Black Lives Matters activists at Dartmouth tore down a #BlueLivesMatter poster display at Dartmouth College showing support for law enforcement and remembering those who lost their lives in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. They then posted their own “propaganda” and administrators essentially allowed the vandalism to occur and stay up.

The Dartmouth Review chronicled how the The Dartmouth College Republicans underwent a three week process to gain proper approval for the use of a bulletin board in Collis, Dartmouth’s student center. The administration granted approval for a Blue Lives Matter display in honor of National Police Week for a period of two weeks between May 2 and May 15.

News spread through social media, prompting some to be angry and refute the support: “In case recent news about inclusivity and diversity had you fooled, Dartmouth is still racist. Located in the student center atrium,” pne person posted.

“A group of students, claiming that they were acting independently of one another as to absolve themselves of collective responsibility, removed the College Republicans’ Blue Lives Matter display, replacing it with four flyers that state, ‘You cannot co-opt the movement against state violence to memorialize its perpetrators. #blacklivesmatter.'” the Review summarized.

The Black Lives Matter flyers were then posted all around, throughout Collis. In the article, the photos and assertions is that the students looked on to ensure the Blue Lives Matter display wasn’t restored.

The Dartmouth College Republicans posted this on Facebook:

On Friday, May 13 at approximately 11:00 a.m., a group of students removed our Blue Lives Matter display in Collis in honor of National Police Week. As an organization, we took the time and effort to obtain proper approval for the display while putting significant thought into its content. We are dismayed that a group of students would attempt to censor our message while coopting the space for their own purposes. We had hoped to bring attention to law enforcement officers and their efforts and hard work in keeping our communities safe. In particular, we had hoped to honor all the law enforcement officers who have given their lives in service to their communities. Just this morning, in Manchester, New Hampshire, two police officers were shot. Thankfully, both are expected to recover. However, this most recent incident only underscores the challenges facing law enforcement officers everywhere; just this year, 35 law enforcement officers were killed in the line of duty across the United States. We hope that the Dartmouth community and the United States at large join us in appreciation of the challenging work that law enforcement officers perform.

A Dartmouth student claimed credit for the vandalism of the Blue Lives Matter display in a Facebook post and emails went out, getting more and more profane and inflammatory. Check out the screenshots at the Dartmouth Review

Here’s part of their response: