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Angela Yee
That's time for the Donkey of the Day. That's pretty funny.
DJ Envy
Charlamagne, the devil, possibly the Breakfast Club.
Charlamagne Tha God
Yes. Donkey of the day for Thursday, February 13th goes to the administration at Rollins Place Elementary School in Zachary, Louisiana. I wish I knew the teacher's name. I wish they released the teacher's name. I don't know why we protect people who do harm to children. Yes, this teacher at Rollins Place Elementary School mentally and emotionally harmed a child. I first want to send positive energy, love and light to Jamisha Augustine in Louisiana. Drop on the clues bombs for her. Okay? I am so sorry that your 6 year old had to deal with a lame ass teacher. And there's yet another reason why I think that if you can homeschool your kids, do it. Okay? My oldest homeschools right now. She homeschools right now because she wants to. And we are just in an era where these teachers, they just don't care like they used to. I'm not saying all of y'all, okay? There are still some great teachers out there. But as the son of a public school teacher, I understand the empathy, empathy and care one must have for kids in order to be a teacher. And a lot of y'all just don't have it. Okay? Do we understand we drop our most precious gift off to strangers every day. We entrust our hearts outside of our bodies. These souls that God used us to bring into the world. We drop them off every day for hours at a time with people we don't even really know. Okay, yeah, we know the teacher's names, but we don't know what type of time they really on. And that's why I have so much love for teachers who actually care, because they don't have to. But if you are going to be in that position as a teacher, you have to, okay? It's an act of public service. And this teacher at Rollins Place Elementary School, you failed. All right, who's grading you? Because you need to be left behind for what you made this six year old child do. What's the news network, Eddie? Aft afb.
Angela Yee
AFB as in boy.
Charlamagne Tha God
Let's go to WAFB for the report, please.
Jamesha Augustine
Jamesha Augustine is fuming with frustration after adults forced her six year old daughter to clean up feces following a potty accident in class. Augustine recalls filling out forms for no dairy. Despite the food allergy, her daughter consumed milk at school for breakfast. After drinking the milk and multiple trips to the bathroom, Augustine's daughter defecated on herself while in class. Augustine's fury came when she Recalls her daughter answering questions about what unfolded and the lesson they were trying to teach her child after having a reaction to something she's allergic to.
DJ Envy
You send a janitor in with the proper equipment to clean up, but a six year old kid, you're going to make her clean up poop without gloves or anything. But besides that, it's just disgraceful. It shouldn't be going on in our school. It shouldn't have never happened.
Jamesha Augustine
Augustine says again, when she enrolled her daughter in the school, she submitted doctor's notes about the dairy allergy. Augustine tells us she met with the school system to make sure they stand by what they say they're going to do.
Charlamagne Tha God
Amen. That teacher should have got beat up. All right. There's so much about this story that triggers me. Number one, I have four beautiful daughters, one in six right now. Number two, I am lactose intolerant. All right? I feel this young girl's pain when it comes to dairy. I don't even like looking at cows, okay? I totally understand why the chick fil a cow has been on a campaign for years to get people to consume more chicken. I can't do red meat because of my high cholesterol and I can't drink milk or consume any dairy products because it gives me the Hershey squirts, okay? Imagine when it's not much ketchup left in the bottle, so you squeezing it and it's coming out and squirts and it sounds like the bottle farting. You know what I'm talking about?
Angela Yee
We get it. We get it.
