California “ANTIFA Teacher” Paid Off to Quit
A California teacher who admits to ties with ANTIFA and proudly proclaimed he has been “grooming” students with radical left-wing ideas has been offered three years’ salary to resign.
Local school officials agreed to pay Gabriel Gipe, a social studies teacher at Inderkum High School, $190,000 to leave his post without fighting his prospective firing, the Sacramento Bee reported, citing settlement records.
After taxes, Gipe walked away with a total of $100,000, the paper reported. His annual salary reportedly was $60,000.
Project Veritas first exposed Gipe’s teaching methods last year on video, which captured Gipe stating that he tried to “scare the f—” out of kids in order to motivate them politically. Footage also surfaced of his classroom, which reportedly included a poster of former Chinese dictator Mao Zedong, as well as one with the ANTIFA flag.
Gipe also allegedly had a collection of ink stamps dedicated to Communist dictators, including one of Joseph Stalin and “an insensitive phrase,” which he had allegedly used to mark students’ work as complete. Other stamps had images of Fidel Castro and Kim Jong Un.
He also said in the video that a student complained about the ANTIFA flag hanging on the wall in his classroom, stating that it made him feel uncomfortable.
“Well this is meant to make fascists feel uncomfortable, so if you feel uncomfortable, I don’t really know what to tell you,” he says.
The unexpectedly large settlement of triple his salary also prevents the district from discussing details of Gipe’s leaving with any potential new employers except for general details such as his salary, the dates he worked there, and the date that he resigned, the report said. Which means he can and will likely end up in another school in another teaching position, once again filling kid’s heads with his far-left militant garbage.
District Superintendent Chris Evans previously said that going forward; administrators will be tasked with looking more closely at classroom walls when they conduct their routine visits.