Texas: black supremacist loses teaching job over online posts
The Mesquite school district discovered that one of its workers was spreading anti-white hate speech through X.
The Mesquite school district in Dallas County, Texas, has fired one of its teachers after finding out that she was a self-confessed black supremacist and racist. According to the school district and local media reports, the teacher in question had an alter ego on social media through which she spread hateful messages.
The teacher, who called herself Claire Kyle on social media, worked at Thompson Elementary School until this week. School district officials launched an investigation into the teacher after being alerted by network users. On Tuesday, through a statement, the school district announced that Claire Kyle was no longer part of the teaching staff at its schools, nor would she ever be again. Through the photo she used on Twitter, several media out lets have revealed that she is Danielle Allen, a 29-year-old Texas teacher.
She hated her sister's white boyfriend
The teacher, of African-American ethnicity, deleted her X (Twitter) accounts, but several media managed to save some screenshots of the hate messages spread on the platform. Among them, the criticisms she makes of her sister for dating a white man, whom she wishes to die.
"Like I'm baffled AF (as f--k) seeing a White man in my house. I can't believe it!! This is supposed to be a [Black-person-only] house. I'm so mad right now!!," Fox News captures. "MY SIS LETTING ALL OF EUROPE TAKE TURNS ON HER!!! The disappointment I feel right now!!!! Our parents raised us better than this!!!!"
"I love being racist," she wrote on social networks. "I'm never going to change." In another message, of which Fox News has the screenshot, X user Claire Kyle is looking for a partner and defines herself as pro black-male and black supremacist.
Several local media attempted to obtain statements from the teacher, but she refused to respond to the press. The Mesquite district, east of Dallas serves nearly 38,000 students.