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WHCD Shooting Should Force a Serious Conversation About Teacher Bias in K–12 Education

by April 26, 2026
April 26, 2026

Image of Cole Allen, December 2024 Teacher of the Month at C2 Education, alongside a scene depicting a police intervention.

Image of Cole Allen, December 2024 Teacher of the Month at C2 Education, alongside a scene depicting a police intervention.
Cole Allen, recognized as “Teacher of the Month” in December 2024 at C2 Education in Torrance, California, has been identified as the suspect in the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooting.

As The Gateway Pundit previously reported, the suspect in the attempted shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner has been identified as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen of Torrance, California.

Allen was taken into custody alive in the Hilton lobby near the security screening area.

But the more important part of this story is not just what happened—it is who the suspect is.

Allen is a highly educated professional. Reports indicate he attended the California Institute of Technology and recently earned a master’s degree in computer science. 

More importantly, he worked as a teacher and was even named “Teacher of the Month” in December 2024 at C2 Education in Torrance.

It’s not fair to say every teacher is responsible for this. That would be dishonest. There are many teachers who do their jobs well, focus on academics, and avoid pushing political views in the classroom.

But ignoring the broader pattern would be just as dishonest.

I spend a significant amount of time looking at how education functions in this country. The trend is clear. Schools have increasingly shifted away from neutral instruction and toward ideological influence.

Students are often exposed to one-sided narratives on complex political issues, with little room for disagreement or serious debate.

When education becomes less about teaching students how to think and more about telling them what to think, the consequences extend far beyond the classroom.

Trust in institutions begins to erode. Students become less willing to question ideas. Families start to view schools as political environments rather than academic ones.

This case should not be used to generalize about every educator. But it should force a conversation that many people have avoided.

Teachers operate within a broader system. That system includes unions openly aligned with the Left.

When those institutions take clear ideological positions, it inevitably shapes the environment in which teachers work.

Political figures like Zohran Mamdani have built support in part through education-aligned networks that promote the socialist rhetoric they advocate. That connection reinforces the perception that schools are not neutral spaces, but extensions of broader political movements.

I am not arguing that teachers should avoid all discussions of politics. Schools must play a role in encouraging political discourse. Schools should be places where difficult topics are examined. But there is a difference between presenting multiple perspectives and pushing a single narrative.

That line has become increasingly blurred.

When students consistently hear one perspective framed as correct and others dismissed, it shapes how they view the world. Over time, that environment discourages independent thinking and replaces it with conformity. 

If a teacher is willing to carry out an attack like this, then it would be ignorant not to consider the possibility that the same individual could have attempted to indoctrinate students. 

When teachers’ unions promote protests against an administration, endorse far-left candidates, and education funding has more than doubled since the 1990s—even after adjusting for inflation—while outcomes remain stagnant, it is time to reconsider the structure of the education system.

Moving beyond this event, there have been multiple instances of teachers engaging in radical left-wing rhetoric. For example, after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, a Chicago Public Schools teacher mocked his death during a “No Kings” demonstration, as previously reported by The Gateway Pundit.

The attempted attack at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner was stopped. But in a decade, when students shaped by increasingly ideological environments enter the real world, the consequences could be far worse than what we see today.

Education is almost never discussed as a serious policy concern. This is largely because it is rarely viewed as urgent. There are only a handful of moments when education is treated as an immediate issue, such as during campus protests in support of the terrorist organization Hamas.

But the reality is that education is the most pressing issue we face because it connects to everything. The people who shape a student’s worldview influence how that student understands politics, society, and reality itself.

The post WHCD Shooting Should Force a Serious Conversation About Teacher Bias in K–12 Education appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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