Yale University Student Hunger Strike Involves Eating When Hungry

A group of Yale University graduate students announced this week that they would be participating in a hunger strike to pressure the administration into granting them better union benefits even though they already have free tuition, free healthcare and get paid about $30,000 per year by the University just to go to school. The “strike” is taking place in front of University President Peter Salovey’s home.

“Yale wants to make us wait and wait and wait … until we give up and go away,” the eight cry-baby members of the graduate student union Local 33 announced. “We have committed ourselves to waiting without eating” the unnamed snowflake lied.

Yale doctoral students currently earn a stipend $30,000 a year, receive free health care, and have their $40,000 tuition paid in full, according to Yale News.  The university administration said in a pitifully weak statement that they understood the students concerns, but “strongly [urge] that students not put their health at risk or encourage others to do so.”

As it turns out, the hunger strike won’t put anyone’s health at risk. According to the pamphlet posted on Twitter by a  former Yale student, the hunger strike is “symbolic” and protesters can leave and get food when they are hungry.

Halikias later hid his Twitter account, but by then the tweet had spread and the public on social media mocked the “sacrifice” of the Yale grad students.

The Union Local 33 posted a video about the strike on their Facebook page, including quotes endorsing their hunger strike from co-founder of the National Farm Workers Association Dolores Huerta and vice chair of the Democratic National Committee Maria Elena Durazo; both of whom are well-known anti-white, racist activists.

Alex Griswold contributed to this report.


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