Thursday, March 7, 2019

Virginia High School Increases Security After ‘MAGA’ Flag Video Goes Viral

A video circulating on social media that appears to show a teacher’s assistant at Tabb High School in Yorktown, Virginia, wrapping a Trump 2020 “Make America Great Again” flag a student wore as a cape around his neck while other students in the classroom laugh. The viral video resulted in the school calling for a “modified lockdown” and canceling after school activities.

In the viral video, a student can be seen wearing a “MAGA” flag as a cape while a teacher’s assistant appears to wrap the flag around the student’s neck. His classmates can be heard laughing in the background, according to a report by ABC 8 News.

The York County School Division says that it is aware of the video being circulated online “depicting an interaction between a para-educator and a student,” adding that the school division takes the matter seriously.

https://www.breitbart.com/tech/2019/03/07/virginia-high-school-increases-security-after-maga-flag-video-goes-viral/

Taft High School address.......

"4431 Big Bethel Rd, Yorktown, VA 23693" = 138 (Full Reduction)

(138 Full Reduction)
August eleventh two thousand nineteen
one thousand four hundred forty
eight hundred eighty eight
eighty eight miles per hour
three point one four one five
three hundred and sixty degrees
November sixth twenty eighteen
national emergency proclamation
national emergency dialing code
To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee
The crucifixion of Jesus Christ
The assassination of Donald John Trump

Tabb High School is a public high school located in Tabb, an unincorporated community in southern York County, Virginia, United States. It is part of the York County School Division. The school opened in 1972 and is located near the site of one of the first land battles of the US Civil War, the Battle of Big Bethel.

The Battle of Big Bethel was one of the earliest land battles of the American Civil War. It took place on the Virginia Peninsula, near Newport News, on June 10, 1861.

Virginia's decision to secede from the Union had been ratified by popular vote on May 23, and Confederate Col. (later Maj. Gen.) John B. Magruder was sent down the peninsula to deter any advance on the state capital Richmond by Union troops based at the well-defended post of Fort Monroe. This garrison was commanded by Maj Gen. Benjamin Butler, a former Massachusetts lawyer and politician, who established a new camp at nearby Hampton and another at Newport News. Magruder had also established two camps, within range of the Union lines, at Big Bethel and Little Bethel, as a lure to draw his opponent into a premature action.

Claim as first land battle of the American Civil War
Big Bethel was one of the first Civil War land battles both in present-day Virginia and in the war after the bombardment and surrender of Fort Sumter. Although arguments have been made that either the Battle of Philippi, on June 3, 1861, in present-day West Virginia (then part of Virginia) or the Battle of Big Bethel was the first land battle of the entire war, the Battle of Fairfax Court House (June 1861) took place in Fairfax County, Virginia on June 1, 1861, two days earlier than the Battle of Philippi and nine days before the Battle of Big Bethel. Historian David J. Eicher discounts both the Battle of Fairfax Court House and the Battle of Philippi as "mere skirmishes" and says the first "real land battle of the conflict" was the Battle of Big Bethel, although after a brief summary of the Battle of Big Bethel he characterizes the early Civil War engagements without apparent distinction as "these first minor skirmishes." The Baltimore riot of April 19, 1861 might also be considered a small Civil War battle, with several killed and wounded on each side, but the Confederate side in the affair was a civilian mob, not an organized military force like the force the mob attacked, which was several companies of the 6th Massachusetts Militia. Civilian mobs also were engaged with military forces in two similar riots in St. Louis in the early days of the war after the surrender of Fort Sumter. Compared to the large battles to come, all the engagements before the Battle of First Bull Run (Battle of First Manassas) are fairly characterized as mere skirmishes.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Big_Bethel




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