presstv.ir <http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/11/12/437379/US-racial-chaos>  

PressTV-‘US in free fall state of racial chaos’

 

Racial tensions across the US is facing a downward spiral and becoming 
difficult to control, highlighted by the latest protests against racism on US 
college campuses, a researcher and historian in Washington says.

“The United States is in a free fall state of racial chaos,” said Dr. Randy 
Short, who has a Ph.D in African studies.

 

There is a significant number of racist white people in the US who like to 
“engage in acts of genocide against African American people,” Dr. Short said in 
an interview with Press TV on Thursday.

“America is in a lot of trouble and people need to have to work together or 
you’re going to see just really unnecessary violence, bloodshed and discord,” 
he added.

University students across the US will hold protests this week against racism 
on college campuses, prompted by protests over the rising number of racist 
incidents against black students at the University of Missouri.

Peaceful marches and walkouts have been held or are planned at Yale University 
in New Haven, Connecticut, Ithaca College in Ithaca, New York and Smith College 
in Northampton, Massachusetts.

A crowd of more than 1,000 gathered peacefully at the Afro-American Cultural 
Center at Yale University for a "March of Resilience," in solidarity with black 
students at the University of Missouri located in Columbia, Missouri.

A walkout is also planned at Ithaca College "for all the injustices students of 
color face on this campus and other colleges nationally," a student group 
called People of Color at the private university announced on its Facebook page.

Students at Smith College, a women's private school, plan a similar walkout on 
Wednesday. Some schools, like the University of Michigan, are taking preventive 
steps to address racial inequality..

However, none of those protests have yet reached the intensity of 
demonstrations at Missouri, where hundreds of students and teachers have 
protested what they see as soft handling of reports of racial abuse on campus.

Shortly after, University of Missouri president Timothy Wolfe, announced he 
would step down as president of the university on Monday.

Students have pointed to several recent events on campus that underscore a 
hostile environment for black students. Student government president Payton 
Head, who is black, said in September that people in a passing pickup truck 
shouted racial slurs at him.

The protests come more than a year after a white police officer in Ferguson, 
Missouri, fatally shot Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, sparking 
widespread demonstrations across the US.

Ferguson, a suburb of St. Louis, is about 116 miles (186 km) from the 
University of Missouri campus in Columbia.

 

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