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Professors, Queen II. They supported Professor Carnegie Mellon, who wished Elizabeth a “tortured” death.

Thousands of university professors, Queen of England II. Describing Elizabeth as a “poor woman” and a “genocidal colonialist”, Carnegie Mellon University professor signed an open letter in support of Uju Ani, saying “Let her illness be painful” in response to the news. the queen’s poor health shortly before her death last week.

The professors echoed Anya’s comments in their letters and Queen Elizabeth II. He wrote that Elizabeth “is seated on an indigenous and black-blooded throne embedded in the common heritage of the British monarchy” and that “her de facto government led and directly contributed to a genocide”. Dr.’s parents, brothers and sisters barely survived. Anya.

Queen of England in 1952. Portrait of Elizabeth wearing a crown and sash of the Order of the Garder.

Professor Anya tweeted: “I heard that the supreme ruler of the empire of thief, rape and genocide is finally dying. Let his illness be painful.”

In a continued tweet, the professor added: “This wretched woman and her bloodthirsty throne held hands with generations of my ancestors on both sides of the family and led a government that supported the genocide endured by my family and brothers. May she die in pain.”

“The Doctor. Anya tweeted her feelings about the Queen’s death,” the letter reads. “As a black woman born in Nigeria whose family was directly affected by the insidious effects of British imperialism, genocide and white supremacy, Dr. shared her illness on her personal Twitter account.”

The letter, calling Anya a “world-renowned” professor, was written by Chelsea R. Carter of Yale University, Nelson Flores of the University of Pennsylvania, Sirri Alang of the University of Pittsburgh, and Crystal M. Fleming of Stony Brook University. and Adiya Benton of Northwestern University and Research Associate Dick Powys of the University of South Florida.

“The term colonial, when in public discourse, may seem like an abstract term that people only read about in history books, veteran Dr. There are echoes of colonial white supremacy in the letter,” said the veteran Dr.

“Queen Elizabeth II is literally, not figuratively, her colonizer and colonizer of millions of people around the world, particularly African countries, Caribbean and Indian Ocean lands,” the letter added.

“For more than 70 years, Queen Elizabeth II’s imperial rule has been inextricably linked with the legacy of the British Empire’s commitment to white supremacy and colonialism,” the professor wrote in his letter.

Professors attacked Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who responded to Anya’s tweet: “Is this someone who seems to be working to make the world a better place? I don’t think so. Wow.”

Anya responded by tweeting “Otoro gba gbue gi” to Bezos, which means “You could die from excessive dirt.”

He added, “May all who have harmed you and your cruel greed remember you in this world as I remember my colonists.”

In their letters, the professors accused Bezos of “insulting”.[ing]The attack on Anya and a “black Nigerian-Trinidadian-American professor.”

The letter also claims that Bezos himself “is no different from the colonial project of the British monarchy” and “simply confused the colonial order with neoliberal capitalism of race, exploitation and greed”.

Carnegie Mellon University professors also pointed out that the Amazon founder donated Bezos to the university, pointing out that Anya’s Queen II. He accused her of condemning her tweets about Elizabeth.

“This financial document is directly related to Professor Anya’s treatment and subsequent statement by the university,” the letter said. “Now Dr. Anya faces serious threats, harassment and abuse.”

The professors made it their mission to warn the Institution, “the black woman professor’s reactions to her life experience of the real and tangible consequences of colonialism and white supremacy, describing them as “offensive and undesirable.”

“This is unacceptable and inhumane,” they added.

The letter concluded with a call to Carnegie Mellon officials to provide “active support” to Professor Anya and to “consider the repeated harm in the classroom when they both decided to evade critical discourse and sided with the oppressed will.”

More than 4,000 people signed the professors’ letter.

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Source: Breitbart

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