
quote:
Dear SLC students, alumni, parents, faculty, and community members:
Martin Luther King Jr. once said, “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” George Floyd’s tragic death at the hands of the police has shaken the nation to its core, and we are writing this petition on account of our alma mater's silence. We are writing because we know this silence has gone on far too long, and because we are using our voices to demand action, and change. Racism and brutality will continue in America as long as these violent systems of oppression are not acknowledged, taught, and intentionally dismantled. And so change must start with education.
SLC was founded on the principles of the Catholic faith. The Catholic Church teaches its followers to love thy neighbor, and Pope Francis has called Catholics to speak out against injustice. And as alumni, we are asking St. Louis to break their deafening silence and do just that. St. Louis Catholic has been silent on the subject of the murders of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor, and Tony McDade (and all those who passed before and after them). We do not want to live in a world where Ben & Jerry’s ice cream is more vocal about injustice than our alma mater. We do not know what to make of the fact that SLC refuses to state plainly that Black Lives Matter—a statement so benign and so obviously true that its omission from your social media platforms speaks volumes. First and foremost, we are asking every one of you to break your silence and take a stand for what is morally correct in accordance with your Catholic faith.
We are grateful for the education we received, the lessons we have learned, and the friendships we gained during our time at St. Louis. However, we also believe our alma mater can and should be better. Many of us experienced racism and discrimination throughout our years at this school, and many of us watched our classmates suffer. And we are here to call for change. As Sirad Hassan and Dayna Valek wrote in their own recent petition, we must “reexamine how we honor Black lives in our education system [...] not simply as a reactionary means, but in direct ways that critically challenge how we frame our nation’s history.” Following their lead, we are calling on you to implement changes in order to directly address issues of inequality in order to better serve your student body.
We believe that as Christian educators, the teachers at St. Louis have a moral and professional responsibility to facilitate in-class conversations about race, privilege, allyship, and justice at every grade level. We must put a stop to the practice of teaching students to be colorblind and acknowledge that racism is not a thing of the past, nor the sole domain of hateful individuals—racism must be understood as a system that is reinforced by institutions and is reinforced through systems of discrimination, as well as implicit and explicit biases.
We want our children to receive an education that prepares them for and informs them of the real world. A lot of these issues we are met with will only be solved through deep, hard thinking in combination with structural change. Having a good heart and good values is crucial, but not a solution. We will need a good heart, good values--but also: history and philosophy and theory. Solving these systemic racial issues requires people of faith, government, the private sector, educational institutions, and individuals. Only one piece of this partnership will not suffice in tackling racial injustice.
We want our children to have a better educational experience than we did and we want to be part of the solution. And that is why we are demanding change.
We believe that the curriculum at St. Louis does not adequately or effectively teach students about systemic racism or white supremacy. While at SLC, we were taught about the Civil Rights Movement and assigned To Kill a Mockingbird. However, we did not receive formal education about modern-day systemic and institutionalized racism, police brutality, or systems of privilege.

Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:46 pm to Jim Rockford
Someone should ask them to demand the school take a stronger position against abortion as well.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:49 pm to The Mick
YESSSS YESSIR
DAAAMN YA GOT TIDDIES ON YA BACK
DAAAMN YA GOT TIDDIES ON YA BACK
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:50 pm to Jim Rockford
Mad that their high school wasn’t as woke and liberal as their colleges.
Posted on 6/23/20 at 11:55 pm to Jim Rockford
They can have hawaii and Puerto Rico.
Posted on 6/24/20 at 12:00 am to Jim Rockford
Is this a high school or something? I only know of McNeese State in LC
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