Quote:
Originally Posted by Oling_Roachinen
Unequivocally yes he did.
Pretty much no one deserves death threats. But fired? Of course he does. What happens if he's teaching a person who voted for Trump (in Florida no less)? He said that he believes they deserved to have their house flooded, be displaced, face dangerous conditions and potential death...you think he's going to treat them fairly?
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Here's the supposed original tweet.
“I don’t believe in instant Karma but this kinda feels like it for Texas. Hopefully this will help them realize the GOP doesn’t care about them,”
I don't see him wishing ill-will on any one. Nor in your follow-up tweet. He was speaking of karma, not wishing ill-will on anyone. Suggesting that someone has a dose of karma coming their way does not mean you wish ill one anyone. For example, you voted for a guy that would not support funding for those hit by a flood. Karma would then be that particular guy having to g hat in hand to ask for the exact same funding he denied to someone else. No ill-well there.
Do I think he is going to treat all people fairly? Yes, because he is an educator and a professional. As an educator you have people with all sorts of beliefs come into your classroom, and you are not going to agree with what they have to say. I know faculty that get lots of papers that they just outright disagree with, but you have to check your beliefs and ego at the door and grade the paper on the work presented, not on what you believe. I could have a student who is an Oiler fan come in and submit a paper on why the Oilers are the greatest team in the universe. I vehemently disagree with that premise, but I have to judge the paper on the research and work presented, not on what I believe or know to be true. I believe this person would do the same.