Harris Faulkner

By now you’ve all seen the video footage of black students using bullhorns to disrupt the learning environment at various colleges and universities in the U.S.

A group of students staged a sit-in at the office of the president at Princeton this week.

Among their list of demands was the removal of former President Woodrow Wilson’s name from all buildings because of his “racist legacy.”

According to Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner, the Black Lives Matter students are misguided and they lack a clear message.

“I’m wondering what the takeaway from all this is — that you can bully people into something…?” said Faulkner during a segment on Fox News daytime talk show “Outnumbered.”

“I still haven’t heard exactly what they want,” she added.

Faulkner, who is black, said “I’m wondering when the learning is going to happen? And at some point, they have to graduate… and get jobs.”

She continued: “What does this teach them about conflict resolution? What are they learning from this process? Because… it only gets more difficult from that campus. There are not going to be safe spaces on your job unless you work in someplace where the walls are padded and everybody is going to protect you from being harmed.”

Co-host Julie Roginsky chimed in by suggesting the black students movement is setting black people back 200 hundred years.

The dean at Claremont McKenna College in California stepped down after agreeing to “carve out safe spaces” for black students where they can segregate themselves from white people.

“You’re self-segregating? Are you kidding me?” said Roginsky. “How many generations did it take to have diversity and assimilation on that campus? And now these kids actually want to self-segregate? There are no safe spaces in the real world.”