Meet 12yo Jaiden who was kicked out of class yesterday in Colorado Springs for having a Gadsden flag patch, which the school claims has "origins with slavery."
The school's director said via email that the patch was "disruptive to the classroom environment."
Receipts in the 🧵
They cited @USEEOC, which admitted that the flag "originated in the Revolutionary War in a non-racial context"…
But then said "However, whatever the historic origins and meaning of the symbol, it also has since been sometimes interpreted to convey racially-tinged messages…"
The director then argued that the flag is associated with "hate groups," linking to this weak article that cites a "graphic design scholar" 😂 who claimed that "some may now see the Gadsden flag as a symbol of intolerance and hate—or even racism."
As you can hear his mom say in the video, Jaiden wanted to stand up for his (non-racist!) beliefs. So after he was kicked out of class, he asked his mom to take him to the news station to get the word out.
(He got the idea from a @tuttletwins book 💪🏽)
They declined an interview
So what rule was he actually breaking? According to the director, this one (see highlight).
Though it's unclear what alleged slavery connections have to do with drugs, tobacco, alcohol, or weapons.
Everyone got the H-1B stuff out of their system yet? Good?
K then let me take a moment to remind us all that modern immigration law is rooted in protectionism and is wholly unconstitutional.
Quick 🧵
First, history.
The U.S. Constitution granted the federal govt the authority to determine naturalization—how residents could become citizens.
It wasn't empowered to dictate who could become a resident. America was an "open borders" nation and emigration was key to its prosperity and growth.
Federal laws dealt only with naturalization (such as the Naturalization Acts of 1790, 1795, and 1798), leaving to each of the states the authority to regulate immigration.
(Naturally, coastal states disproportionately faced the issue due to the shiploads of migrants.)
State laws that screened immigrants (primarily for health reasons) were challenged in the U.S. Supreme Court because, it was alleged, such laws interfered with inter- state and foreign commerce—both of which constitutionally fall under the purview of the federal government.
In Mayor of the City of New York v. Miln, the court reaffirmed immigration (and the laws dealing with the subject) as “a power which rightfully belonged to the states.”
The court upheld the state’s sovereign right to regulate immigration into its borders.
Elite politicians and bankers secretly met at this club on Jekyll Island, in Georgia, to create a financial system that would enrich them and their buddies and enable them to consolidate political power.
Their plan soon after became the Federal Reserve. Here's how secret it was: 🧵
Senator Nelson Aldrich, chairman of the Senate finance committee, organized a trip disguised as a duck hunting expedition to Jekyll Island. The club was co-owned by JP Morgan, who could make sure no one would be present.
Aldrich invited a few NYC bankers and the asst. secretary of the treasury to this secret meeting and told them each to board a train, one by one, in New Jersey. He told others to use only their first names and to dress up in hunting clothing to conceal their true identities.
These men, who together represented an estimated 1/4 of the world’s wealth, spent the next week isolated in the Jekyll Island Club, working together to outline a central bank system that they could then get passed through Congress, using Aldrich’s influence.
In 1913, Woodrow Wilson signed the Federal Reserve Act into law, bringing the Creature from Jekyll Island to life—a private banking cartel that has since devalued the dollar by 97%+.
Ever wondered how a single lie could deceive Americans and drag the country into war?
I present, the story of Nayirah — a young lying girl, responsible for sooo many deaths. Sordid details in the 🧵
October 1990: Nayirah, a 15-year-old Kuwaiti girl, delivers harrowing testimony in front of Congress. Oxygen tanks unplugged, babies left to die—sounds horrific, right?
Well, Congress thought so, too. This testimony was a key factor in pushing the U.S. into the Gulf War.
👿 Plot Twist: Nayirah lied. None of it was true.
And guess what? She wasn't just any girl; she was the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador to the U.S.
The whole act was staged by a PR firm paid by the Kuwaiti government.