A substitute teacher from Florida declared herself a “million-dollar whore” and began dancing in front of her students.
“Investigators said they learned that before their arrival, Jordan had been yelling, slamming her hands on desks, making inappropriate statements to students and ‘twerking’ in class,” local media reports said. “This included telling students she would engage in sexual activities with them and referring to herself as a ‘million dollar whore.'”
When police arrived at Lake Minneola High School in Florida about 10:20 a.m. Monday, “the deputy found the deputy — identified as Angela Faith Jordan — yelling ‘incoherently,’ [the police] ‘He should be put in jail for the rest of his life’.”
A student claims that after the bell rang and she tried to leave the room, Jordan assaulted her, called her “derogatory names” and grabbed her neck.
Before the police arrived, the assistant principal attempted to get Ms. Jordan to leave, but she refused.
Authorities say Jordan is charged with misdemeanor charges of “disorderly conduct, simple assault and two counts of disrupting a school function.”
Here is the most interesting news…
“The case report shows Jordan has a history of bipolar disorder.”
What?
Why was someone with bipolar disorder allowed in class? Why was he appointed as a replacement?
As a Catholic, I was horrified by cases of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church and had no problem speaking out against those who whitewashed it. Why? Because 1) what happened was obscene and indefensible, and 2) I love the Catholic Church and want the cancer to go away.
And yet, people who claim to love public education and public schools and teachers continue to pretend that there is no very serious sex problem in the public school system.
daily Mail recently explored the issue and found that “25 female teachers have been arrested in 16 states in the last 12 months alone – and this is likely to be only the tip of the iceberg as there is no centralized data collection to track this disturbing trend.”
This news is even scarier: “According to their estimates, 80 percent of teachers who abuse students are still predominantly men.”
Now do the math…if those 25 female teachers alone account for 20 percent of sexual misconduct in public schools, you’re looking at about 125 incidents per year.
And now we have this latest case in Florida that may not have involved sexual abuse, but it was certainly a highly erotic situation and breakdown.
What is the culture in the school system that gives rise to all these incidents of sexual abuse and misconduct? What’s wrong with the employment screening process? Where does this sense of authority come from that tells these teachers that this behavior is okay?
Homeschool, y’all.