Charlamagne Tha God
Yeah. I can't do ice cream, milk, cheese, if I do any of that cold brown. All right? Backdoor sprint, bubble guts runs. When you walking up the ladder and you're hearing something splatter. Diarrhea. Diarrhea. So, yes, I feel this young lady's pain. And what I don't understand and why violence is often necessary. This mother, Jamisha Augustine, told the school her daughter had a dairy allergy. They didn't listen. This young girl kept having to go to the bathroom, okay? Because she drank some milk in the morning when she wasn't supposed to. If you a teacher and you're an adult, period, you know something about lactose intolerance, right? If you know anything about lactose intolerance, then you know this little girl wasn't playing. There is no such thing as telling a kid she's going to the bathroom too much when she has diarrhea. She couldn't control her bowels. But instead of having empathy and caring and being there for this young lady, you decided to tell her, no, enough is enough. And she ended up pooping all over herself. Kids are cruel. They will tease her relentlessly for this. Okay? And then you decided to make up. Make her clean up her own feces. Feces without gloves. Because you wanted to teach her a lesson. Nah, we got a squabble. We got the squabble. Jamisha, her mother should have came in that classroom and knocked. Knocked everything off your desk, okay? There's all of this one right arm, just. Just for dramatic effect. And then she should have knocked your head off, okay? You got a husband. That little girl. Daddy should find him and beat him up, too. No, no, no, no. You made my daughter clean up her own back door brownies with her bare hands. We all got a fight. Tag team. Back again. All right. Me and my wife against you and your husband. There is no way this woman can consider herself a good teacher. And if you are making your own daughter do things like this, then you not even a good parent. It was an accident. The young girl was experiencing something she couldn't control, and that something is diarrhea. How about let me make you a large McFlurry with ex lax, then make you drink some coffee, then make you take a shot of Hennessy, okay? That's always been a laxative for me. I even make you eat some Mexican cuisine, Okay? I make you do all that, and then let me prevent you from going to the bathroom. Now what? Let me tell you something, teachers. There's a good lesson to learn from Dr. Seuss, okay? The Lorax. Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It's not. You have to start caring about these kids. Please give Rollins Place Elementary School in Zachary, Louisiana, the biggest he haw. A person like that shouldn't even be teaching.
Angela Yee
That ain't funny.
Charlamagne Tha God
I'm not even joking. Because you have to care about these children. You ain't let this little girl go to the bathroom knowing she got diarrhea, knowing she lactose intolerant. And then you made her clean up feces with her bare hands. She's not fit to be a teacher.
Angela Yee
It don't matter if she was 10. It don't matter if she was 12. Like, no. Hell no. I'm with you, Charlemagne. Yeah, me and my wife, we got. We gotta go squabble up. Then call your mama and call your pops, because now Grandpa and Grandma want to come and squabble up, too. Like, we the whole family, squabbling up oh, yeah.
Charlamagne Tha God
Yeah.
Unknown
That's crazy.
Angela Yee
Could you have a six year old picking up diarrhea? Nah, I didn't even pick up diarrhea.
Unknown
I don't even like.
Angela Yee
No, you can't be liquid. Yeah, you gotta wipe it up with paper towels and tissue.
Charlamagne Tha God
You know what I'm saying?
Angela Yee
Oh, my gosh.
Unknown
That's why my baby is homeschooled now. I ain't got time.
Angela Yee
Your baby is what you mean?
Unknown
I ain't talking about Marley. I'm talking about Ashton.
Charlamagne Tha God
Oh, all right.
Angela Yee
You said my baby. Ashton's a damn near grown ass man.
Charlamagne Tha God
They grow up fast in Baltimore. Molly 12 right now.
Angela Yee
Molly 12.
Unknown
First of all, she definitely about to be six months, but yes, I can't. Yo schools are just. It's not it for me.
Angela Yee
All right, well, thank you for that. Donkey Today.
Charlamagne Tha God
Donkey of the Day is sponsored by renowned personal injury attorney Michael the Bull. Lamb and soft. Don't be a donkey when you need a fighter on your side. If you're ever injured, go to Michael the Bull Dot Com. That's Michael the Bull Dot Com. And when you mess with the bull, you get the horns. Wake that ass up early in the morning. The Breakfast Club. Oh, oh, oh. O'Reilly.
Unknown
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Charlamagne Tha God
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Podcast Summary: The Breakfast Club - "DONKEY: Child With Dairy Allergy Forced To Clean Up Feces At School After Drinking Milk"
Episode Information:
In this poignant episode of The Breakfast Club, hosts DJ Envy, Angela Yee, and Charlamagne Tha God delve into a troubling incident at Rollins Place Elementary School in Zachary, Louisiana. The episode centers around Jamisha Augustine’s six-year-old daughter, who suffered emotional and physical distress after being forced to clean up her own feces following a dairy allergy-related incident at school.
Charlamagne Tha God introduces the story, condemning the school's administration for their mishandling of the situation:
“Donkey of the day for Thursday, February 13th goes to the administration at Rollins Place Elementary School in Zachary, Louisiana... this teacher at Rollins Place Elementary School mentally and emotionally harmed a child.”
