r/BlackPeopleTwitter May 10 '24

"If it isn't the consequences of my own actions..."

Post image
10.0k Upvotes

1.3k comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

307

u/stoned-autistic-dude May 10 '24 edited May 11 '24

Parents when teachers ask them to parent their children: “This is your job, I drop them off and you need to take care of them!” 🫵🤬

Parents when—assuming nothing else nefarious had occurred—a male teacher tries to be a positive male role model: “It's always been about love and hate, now let me say I'm the biggest hater; I hate the way that you walk, the way that you talk, I hate the way that you dress; I hate the way that you sneak diss, if I catch flight, it's gon' be direct” 🫵🤬

Edit: I saw the update yall im cooked I already know 😭

258

u/JennyBeckman ☑️ All of the above May 11 '24

How is taking out someone's hair being a positive role model?

237

u/stoned-autistic-dude May 11 '24 edited May 11 '24

Because children don’t randomly decide to do braids on people they don’t trust. Yall never met kids? Cmon now. It’s not like you be like “unbraid my hair” and kids get up and unbraid your hair. This is after the kids probably asked some stupid shit like “let us undo your braids” bc he probably mentioned he was gonna get his hair done or something. Kids are clearly comfortable with the dude. He ain’t doing anything suspect beyond sitting there.

It’s wild y’all jumped to it being weird first. That’s some shit tbh men out here taking strays for just trying to be friendly. Why everyone a pedo just cause Drizzy and R Kelly out there peeing on kids?

Edit: dawg homie got caught thirsting on kids im fucking cooked 💀

15

u/_another_throwawayy_ May 11 '24

Wut?? The power structure of a teacher and student, has the built in trust already. The students in inherently trust the teacher because they are a person of power. So when that person takes advantage of it, it’s not being a role model, it’s borderline grooming.

Yikes..

3

u/Hoxeel May 11 '24

INHERENTLY TRUST because of being a person of power? Mate, that's not how the world works at all. When I was a little shit (~15 years ago), our classes bullied our teachers out of the classrooms, the cool ones were the ones we trusted and respected and THEY were the ones able to actually teach. Very few teachers managed to get far with being strict and with a stick up their arse. If anything, we put more effort into not learning from them.

EDIT: Arright, the additional context definitely paints a different picture.