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Student fights for the right to be 'right' Conservative teen shakes up campus
SF Chronicle ^
| Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer
Posted on 03/15/2004 7:47:24 PM PST by Conservative Bueler
Student fights for the right to be 'right' Conservative teen shakes up campus Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer Tim Bueler, like many cocksure 17-year-olds, is strident in expressing his political beliefs. And to him, the Republican Party leans too far to the left. That was the spark that launched his Conservative Club at Rancho Cotate High School in the Sonoma County town of Rohnert Park and ignited two months of rhetorical ugliness on campus. It also put him on the conservative talk show circuit, including an appearance Thursday on Fox television's "The O'Reilly Factor." It all started on Dec. 3, when Bueler posted a flyer announcing a new "Conservative Hot Line" for the 1,800 students at his high school. It encouraged students to call the hot line to report "un-American comments expressed by your liberal teachers." "Let's take a stand against the liberal traitors who call themselves teachers," the flyer urged. Two days later, an anonymous teacher drafted a response proposing a "Liberal Hot Line," which parodied the tone of Bueler's missive. "Let's take a stand against the neo-conservative wing-nuts who call themselves Americans," the flyer declared. Things could have stopped there, but backing off, apparently, isn't in Bueler's nature. So, a week later, he fired off another newsletter. "Liberals," it pronounced, "welcome every Muhammad, Jamul and Jose who wishes to leave his Third World state and come to America -- mostly illegally -- to rip off our health care system, balkanize our language and destroy our political system." That did it. Latino students were furious, and 40 school employees and teachers, including Principal Mitchell Carter, signed a letter protesting the inflammatory rhetoric. Bueler claimed he was threatened, called "Nazi" and other epithets, even by teachers, who he said refused to protect him from angry mobs of classmates. He soon was being escorted to and from class by school security officers. After Bueler's anti-immigrant newsletter came out, school staff suggested to him that he stay home for a few days as "a cooling-off period," according to a fact sheet provided by the district. For his part, Carter, the principal, isn't responding to questions and is referring calls to district Superintendent Michael Watenpaugh, who has criticized Bueler for distributing inflammatory material without first getting permission from a student adviser, as is school policy. District officials have acknowledged, however, that the school faculty and the principal made some "missteps" that may have helped inflame matters. Watenpaugh said Carter and others officials were wrong for suggesting the "cooling-off period." The situation has remained volatile. For example, 15 police officers swarmed onto campus to quell disturbances following the Conservative Club's Jan. 16 meeting. Nonetheless, the school has not silenced Bueler, who started the club -- which now claims 50 members -- last fall. And the lanky junior appears to be enjoying, if not reveling in, his role at the center of an ideological free-for-all. He has become a hot commodity on conservative talk radio shows, where he has not been shy about expressing his support for God, guns and country and his contempt for liberals. Several nationally syndicated television shows have called for interviews, including, he says, "Good Morning America." School officials have gotten thousands of e- mails from people across the country who, they say, were whipped up into a righteous frenzy by a stream of rhetoric. A good deal of the verbal pyrotechnics have come from Bueler's hero, ultra-conservative radio personality Michael Savage, as well as Internet pundits and the right-leaning Washington Times. They paint Bueler as a patriotic hero who stood up to howling liberal hypocrites trying to stifle his voice and trod upon the traditional American values he was bravely trying to uphold. "Remember the movie 'Rebel Without a Cause'?" asked Savage, the radio host whose book, "Savage Nation," Bueler borrowed liberally from in outlining his club's philosophy. "This kid represents rebels with a cause. He represents the new counterculture." All of which is a bunch of ideological baloney swathed in righteous propaganda, according to Mark Alton, the Rancho Cotate athletic director and science teacher who co-wrote the faculty letter protesting Bueler's comments. "Certain outside conservative groups are using this to further their own political agenda, which is to attack the public education system," Alton said. The real issue, he said, is not free speech but how to maintain peace on a school campus by having rational discourse. "Those statements about illegal immigration and students of color and his attack on liberal teachers as traitors offend people, and many of us think they are inappropriate," Alton said. "He has a right to his opinions, and nobody wants to deny him his rights, but there are certain things that are inappropriate on a school campus. When hateful, intolerant discourse is being used, it is our responsibility to respond." The fact that Bueler cannot walk around campus without an escort isn't something the First Amendment can do anything about, said UC Berkeley constitutional law Professor Jesse Choper. What's significant, he said, is that the school district provided that security. "This school district chose to honor his free speech and sought to protect him from threats. That's commendable," Choper said. "It is not totally clear that (Bueler) had an enforceable constitutional right to go as far as he did, such as calling the teachers names like that. By no means am I saying that they could have stopped him, but they responded in a responsible fashion. '' For his part, Bueler seems comfortable in the magnifying glare of the media spotlight. He sat at home recently contemplating interview requests from at least four national television talk shows and a scheduled appearance Feb. 7 as the featured speaker at the conservative Eagle Forum's annual convention. " 'Good Morning America' is a little shaky,'' he scoffed, referring to efforts by producers to get him on the prestigious show. "They're real liberal. "
TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: conservativeclub
To: Conservative Bueler
Could I buy a paragraph Alex?
