From the Indiana Star:
Indiana University Health is investigating a controversial tweet allegedly sent by a nurse who works for the organization. The tweet, from an account named Night Nurse that has been linked to an employee named Taiyesha Baker, said:
"Every white woman raises a detriment to society when they raise a son. Someone with the HIGHEST propensity to be a terrorist, rapist, racist, killer, and domestic violence all star. Historically every son you had should be sacrificed to the wolves Bitch"
The account, @tai_fieri, was deleted and appears to have been recreated by a different user who posted new tweets Saturday.
IU Health spokesman Jason Fechner confirmed that Baker worked for the health system when the tweet was posted. He said human resources is investigating and will take appropriate action based on what it finds. He did not elaborate on the protocol for the investigation.
“IU Health is aware of several troubling posts on social media which appear to be from a recently hired IU Health employee," Fechner said in a statement. "Our HR department continues to investigate the situation and the authenticity of the posts. During the investigation, that employee (who does not work at Riley Hospital for Children) will have no access to patient care.”The best the Indiana Star can manage is to say the Tweets are controversial.
They ought not be the least controversial.
They are downright genocidal.
UPDATE
THE BITCH WAS FIRED
6 comments:
As a registered nurse.... my thoughts:
https://thelastenglishprince.wordpress.com/2017/11/26/taking-and-keeping-an-oath/
Race hatred. This is Obama's sad legacy
Fired. https://nypost.com/2017/11/27/nurse-loses-job-over-post-suggesting-sons-of-white-women-be-sacrificed/
Reading the link, I am unsure "why" she was licensed in October, unless she was obtaining a license in a state that is not under the nursing compact, does not have reciprocity.
If she is a new nurse, an October license issue seems troubling. Did she not pass her initial R.N. license exam? The exams are not taken online at a testing center. Back in the day, I spent two days in Fort Worth, Texas taking my exam with pencil and paper.
Reverse the races-- do you think dismissal wouldn't have happened in a nanosecond if it was a white person saying the same thing? But they "reviewed" the situation for a while. What would the outrage have looked like if the hospital had said they were "reviewing" the situation if a white nurse had done the same thing?
Fired, huh?
I just hope that, somewhere along the way, she wasn't responsible for the death of patients.
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