Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Have We Really Sunk This Low?

I'm not going to comment much on this, mainly because it disgusts and sickens me. Read it and see what you think.

Does wearing the American flag incite violence?
The US Supreme Court announced on Monday that it would not take up a major First Amendment case testing whether school officials in California violated the free speech rights of three high school students who were told they could not wear American flag T-shirts at school because it might upset students of Mexican heritage.

A school principal and vice principal at Live Oak High School near San Jose told the three T-shirt wearers that they must either take the shirts off, turn them inside out, or go home.

School officials determined that the threats of violence were credible. Rather than confront those making the threats, the school officials focused on the students displaying the American flag.
Oh, great. Let's punish the ones standing up for this country and kowtow to those who threaten violence. I thought the purpose of school was to educate. What lesson did the young Americans - and the young Mexicans - learn from this shameless display of conciliation? That might makes right?

Shameful.
The May 5, 2010, incident sparked national headlines – and a lawsuit.

The students charged that school officials violated their First Amendment right to engage in a passive expression of political opinion at their school by wearing American flag shirts.

A federal judge threw the suit out, ruling that school officials “reasonably forecast” that the American flag shirts “could cause a substantial disruption” at the school.
I'm not even going to get into what a sad commentary that is on today's society, when American flags  “could cause a substantial disruption.”
A federal appeals court upheld that decision. A panel of the San Francisco-based Ninth US Circuit Court of Appeals said that in an “era of rampant school violence” involving guns, other weapons, and Internet threats, school officials were entitled to tailor their actions in ways they deemed necessary to avert violence and enhance student safety.
California. What else would you expect?
In declining to hear the student’s case, the high court action allows the Ninth Circuit’s decision to stand.

At the center of the case was a 47-year-old free speech landmark decision in which the Supreme Court found a First Amendment right of students at a Des Moines public school to wear black armbands to class to protest the Vietnam War.

The local school board got wind of the planned protest beforehand and passed a resolution banning armbands. The students conducted their protest anyway.

Five were suspended.

They sued. A federal judge ruled for the school district. On appeal, the Supreme Court reversed, declaring that students do not “shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.”
So what happened between 1969 and today? How did we get from "constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression" to letting bullies set the rules?

I'm not sure of the answer to that question, but I suspect it has something to do with the gradual liberalization wussification of our country.


That 1969 decision is Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District.

Lawyers for the American flag-wearing students in California cited the Tinker decision as standing for the proposition that school officials must honor the free speech rights of students who engage in a “silent, passive expression of opinion, unaccompanied by any disorder or disturbance on the part of the [protesting students].”

The flag shirt wearers issued no threats, according to briefs filed in the case. They showed up at school wearing shirts displaying the national symbol of the United States.

The episode violates foundational First Amendment principles and teaches a dangerous lesson to public school students, Robert Muise, a lawyer with the Michigan-based American Freedom Law Center, said in his brief on behalf of the students.

“It is far better in our civilized society to teach students about the First Amendment and why we tolerate divergent views than to suppress speech,” Mr. Muise wrote.

“The better and proper response is for school officials to educate the audience rather than silence the speaker,” he said.

He added: “There is never a legitimate basis for banning the display of an American flag on an American public school campus.” (emphasis added)

It is time for the high court to revisit the issue and clarify the core holding in the Tinker case, Washington lawyer Robert Corn-Revere wrote in the Tinker’s brief.

He added that the California case also offered the justices a teaching moment. “This case is about the future of free speech as much as about the present and the past,” Mr. Corn-Revere wrote. “If students learn that threatening speakers is an effective way to suppress speech, this will produce more threats, and more suppression of a wide range of other speech,” he said.

“And beyond this, even peaceful students will learn that free speech must yield whenever its opponents are willing to threaten violence..."
Of course, what else could you expect from a court that upheld obamacare on the flimsy pretext that the mandate is a tax.

What a bunch of loons...


8 comments:

Old NFO said...

*&%$$&(( !!! sigh

Bag Blog said...

Years ago I visited my liberal, lawyer brother in Austin and gave him a T-shirt with an old truck pictured on the front. The truck reminded me of an old family truck that my brother and I learned to drive in - that was the reason I bought it. But all my brother saw was the words "America" on the top of the shirt. It was as if he could not wear a shirt that said America. I had a WTH moment and posted my thoughts on my brother and Austinites in general.

Randy said...

This pc crap has got to end. There is NO right that guarantees someone from being offended. So what if they are offended. I am offended by being prevented from exercising my rights by your being offended. Is the discrimination, maybe, so what? Everyone discriminates over something.

Well Seasoned Fool said...

People seldom learn from history. Reminds me of Danegeld.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danegeld
These gutless wonders just invite further chaos by having no principles they will defend.

Anonymous said...

And we all know that Mullah Obama don't need no steenking principles. After all, he has a phone and a pen.

Scottiebill

CenTexTim said...

NFO - couldn't have said it better myself.

BB - I have a liberal sister. I struggle with the same issues with her. BTW, I lived in Austin 20+ years ago. Donns Depot was one of my hangouts.

Randy - life in general is offensive. Learn to deal with it.

WSF - once you pay Danegeld you never get rid of the Dane.

Scottie - sadly, you're right about that.

Randy said...

That wasn't directed at you, it was the pc crowd I was speaking to in general when i used the term 'you.' sorry

CenTexTim said...

Randy, same thing here. My remarks weren't meant for you, but rather the same PC crowd as well. Sorry I wasn't clearer.