8/31/2006 12:40:59 AM
insulting the president. 6 months in jail.
8/31/2006 12:43:42 AM
that kid sounds like a huge douchealong with the other kid and her motheralong with the school administrators who stepped in
8/31/2006 1:01:55 AM
THey would have done the same thing at ANY school in WAKE county and probably NC
8/31/2006 1:04:54 AM
Can't do that in a public school. electric chair.
8/31/2006 2:17:53 AM
What a difference a decade makes. Back in my day they wouldn't even let you wear a "Big Johnson" t-shirt. It's like they didn't want people to know who the idiots were or something. Back then you just politely turned the t-shirt inside out at the request of some school authority. Nowadays you just piss and moan about freedoms.I'm not saying give the dude jail time. That's ridiculous. I'm just saying that a certain level of (self) respect should be shown. I just find myself wondering how in the world this ended up in court in the first place.
8/31/2006 7:20:55 AM
Now, if they changed that shit to "I love drugs" and imposed any other person's picture on that shirt...I bet he'd not be allowed to wear it.
8/31/2006 7:23:19 AM
Or worse "I love God"Imagine the uproar then.
8/31/2006 7:23:53 AM
I'm pretty surprised 7th graders are that political[Edited on August 31, 2006 at 8:33 AM. Reason : are]
8/31/2006 8:33:33 AM
jeeze
8/31/2006 8:35:28 AM
8/31/2006 9:03:53 AM
I'm saying that most schools ban the depiction of drug use on clothing. Why is it somehow different if its in a political context?
8/31/2006 9:12:48 AM
That's probably where the umbrella of political speech came into play.I didn't read the court opinion, but political speech is among the most broadly protected freedoms by the courts. I won't supply the precedents here, but they are voluminous and I invite you to do some Googling if you're really curious. Most of them, IIRC, were from the sixties.The fact that Bush is a public--and political--figure is what protects the allegations made by the shirt about drugs and alcohol. The factual basis behind the latter is equally irrelevant to the speculative nature of the former.[Edited on August 31, 2006 at 9:23 AM. Reason : .]
8/31/2006 9:20:06 AM
Gamecat, I'm sure you have a point here, but when do you draw the line between political speech and shirts that break school rules based on other counts.For instance, lets say you have a picture of George Bush bending over an Iraqi boy and raping him. And the caption is "Bush is fucking the Iraqi People"The depiction of sex and the word "fucking" are probably both against school rules. Does George Bush being famous end the obligation to abide by other school rules?
8/31/2006 9:25:29 AM
8/31/2006 9:33:53 AM
8/31/2006 9:40:06 AM
Man, all those guys from high school could have gotten away with a "Big Johnson Rocks the Vote" t-shirt. But that still doesn't overcome the fact that people back then didn't piss and moan about their fundamental freedoms being trampled on at every drop of a dime or anytime someone said the "no" word.Here's to simpler times.[Edited on August 31, 2006 at 9:43 AM. Reason : -]
8/31/2006 9:43:05 AM
Its retarded to seperate political speech from any other kind of speech.
8/31/2006 9:46:37 AM
I'm going to go ahead and disagree with you there. Yeah. I'm a big fan of protecting political speech in public schools--and wouldn't particularly mind if the kid was allowed to wear his shirt if he'd just duct tape the cocaine shit. I even think he might deserve to be punished by the school.In my mind, it wouldn't be too difficult to show that this causes an undue interruption of normal school activities.Something about school uniforms has always--even as a child--struck me as fascist and...well...too Catholic. Of course, that brings up a humorous but meaningless point: If you don't like your kids seeing political speech on shirts, you can always send them to private school.[Edited on August 31, 2006 at 9:59 AM. Reason : choice]
8/31/2006 9:58:51 AM
^
8/31/2006 10:24:12 AM
why would a seventh grader need to make a political statement in a school full of people who can't vote?
8/31/2006 10:29:06 AM
Because they may someday.Next question...
