You argued that teachers are not protesting during teaching times and can't prove that they're not.None of it confuses me, skoob.
You don't understand that courses are generally 10 week contracts with exam time on top. You don't understand that profs and teachers have free time and can protest during that free time and you don't understand that the fall and spring terms are time when the vast majority of classes happen.
So you are totally unable to understand that the U of T and other Canadian protests are not happening during the busy time of school.
You'd know this if you had a university education.
That's why you get stuck on the same failed argument over and over again and no matter what anyone posts you will ask the same stupid question over and over again and then declare you won the debate. You're just not very bright.
I provided a schedule that shows that classes happen year-round. The likelihood that they are protesting while being paid to teach is far greater than what you are incorrectly assuming.
You are trying to desperately peddle the notion that teachers are protesting when not in class, preparing course materials, grading papers, meeting with students, attending faculty meetings, etc etc all of which is their responsibility as teachers and based on the year-round schedule.