Missouri Western State University is acting outside the box and taking a completely different route in dealing with snowflakes with hurt feelings.
A college snowflake saw a high school boy wearing a MAGA hat and she went fully deranged and even when the police got there she went even farther out of her mind, insisting that the police needed to force the boy to take the hat off because it is a symbol of racism.
Since she doesn’t understand the concept of free speech, the college has decided to hold a seminar to explain the constitutionally protected free speech.
Missouri Western State University has scheduled a talk on free speech tomorrow after a student was caught panicking over the sight of a “Make America Great Again” hat on campus last week.
Snowflakes are still melting 2-years after @POTUS @realDonaldTrump‘s HISTORIC @WhiteHouse win!
If this #MAGAphobia student gets TRIGGERED this bad by a red hat, she may have a rough time finding a job in the real world.
Retweet if you STAND BY THE STUDENT WEARING a #MAGA Hat!?? pic.twitter.com/sy404JpbfR
— Oliver McGee PhD MBA (@OliverMcGee) April 7, 2019
“It’s a symbol of white supremacy!” the young woman yells to a police officer in the recently surfaced video. “I don’t want to see that! I wake up every day and I see my people getting killed!”
The police officer who confronts the woman tries to reason with her, saying, “Hold on. Listen. What you’re doing right now doesn’t help the matter. You yelling and screaming does not—”
“Do you know what that hat symbolizes?” the woman interrupts before continuing, “All I want is for him to take [the hat] off. I don’t want to see that!”
When the officer asks her to talk calmly, she responds, “I don’t want to talk calmly. I want him to take that off.”
The scene drew about 50 onlookers, and the person wearing the MAGA hat was a high school student who was at the college to help decorate for his school’s prom, which was being held on Missouri Western State’s campus, according to newspaper The Kansas City Star.
University spokesman Kent Heier told the Star that the school is “100% supportive of free speech” in a statement, saying, “Free speech is one of our core values and another is respect. We are 100% supportive of free speech. We preserve the right to free expression for all those on this campus, students, staff, faculty and visitors.”