(00:08)
Report from WAFB:
Jamesha Augustine recounts the harrowing experience:
“After drinking the milk and multiple trips to the bathroom, Augustine's daughter defecated on herself while in class. adulta then forced her to clean up the mess without proper equipment.”
(01:51)
Charlamagne expresses deep frustration and anger towards the teacher's actions:
“If you are going to be in that position as a teacher, you have to... it’s an act of public service. And this teacher at Rollins Place Elementary School, you failed.”
(00:50)
He further criticizes the lack of empathy and understanding from the teacher, emphasizing the importance of care in the teaching profession:
“We entrust our hearts outside of our bodies... But if you are going to be in that position as a teacher, you have to, okay? It's an act of public service.”
(00:35)
DJ Envy reinforces Charlamagne's sentiments, highlighting the inappropriateness of the situation:
“You send a janitor in with the proper equipment to clean up, but a six-year-old kid, you're going to make her clean up poop without gloves or anything. It shouldn’t be going on in our schools.”
(02:25)
Charlamagne connects personally to the issue, sharing his own experiences and empathy:
“I have four beautiful daughters, one in sixth right now. Number two, I am lactose intolerant... I feel this young girl's pain when it comes to dairy.”
(02:25)
He humorously touches on his own struggles with lactose intolerance to underscore his understanding:
“I can't drink milk or consume any dairy products because it gives me the Hershey squirts... when you're hearing something splatter. Diarrhea.”
(03:24)
Charlamagne discusses the broader implications for the teaching profession, emphasizing the need for empathy and responsibility:
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. You have to start caring about these kids.”
(05:50)
He underscores that teachers have a significant impact on children's lives and must uphold high standards of care and compassion.
The hosts and listeners show solidarity with Jamisha Augustine and her daughter, condemning the school's administration and advocating for homeschooling as a safer alternative:
“If you can homeschool your kids, do it. My oldest homeschools right now. She homeschools right now because she wants to.”
(00:50)
Angela Yee echoes the outrage, dismissing the appropriateness of making a child clean up after herself:
“Could you have a six-year-old picking up diarrhea? Nah, you can't be liquid. You gotta wipe it up with paper towels and tissue.”
(06:00)
Listeners share personal anecdotes, reinforcing the collective disapproval of the incident and support for affected families.
Charlamagne wraps up the segment by reiterating the necessity for compassion in education:
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not. You have to start caring about these kids.”
(05:50)
He calls for accountability, urging that such individuals should not continue in teaching roles:
“Give Rollins Place Elementary School in Zachary, Louisiana, the biggest he haw. A person like that shouldn't even be teaching.”
(05:50)
Angela Yee and DJ Envy conclude by affirming their support for Jamisha Augustine and condemning the inappropriate actions of the school's administration, emphasizing the need for systemic changes to protect children’s well-being in educational settings.
Lack of Empathy in Education: The incident highlights a troubling lack of empathy and understanding from a teacher towards a child with specific medical needs.
Importance of Parental Vigilance: Parents must remain vigilant and proactive in ensuring their children's safety and well-being within educational environments.
Advocacy for Homeschooling: The discussion advocates for homeschooling as a viable and safer alternative for families facing inadequate support within public school systems.
Call for Accountability: The hosts emphasize the need for holding educators accountable to maintain high standards of care and professionalism.
Community Solidarity: There is a strong sense of community support for affected families, emphasizing collective action against systemic failures.
Notable Quotes:
Charlamagne Tha God:
“If you are going to be in that position as a teacher, you have to... it’s an act of public service.”
(00:35)
DJ Envy:
“You send a janitor in with the proper equipment to clean up, but a six-year-old kid, you're going to make her clean up poop without gloves or anything.”
(02:25)
Charlamagne Tha God:
“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better.”
(05:50)
Angela Yee:
“Could you have a six-year-old picking up diarrhea? Nah, you can't be liquid.”
(06:00)
This episode of The Breakfast Club serves as a stark reminder of the critical role educators play in children's lives and the dire consequences that can result from a lack of compassion and understanding within educational institutions.