“I’m sure at Colorado Christian University, there are a lot of safe spaces right now,” said KLZ radio’s Dan Meurer in introducing an interview segment with guest host Jenna Ellis, an assistant professor of legal studies and leadership at CCU.
“No, there are not, and if any of my students wear a safety pin and ask for a safe space, I will tear it off them and fail them in my class,” replied Ellis, with a partial laugh. “And they know it too. We have no snowflakes on campus.”
“I love Colorado Christian University,” responded Meurer.
Ellis declined a request to explain or discuss her radio comments.
CCU is a private Christian University in Lakewood. It houses the Centennial Institute, a conservative think tank.
Ellis joined CCU last year as affiliate faculty, while still practicing law, and this year she became “full faculty,” as she defelops CCU’s “Legal Studies Program, geared to best prepare students for success and ministry in law school and legal practice,” according to the CCU website.
The university website describes Ellis as a “Christian attorney,” who has “endeavored to contribute to the biblical worldview of law, specifically Constitutional law.
“As a professor of legal studies and leadership courses, Dr. Ellis’s view is that biblical Truth is where we begin, and integrate the learning of law and leadership into our Christian worldview,” states the CCU website.
Ellis is the author of The Legal Basis for a Moral Constitution: A Guide for Christians to Understand America’s Constitutional Crisis, a book that “discusses why all law is inherently moral and the legal reasons that Christians can advocate for biblical morals within Constitutional law,” according to the CCU website.
After Trump’s victory last month, CCU President Don Sweeting issued a statement, which read, in part, “We acknowledge that the sphere of politics, while very important, is not of ultimate importance. The gospel of Jesus Christ must always be our first message. Our ultimate hope is the kingdom of God.”
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Compare and contrast:
I was going to point that out. Such a good "Christian" this person is. The Golden Rule only applies to the correct people apparently, and these "Christians" have some sort of rule book to determine who the good people are.
The problems for fundies like Ellis and Sweeting remain the same. Which god are they referring to? What if one doesn't believe in the concept of the Judeo/Christian/Islamic one god?
Well, in Denver, there is always The Broncos.
This lady's talking in white racist code for:
If someone wears a safety pin, they are declaring themselves an ally for minority students. They are declaring that they will speak up against bullying and racism. Granted,the safety pin thing is a bit silly, but the hearts are in the right place.
So Ellis doesn't want that. She'd prefer for everyone to be silent and "go along" with prevailing racist rants.
Secondly, when she says that there are no "snowflakes" on campus, that is Daily Stormer (white hate site) code for someone who is offended by racist, sexist, offensive terms. Feel free to check out the daily stormer site. (on an empty stomach, preferably). You may find that you, too, are a proud "snowflake".
A Guide to the Language of the 'alt-right'