
A taxpayer-funded school board clerk just told dog owners to turn White Christian cemeteries into urine-soaked “parks” for their pets.
Story Snapshot
- A St. Paul school board clerk and activist urged dogs to “piss on the White corpses” in cemeteries.[1]
- Her outburst came after Minneapolis officials voted to shut down a long-standing dog park on land called sacred by Dakota tribes.[6]
- The same official is already facing federal felony charges tied to a disruptive protest in a Christian church.[12]
- The episode shows how radical, race-obsessed politics are spilling into schools, churches, and even cemeteries.[1]
School Board Clerk’s Shocking Cemetery Comment
Chauntyll Allen, clerk for the St. Paul Public Schools Board of Education, sparked outrage with a Facebook comment telling dog owners to “leave the indigenous land sacred and piss on the White corpses.”[1] The post appeared in a group backing the Minnehaha off-leash dog park, which Minneapolis is closing. Her remark also referenced “White Christian cemeteries,” suggesting they should become dog parks where pets urinate on the dead.[8] For many families, that language feels like open hatred toward White Christians and basic respect for the dead.
Allen’s words did not come from a random internet troll. According to multiple reports, she is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter Twin Cities and holds elected office as the board clerk in St. Paul’s public school system.[1] That role gives her direct influence over policies that affect children and families. Critics argue that when a school official talks about desecrating cemeteries based on race and faith, it exposes a deeper problem in public education culture. They see an activist mindset that treats certain groups of Americans as targets, not neighbors or fellow citizens.
Dog Park Closure on “Sacred” Land Sparks Heated Rhetoric
The comment erupted after the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board voted 8–1 to close the Minnehaha off-leash dog park by the end of 2026.[6] Officials said the land, part of the Coldwater Spring area known as Mni Owe Sni, is a traditional cultural place considered sacred by Dakota tribes and may include unmarked graves from the United States–Dakota War of 1862.[4] The decision followed pressure from Indigenous leaders and activists who argued that dogs running and defecating there disrespected the site’s spiritual importance.[6]
Dog owners, many of whom used the park for decades, expressed strong anger and disbelief online and at public meetings.[2] They feel the board moved too fast, ignored broader community input, and is bending to a political narrative that labels long-time recreation as “colonial harm.”[2] In that tense atmosphere, Allen’s “piss on the White corpses” remark poured gasoline on the fire. Instead of trying to cool tempers or find a compromise, her language divided residents along racial and religious lines and shifted the debate from land use to open contempt for White Christian families.
Pattern of Radical Activism and Legal Trouble
This is not the first time Allen has been in the spotlight for aggressive activism. She faces federal felony charges for conspiracy to deprive constitutional rights, tied to a protest that stormed Cities Church during a Sunday service.[12] Reports say protesters disrupted worship, caused injury, and targeted the church over its stance on immigration detention.[10] Fox News and Newsweek both detail how Allen was arrested and later spoke publicly about her time in custody, casting herself as a victim of harsh law enforcement.[12]
Critics argue that this pattern—storming a church, now talking about dogs urinating on Christian graves—shows deep hostility toward traditional faith communities rather than a desire for fair dialogue.[10] They also point out that major St. Paul cemeteries like Calvary, a Catholic site opened in 1856, and Oakland, a non-denominational cemetery founded in 1853, hold people of many races and backgrounds.[1] That reality makes the idea of targeting “White Christian cemeteries” not only hateful but factually wrong. Bodies rest in caskets and vaults underground, so talk of dogs peeing on “corpses” is less a policy idea and more a crude way to demean certain Americans.[1]
What This Means for Parents, Taxpayers, and Communities
Many parents already worry that public schools have become breeding grounds for ideology instead of places focused on reading, math, and real history. Hearing a school board official speak about desecrating cemeteries on racial and religious lines confirms those fears for many.[1] They see a taxpayer-funded leader who treats White Christians as villains and shows little respect for basic American values like equal dignity and freedom of worship.
The dog park dispute also exposes a broader trend. Across the country, land use fights tied to Indigenous claims are turning into wider culture battles over “settler colonialism” and “white supremacy,” not just park boundaries.[16] When officials answer these debates with racially charged attacks instead of careful stewardship, they fuel resentment and mistrust. For conservatives who value limited government, local control, and respect for faith, this episode is a warning: watch your school boards and park commissions closely, because radical rhetoric is no longer staying in activist circles—it is now shaping decisions that touch your churches, cemeteries, and community spaces.
Sources:
[1] Web – School Board Clerk: Make White Christian Cemeteries Into Dog Parks So …
[2] Web – Chauntyll Allen suggests dogs should urinate in Christian cemeteries
[4] Web – Minnesota school board member under fire after saying dogs should …
[6] Web – Statement from an actual elected member of the St. Paul School …
[8] Web – 𝐒𝐀𝐈𝐍𝐓 𝐏𝐀𝐔𝐋 𝐒𝐂𝐇𝐎𝐎𝐋 𝐁𝐎𝐀𝐑𝐃 𝐂𝐋𝐄𝐑𝐊 …
[10] Web – Sacred Land or Political Pawn? BLM Activist Sparks Fury With ‘White …
[12] Web – Minnesota school board member Chauntyll Allen ripped by state …
[16] Web – Civil rights leaders Dr. Nekima Levy Armstrong and Chauntyll Allen …



