
Uju Anya, a Nigerian-American professor of linguistics at Carnegie Mellon University, told the podcast This Week In White Supremacy that she stood by her controversial remarks about the queen

‘I said what I fucking said’: Carnegie Mellon professor who wished the Queen an ‘excruciating death’ doubles down and calls the hate-filled screed an effort to ‘teach’ Americans about the British monarchy
- Uju Anya, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania, celebrated the queen’s death last week
- ‘I heard the chief monarch of a thieving, raping genocidal empire is finally dying. May her pain be excruciating,’ she tweeted
- Her remarks sparked outrage, but on Wednesday she doubled down – telling a podcast that she was ‘triggered’ by the queen’s death, and emotional
- Anya, a Nigerian-born American-Trinidadian academic, said her hatred of the queen came from Britain’s support for Nigeria’s government during the civil war
- The 46-year-old said that she did not regret her remarks because they were intended to educate Americans about the monarchy
Uju Anya, a Nigerian-American professor of linguistics at Carnegie Mellon University, sparked widespread anger with her response to the final hours of the queen… More

[https://youtu.be/2qCxE_7LSk8]

‘She sat on a throne of blood’: Smirking Carnegie Mellon professor launches ANOTHER vile attack on Britain’s late Queen claiming she wore a crown made of ‘blood diamonds’ and was directly responsible for Nigerian Civil War
- Uju Anya, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania, celebrated the queen’s death last week
- ‘I heard the chief monarch of a thieving, raping genocidal empire is finally dying. May her pain be excruciating,’ she tweeted
- Her remarks sparked outrage, but on Wednesday she doubled down – telling a podcast that she was ‘triggered’ by the queen’s death, and emotional
- Anya, a Nigerian-born American-Trinidadian academic, said her hatred of the queen came from Britain’s support for Nigeria’s government during the civil war
- The 46-year-old said that she did not regret her remarks because they were intended to educate Americans about the monarchy
The Carnegie Mellon professor who sparked outrage by saying she hoped the Queen died an ‘excruciating death’ has launched another vile attack on the late monarch for sitting on ‘a throne of blood’.
Uju Anya, who teaches linguistics, argued Her Majesty, who died last week aged 96, wore a crown made of ‘blood diamonds’ and claimed her palaces and riches were funded by ‘our blood’.
She also attacked the monarch for what she claimed was her role in the Nigerian Civil War, bizarrely suggesting she was directly responsible for the death of millions.
Later in the show, she admitted her sick tweet was an ’emotional outburst’ because she was ‘triggered’ by news of Her Majesty’s passing.
But she said ‘I said what I fucking said’ and was ‘unapologetic’ for the vile posts that lead to a huge public backlash – including from her own university.
Anya, a Left-wing Nigerian-American lecturer, was among those trying to use the Queen’s death for social capital while the royals and millions mourned.
She attacked the late Royal as the ‘chief monarch of a thieving, raping genocidal empire’, adding: ‘May her pain be excruciating.’
Other obscure writers piled in on her passing aged 96, with little-known journalists from The New York Times, Mew York Magazine and The Atlantic turned into online trolls and also aired vile claims.
It comes as Meghan Markle’s new favorite magazine The Cut now turned their heads on her father-in-law King Charles, slamming the new British sovereign as ‘big, fussy baby and a jerk’.
The latest hatchet-job from the New York Magazine offshoot was titled ‘King Charles’s Reign of Fussiness Has Begun’ and viciously went after the royal as he tried to mourn the loss of his mother.
Tirhakah Love, senior newsletter writer for New York Magazine, said he was looking forward to dancing on the queen’s grave

In The New York Times, Maya Jasanoff, a history professor at Harvard University, where she focuses on the history of Britain and the British Empire, said it was wrong to ‘romanticize’ her reign.
Maya Jasanoff, a Harvard professor specializing in the history of the British Empire, said it was wrong to ‘romanticize’ the queen’s rule
‘The queen helped obscure a bloody history of decolonization whose proportions and legacies have yet to be adequately acknowledged,’ she wrote.
Jasanoff highlights repression in Malaya, Kenya, Yemen, Cyprus and Ireland.
‘We may never learn what the queen did or didn’t know about the crimes committed in her name,’ she said.
‘Those who heralded a second Elizabethan age hoped Elizabeth II would sustain British greatness; instead, it was the era of the empire’s implosion.’

A writer for The Atlantic magazine, Jemele Hill, also chimed in on her Twitter account, saying journalists had a duty to cover what she called the ‘devastating’ impacts of Elizabeth’s reign.
‘Journalists are tasked with putting legacies into full context, so it is entirely appropriate to examine the queen and her role in the devastating impact of continued colonialism,’ Hill wrote… More
Harumi Nemoto is wondering if folks also hate the Emperor of Japan?









[https://youtu.be/TgQ3mZxLhE8]



























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Grimes: DeSantis flies two planes of migrants to wealthy Martha’s Vineyard as the residents there proudly displaying signs saying ‘We stand with immigrants… all are welcome here’