Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Far-Right Student Leader Slammed For Racist Post Mocking Murder Of Black UVA Students

Meg Miller with Kyle Rittenhouse; Meg Miller
@megannclaire/Instagram

University of Missouri students are outraged after White student Meg Miller, President of the university's chapter of Turning Points USA, posted on social media appearing to celebrate the murders of Black football players at the University of Virginia.

A University of Missouri student is rightly facing backlash from the student community for a blatantly and violently racist social media post made shortly after the shooting murder of 3 Black football players at the University of Virginia.

Miller's statement wasn't mild in any sense of the word, and the student backlash makes perfect sense—she advocated for more violence against Black students.


She posted a photo of her face while lying in bed with the caption:

"If they would have killed 4 more [n-words] we would have had the whole week off."

Screenshot of tweet from Isaac Stanley-Becker: "The president of the University of Missouri chapter of Turning Point USA appears to celebrate the killing of black UVA students and suggest it didn't go far enough. University says it's investigating." Below the text there are screenshots of the Instagram account of Meg Miller, the racist post, and a tweet from Turning Point USA announcing Miller's rise to chapter president.@isaacstanbecker/Twitter

Miller was, until recently, the chapter president of the local Turning Point USA (TPUSA) group. According to the Anti-Defamation League, TPUSA is "linked to a variety of extremists."

The organization is at least partly responsible for spreading the "Great Replacement" conspiracy theory—the assertion there is some grand plan for people of color to somehow replace White people—which featured heavily in the manifesto of the person responsible for killing 10 Black people in a grocery store in Buffalo, New York earlier this year.

According to Turning Point USA, Miller quit their organization suddenly without informing them about her incredibly racist statement.

"This individual quit the club without explanation last week and didn't report the incident to any field staff, nor have any chapter members from the school been able to contact her since."
"In fact, the national organization is only finding out about this now."

They further claimed:

"This kind of language has no place at TPUSA, and we support her decision to remove herself from all involvement with that local chapter."

Miller may have dropped all involvement with TPUSA, but students at her university are calling for her expulsion for her racist post.

The Kansas City Defender—according to their website a "nonprofit digital startup producing news, digital tools and public services for Black people across the midwest"—spoke with Black student leaders about how Miller's comment affected their community.

Kaylyn Walker the Vice Chair of Social Justice for the Missouri Student Association—the university's undergraduate student government—and Senator with the Legion for Black Collegians commented on the situation

They said:

"The Black Mizzou [University of Missouri] community is very close and we have a groupchat."
"The screenshot was sent in the groupchat by one of our members."
"Everyone immediately went into action saying who is this girl, what can we do, this is horrific."
"Eventually we found her Instagram, went to her snapchat. When she saw we were flooding to her Instagram she went private and started blocking people."

The university didn't really respond to students voicing their concerns though.

So students chose to take things online.

"People who had reached out to our administration were all getting the same auto-generated response. We were upset that we weren’t getting actual responses from an actual human being administrator."
"That’s why we went to Twitter to start tagging faculty because we could tell this wasn’t being taken as seriously as it should be."
"Obviously the first emotion we felt was anger."
"We were of course angry she said it, but even more outraged at how the administration is handling it."

Twitter users were rightly horrified by Miller's comment.




Miller's social media presence is quite problematic outside of the one specific comment as well.

Various photos show her posing with rifles, dead animals she presumably hunted and none other than Kyle Rittenhouse—the man who shot and killed 2 men in Kenosha, Wisconsin and wounded another during protests that arose after the police shooting of Jacob Blake.

In addition, she referred to herself as a "Pro-Life Advocate" in her Instagram bio, despite openly advocating for the murder of Black students.

When reached out to for comment by Kansas City Defender, the University of Missouri did not respond.

They did release a statement, though:

"University of Missouri officials have been alerted to reports of a racist post by an MU student. The information was referred to the MU Office of Institutional Equity."

Mun Choi, president of the University of Missouri, said:

"This language is reprehensible, and we condemn any language and actions that are racist, discriminatory and hateful to our community."

The official statement concluded:

"Following the review, the university will take appropriate action."

It remains to be seen what the university will determine the "appropriate action" to be, but students aren't surprised by their response to threats of potential violence.

Walker said:

"This happens everyday on our campus. People feel unsafe, unvalued, unloved. We are all banding together."
"This is a reoccurring thing, none of us have gotten any response whatsoever from the administration."
"Nothing from an actual person. Those auto-generated responses are the only updates we’ve gotten so far."

The university's Black students aren't willing to just let it go, though.

They deserve to feel safe—and actually be safe—on their campus.

"Whatever it requires, protests, town halls, strikes, we are going to do whatever it takes to make the campus safer for people of color.

More from Trending

Flavor Flav
Bryan Steffy - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

Flavor Flav's 'Spirit Is Broken' After NBC Kicked Him Out Of Backstage Area At Tree Lighting

Rap icon Flavor Flav was dispirited by the way NBC treated him in a backstage area at the tree lighting ceremony at Rockefeller Center on Wednesday.

The 65-year-old cofounder of the rap group Public Enemy said he was kicked out for no reason.

Keep ReadingShow less
Lindsey Graham; Pete Hegseth
Fox News, Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Lindsey Graham Mocked For Instantly Flip-Flopping On Pete Hegseth Appointment: 'None Of It Counts'

Lindsey Graham doing a swift 180 on his initially negative assessment of beleaguered Secretary of Defense nominee Pete Hegseth gave the internet whiplash.

Hegseth, an Army National Guard veteran, was nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to join his cabinet as Secretary of Defense days after Trump won the 2024 election for a second non-consecutive term.

Keep ReadingShow less
LL Cool J
Gareth Cattermole/MTV EMA/Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images for Paramount

LL Cool J Sparks Debate After Claiming He's The 'Most Important Rapper That Ever Existed'

The '80s and '90s were a key period for musical innovation and artists deciding their sound and what they wanted their songs to talk about.

While appearing on the podcast Le Code by Apple Music, LL Cool J boldly stated that he felt that he was the "most important rapper that ever existed," and someday, people would realize he was right.

Keep ReadingShow less
John Fetterman; Ron DeSantis
CNN, Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

John Fetterman Jokes He'll Consider Confirming DeSantis—But Only On One Hilarious Condition

Democratic Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman made a wisecrack at Ron DeSantis after being asked if he would vote for the GOP Florida Governor as Secretary of Defense.

"I’ll consider a YES on him if he finally admits to his boots with 4' lifts," Fetterman joked on X (formerly Twitter) accompanied by a screenshot of a news headline stating "Trump may replace Hegseth with DeSantis: WSJ."

Keep ReadingShow less
Daniel Craig; Stephen Colbert
@colbertlateshow/Instagram

Stephen Colbert Stunned After Daniel Craig Calls Him Out For Pronouncing His Name Wrong

Daniel Craig humorously confronted Stephen Colbert during his Monday appearance on The Late Show, pointing out that the host had been mispronouncing his name for years.

“I have a bone to pick with you,” Craig said. “Six shows—say my name.” Colbert gave it a shot, correctly pronouncing "Craig" to rhyme with "vague." Craig jokingly acknowledged the improvement: “Oh, now you’re doing it right.”

Keep ReadingShow less