Remember Dylann Roof?



Here’s how we documented his story at the time he shot up a black church in Charleston, SC.

One would think that having come of age during the presidency of the nation’s first black president, Roof and his contemporaries would be subjected to a virtual smorgasbord of diversity education, beginning from the time he entered kindergarten until he dropped out of high school in 2010. And in South Carolina public schools, he most certainly was.

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In an interview with CNN, Carson Cowles, an uncle of Roof’s said that of course the family was devastated by what had happened, and insisted that Roof’s mother “never raised him to be like this”. But at almost the minute Dylann Roof hit the schoolhouse door, his “training” began.

According to studies cited by the National Crime Prevention Council, “tolerance education” is most effective between the ages of 4-9. The study also claims that most children have formed stereotypes by the age of 12. In many states, including South Carolina, the South Carolina Bar Young Lawyers Division conducts tolerance programs for third and fourth graders. At a website called GreatSchools.org, high school history teachers, when talking about the Vietnam War to their students, are encouraged to “draw attention to perspectives” of the North as well as the South Vietnamese people, the feelings of soldiers on both sides, and the differing views on the war of the American people. No word on whether or not teachers are encouraged to discuss differing views of World War II from the perspective of both the Nazis and the Jews.

So where did all of this diversity training go wrong with Dylann Roof?