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“Burn this B*tch to the Ground”: Chicago Public Schools Promotes Video Defending Rioting, Looting During 2020 [WATCH]

Are you still sending your kids to a government school where some moron with a septum piercing and blue hair can prattle on to them about changing their gender and how evil white people are?

Well, to be clear, that’s a mistake if you can in any way avoid it. Those teachers are crazy and their lesson plans, when leaked, seem like what a gay, black version of Karl Marx would come up with. I guess the gay, black Karl Marx would just be BLM’s “trained Marxist” leadership, however, so that makes sense, as many schools got totally on board with what BLM was pushing during the summer of 2020, when it set the country alight and looted store after store following the death of George Floyd.

And nowhere has that been more clear than Chicago Public Schools, as the Chicago Public School’s Office of Equity posted, on June 24, 2022, a video titled “How Can We Win” to its “tools” section.

Watch that horrific video, one that cheers the rioting and looting that took place during 2020 and even diminishes the outrage and claims of those whose lives were ruined by the riots, here:

As you can hear in the video, Jones opens by saying that she has heard from “wealthy black people” and that those wealthy blacks have said that “we should not be tearing up our own communities” and instead “should be hitting them in the pocket, we should be focusing on blackout dates where we don’t spend money.

The “them” there is presumably white people.

But that wasn’t radical enough for Jones, who continued on, saying that while that was a good idea, rioting and looting were needed too. In her words:

But, you know, I feel like we should do both, and I feel like I support both.

“And I’ll tell you why I support both. I support both because there’s when you have a civil unrest like this, there are three types of people in the streets. There are the protesters, there are the rioters, and there are the looters.

“The protesters are there because they actually care about what is happening in the community. They want to raise their voices and they’re strictly to protest. You have the rioters who are angry, who are anarchists, who really just want to f*ck shit up, and that’s what they’re going to do regardless. And then you have the looters, and the looters almost exclusively are just there to do that, to loot.

She then turned to defending those looters, saying:

Some people are like, ‘well, those aren’t people who are legitimately angry about what’s happening. Those are people who just want to get stuff.’ Okay, well then, let’s go with that. Let’s say that’s what it is. “The financial gap between poor blacks and the rest of the world is at such a distance that people feel like their only hope and only opportunity to get some of the things that we flaunt and flash in front of them all the time is to walk through a broken glass window and get it.”

Continuing and explaining why she’s okay with looting and rioting, justifying it by saying that poor blacks don’t own anything, Jones went on to say:

We must never forget that economics was the reason that black people were brought to this country. We came to do the agricultural work in the south and the textile work in the north. You understand that? That’s what we came to do.

“Now if I right now, if I right now decided that I wanted to play Monopoly with you, and for 400 rounds of playing Monopoly I didn’t allow you to have any money, I didn’t allow you to have anything on the board, I didn’t allow for you to have anything. And then we played another 50 rounds of Monopoly and everything that you gained and you earned while you’re playing that round of Monopoly was taken from you. That was Tulsa. That was Rosewood. Those are places where we built black economic wealth, where we were self sufficient, where we owned our stores, where we owned our property, and they burned them to the ground.

And then finally at the release and the onset of that they allow you to play and they say, ‘Okay, now you catch up.’ Now at this point, the only way you’re going to catch up in the game is that the person shares but wealth, correct? But when every time you share the wealth, then there’s psychological warfare against you to say, Oh, you’re an equal opportunity hire.

“How can you win? How can you win? You can’t win. The game is fixed. “So when they say, ‘why do you burn down the community? Why do you burn down your own neighborhood?’ It’s not ours. We don’t own anything. We don’t own anything.

True economic genius coming out of her. Perhaps she can teach at Harvard, assuming she and her associates don’t burn it down first.

In any case, she then continued her rant and finally got to her main point: an outright justification of looting and claim that it’s okay because “the social contract is broken.” In her words:

So the social contract is broken. And if the social contract is broken, why the f*ck do I give a sh*t about burning the f*cking Football Hall of Fame? About burning a f*cking target? You broke the contract when you killed us in the streets and didn’t give a f*ck. You broke the contract for over 400 years. We played your game and build your wealth. You broke the contract when we built our wealth again, on our own, by our bootstraps in Tulsa, and you dropped bombs on us. When we built it in Rosewood, and you came and you slaughtered us? You broke the contract.

So f*ck your target. F*ck your hall of fame. Far as I’m concerned they could burn this b*tch to the ground and it still wouldn’t be enough, and they are lucky that what black people are looking for is equality and not revenge.

Originally posted to YouTube, the video’s description is of much the same tone and content, stating:

“On Saturday May 30th filmmaker and photographer David Jones of David Jones Media felt compelled to go out and serve the community in some way. He decided to use his art to try and explain the events that were currently impacting our lives.

“On day two, Sunday the 31st, he activated his dear friend author Kimberly Jones to tag along and conduct interviews. During a moment of downtime he captured these powerful words from her and felt the world couldn’t wait for the full length documentary, they needed to hear them now.”

So that’s what the public school system in Chicago is sharing. Escape from cities, escape from government schools.

By: Gen Z Conservative, editor of GenZConservative.com. Follow me on Facebook and Subscribe to My Email List

Image Credit: Rumble Screengrab

This story syndicated with permission from Gen Z Conservative