8/31/2006 10:29:26 AM
I'm assuming that this was the offending t-shirt:http://www.legitgov.org/T_shirt_bush_chickenhawk_image_011704.html
8/31/2006 10:52:47 AM
8/31/2006 11:02:49 AM
Clear5, its arguments like that that ruin it for everyone elseKeep overtly political statements, like the wearing of that shirt (or a nazi shirt, for instance)away from subtly (read: made up) statements by girls who want to break dress code
8/31/2006 11:12:24 AM
8/31/2006 11:20:08 AM
8/31/2006 11:31:38 AM
Oh come off it.The absurdity of it is precisely what would make it end up in court.
8/31/2006 11:39:11 AM
^well your explanation is lacking, since local definitions of obscenity often come under court scrutiny
8/31/2006 11:41:41 AM
I think Im with Gamecat on this...People in general should be allowed to wear whatever they want to (as long as they conform to indecency laws an such...which too can be debated)however...in a school setting....it has long been established that clothing that causes a disruption to a normal school environment has been not allowed...thats definitly the case here...the T-shirt caused a problem...the kid should have been told to take it off/turn it inside out....or he should have been sent home....its that simple...dont turn this into a political thing...politics has little to do with this....the shirt was an interruption and the kid should not be allowed to wear it[Edited on August 31, 2006 at 11:45 AM. Reason : asdf]
8/31/2006 11:44:24 AM
Depictions of drug use on tshirts should not be allowed in school, no matter what the context is
8/31/2006 11:47:26 AM
8/31/2006 12:01:37 PM
8/31/2006 12:15:45 PM
100% inaccurate.You could put any political figures face on the shirt.
8/31/2006 12:17:09 PM
Well considering people on a message board in NC are arguing about a t-shirt some Vermont kid wore to school, I'd say that it probably caused a disruption there as well.
8/31/2006 12:20:45 PM
what about shirts depiting jesus? or even worse, what about people trying to pray in school?
8/31/2006 12:21:23 PM
What about shirts depicting Jesus? What about people praying in school?Both were common all over my public high school.---
8/31/2006 12:28:19 PM
The question becomes though at what level is political speech not allowed? From my own experiences in highschool (and I realize that none of these were persued to the court level) do you think the court would have overturned my school's ban on a shirt that said "Art is not Pornography" with a nude model on it? Or the "Abortion is Mean" t-shirt they also banned? Both are very much political statements, but are they allowed? How about political statements about local government activities? And then as always, theres the question of is a shirt about a school policy or decison (which was the context for the art shirt above) a political statement?From my own point of view, I think the kid should have been allowed to wear the shirt, but since we do allow for the banishment of certain political views from schools (see what happens if someone wears a shirt that says "Fags Suck" for example) what exactly are the criteria for determining what to ban?Edit:-------Wasn't there in fact a big todo a few years ago over a girl wearing a confederate flag as a prom dress? What was the outcome of that?[Edited on August 31, 2006 at 12:32 PM. Reason : sadf]
8/31/2006 12:31:06 PM
i think i agree with Gamecat here. Any public figure on a tshirt is fine, but the fact that it included drugs on it should make it cross the line.
8/31/2006 12:35:53 PM
TaterSaladThat's the point I made all along. I could care less what political viewpoint someone wants to espouse so long as the conditions of the shirt/viewpoint don't break school rules.
8/31/2006 12:48:17 PM
8/31/2006 12:51:55 PM
8/31/2006 1:16:49 PM
FUCK THE DRAFT
8/31/2006 1:26:17 PM
8/31/2006 1:43:02 PM
fucking hippies up in VT
8/31/2006 1:47:33 PM
8/31/2006 1:51:14 PM
I thought you were arguing they were mistaken in application of the precedent.You're arguing against that precedent.I understand now.What extends the absolute authority over the rights of a student to the state?
8/31/2006 2:07:22 PM
8/31/2006 3:25:25 PM
8/31/2006 3:35:30 PM
i dont have any problem with the political aspect of thishowever i dont know why the court didnt respect the local school's policy of not allowing drug-related shirts in their dress code
8/31/2006 3:39:57 PM