Friday, March 29, 2024

Ohio Firefighter’s FB Post: Saving 1 Dog More Important Than Saving 1 Million Nig*ers

tyler roysdon1

*There’s a-holes and then there’s THIS a-hole. He needs to especially be put on blast.

His name is Tyler Roysdon. He’s a volunteer firefighter for Franklin Township in Ohio and he’s (rightfully) in some deep, deep sh*t for his extra, extra racial comment that he posted on Facebook the other day.

This a-hole actually thought it was cool to express his real priorities when it came to saving folks during a fire. Here’s the bottom line. He wrote that he would rather save a dog from a burning building over a black man because: “one dog is more important than a million ni**ers.”

Yeah, he actually wrote that. And of course when it got more attention that he was ready for, he took it down, but of course there were screenshots of his comment made by several people. (You can see it below.)

NEWS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED: IS KEVIN HART BEING EXTORTED? HE ISSUES PUBLIC APOLOGY TO FAMILY: ‘I MADE A BAD ERROR IN JUDGEMENT’ – VIDEO

tyler roysdon - fb post

The township officials found out about the post and immediately suspended Roysdon indefinitely. The officials made the following statement about:

“Recently, a Franklin Township volunteer firefighter posted unacceptable remarks on social media. Upon gaining knowledge of this information, Fire Chief Steve Bishop immediately contacted the firefighter and directed the comments be removed. The firefighter was suspended without pay until the Board of Township Trustees could meet to determine a course of action. Chief Bishop does not have the authority to terminate employees. Termination of any township employee requires a vote by the Board of Trustees.”

The racist firefighter’s wife, Joei Frame Roysdon, spoke to to WXIX-TV and tried to defend her a-hole husband’s comment with this drivel:

“He admitted that he said things that were wrong and apologized. Everyone deserves a second chance and is also entitled to their own opinion.”

Ryan Grubbs, also a volunteer firefighter, told WKEF-TV that Roysdon’s words go against the department’s core values:

“We don’t pick and choose who needs us, we just go. We’re volunteers. We’re doing this because we love the community.”

 

We Publish News 24/7. Don’t Miss A Story. Click HERE to SUBSCRIBE to Our Newsletter Now!

YOU MAY LIKE

SEARCH

- Advertisement -

TRENDING