BEWARE...SOME DAYS ARE NOT VERY PRETTY. I GET CRABBY LIKE NORMAL PEOPLE DO. AND I DO SPEAK MY MIND.
DO NOT READ IF YOU ARE SENSITIVE TO TRUE, REAL, EVERYDAY FEELINGS LIKE MINE.(But I think you would enjoy it)
DON'T FORGET...FREEDOM OF SPEECH !
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
Principal refuses to allow first black valedictorian to give speech, so Rochester mayor intervenes
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Principal refuses to allow first black valedictorian to give speech, so Rochester mayor intervenes
Jaissaan Lovett says he was denied a chance to give
his speech as his high school's first black valedictorian, so his city's
mayor invited him to give it at City Hall.
Youtube/City of Rochester, N.Y. Mayor's Office
When
Jaissaan Lovett graduated last month as his high school's first black
valedictorian, he prepared a speech — but he says his principal wouldn't
let him give it. So someone else stepped in who wanted to hear what he
had to say: the mayor of Rochester, New York, Lovely Warren. Not only
that, she gave him a much wider audience for his message.
Lovett
said he was never asked to give a graduation speech, though past
valedictorians had gotten to, according to the newspaper. When he asked
to speak anyway, he said the principal, Joseph Munno, said no.
"He
didn't want to see the speech or what it said, nothing," Lovett told
the Democrat and Chronicle. "He just said no." The paper said Munno
declined to comment.
Mayor Warren invited Lovett, who works in her
office as an intern, to deliver the speech at City Hall. She then
posted it on her YouTube channel and Facebook page.
Jaisaan Lovett's Valedictorian Speech by
City of Rochester, NY .Mayor's Office on
YouTube"Unfortunately, Jaisaan's school did not
allow him to give his valedictorian speech," Warren said in the video.
"For some reason, his school – in a country where freedom of speech is a
constitution right, and the city of Frederick Douglass – turned his
moment of triumph into a time of sorrow and pain.
"Jaisaan will
never graduate from high school again. He will never get that moment
back. This is not the time to punish a child because you may not like
what he has to say."
Lovett had his own message for his principal, too.
"I'm
here as the UPrep 2018 valedictorian to tell you that you couldn't
break me. I'm still here, and I'm still here strong," Lovett said in the
video. "And after all these years, all this anger I've had toward you
and UPrep as a whole, I realized I had to let that go in order to better
myself."
The school's board of trustees responded to the
controversy in a Facebook post, saying they're "aware of the concern"
and will be "reviewing the circumstances regarding what happened." They
wished Lovett "much success as he continues his education at Clark
Atlanta University, which he will attend on full scholarship, according
to the Democrat and Chronicle.
UPrep, an all-male school serving grades 7-12, is one of
Rochester's best regarded charter schools, according to the Democrat and
Chronicle, with annual graduation rates well above 90 percent.
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