I'm just messing with you man. LOL!
2
posted on
03/15/2004 7:49:30 PM PST
by
ConservativeMan55
(There is no problem so great that it cannot be solved with high powered explosives.)
To: ConservativeMan55
"like many cocksure 17-year-olds"
hmm...never heard the media refer to leftist teenages as cocky
3
posted on
03/15/2004 7:50:48 PM PST
by
raloxk
To: ConservativeMan55
Student fights for the right to be 'right' Conservative teen shakes up campus Peter Fimrite, Chronicle Staff Writer Tim Bueler, like many cocksure 17-year-olds, is strident in expressing his political beliefs.
And to him, the Republican Party leans too far to the left. That was the spark that launched his Conservative Club at Rancho Cotate High School in the Sonoma County town of Rohnert Park and ignited two months of rhetorical ugliness on campus.
It also put him on the conservative talk show circuit, including an appearance Thursday on Fox television's "The O'Reilly Factor." It all started on Dec. 3, when Bueler posted a flyer announcing a new "Conservative Hot Line" for the 1,800 students at his high school.
It encouraged students to call the hot line to report "un-American comments expressed by your liberal teachers." "Let's take a stand against the liberal traitors who call themselves teachers," the flyer urged. Two days later, an anonymous teacher drafted a response proposing a "Liberal Hot Line," which parodied the tone of Bueler's missive.
"Let's take a stand against the neo-conservative wing-nuts who call themselves Americans," the flyer declared. Things could have stopped there, but backing off, apparently, isn't in Bueler's nature. So, a week later, he fired off another newsletter.
"Liberals," it pronounced, "welcome every Muhammad, Jamul and Jose who wishes to leave his Third World state and come to America -- mostly illegally -- to rip off our health care system, balkanize our language and destroy our political system."
That did it. Latino students were furious, and 40 school employees and teachers, including Principal Mitchell Carter, signed a letter protesting the inflammatory rhetoric. Bueler claimed he was threatened, called "Nazi" and other epithets, even by teachers, who he said refused to protect him from angry mobs of classmates. He soon was being escorted to and from class by school security officers.
After Bueler's anti-immigrant newsletter came out, school staff suggested to him that he stay home for a few days as "a cooling-off period," according to a fact sheet provided by the district. For his part, Carter, the principal, isn't responding to questions and is referring calls to district Superintendent Michael Watenpaugh, who has criticized Bueler for distributing inflammatory material without first getting permission from a student adviser, as is school policy.
District officials have acknowledged, however, that the school faculty and the principal made some "missteps" that may have helped inflame matters. Watenpaugh said Carter and others officials were wrong for suggesting the "cooling-off period." The situation has remained volatile. For example, 15 police officers swarmed onto campus to quell disturbances following the Conservative Club's Jan. 16 meeting.
Nonetheless, the school has not silenced Bueler, who started the club -- which now claims 50 members -- last fall. And the lanky junior appears to be enjoying, if not reveling in, his role at the center of an ideological free-for-all. He has become a hot commodity on conservative talk radio shows, where he has not been shy about expressing his support for God, guns and country and his contempt for liberals.
Several nationally syndicated television shows have called for interviews, including, he says, "Good Morning America." School officials have gotten thousands of e- mails from people across the country who, they say, were whipped up into a righteous frenzy by a stream of rhetoric. A good deal of the verbal pyrotechnics have come from Bueler's hero, ultra-conservative radio personality Michael Savage, as well as Internet pundits and the right-leaning Washington Times.
They paint Bueler as a patriotic hero who stood up to howling liberal hypocrites trying to stifle his voice and trod upon the traditional American values he was bravely trying to uphold. "Remember the movie 'Rebel Without a Cause'?" asked Savage, the radio host whose book, "Savage Nation," Bueler borrowed liberally from in outlining his club's philosophy. "This kid represents rebels with a cause. He represents the new counterculture."
All of which is a bunch of ideological baloney swathed in righteous propaganda, according to Mark Alton, the Rancho Cotate athletic director and science teacher who co-wrote the faculty letter protesting Bueler's comments. "Certain outside conservative groups are using this to further their own political agenda, which is to attack the public education system," Alton said.
The real issue, he said, is not free speech but how to maintain peace on a school campus by having rational discourse. "Those statements about illegal immigration and students of color and his attack on liberal teachers as traitors offend people, and many of us think they are inappropriate," Alton said.
"He has a right to his opinions, and nobody wants to deny him his rights, but there are certain things that are inappropriate on a school campus. When hateful, intolerant discourse is being used, it is our responsibility to respond." The fact that Bueler cannot walk around campus without an escort isn't something the First Amendment can do anything about, said UC Berkeley constitutional law Professor Jesse Choper.
What's significant, he said, is that the school district provided that security. "This school district chose to honor his free speech and sought to protect him from threats. That's commendable," Choper said. "It is not totally clear that (Bueler) had an enforceable constitutional right to go as far as he did, such as calling the teachers names like that.
By no means am I saying that they could have stopped him, but they responded in a responsible fashion. '' For his part, Bueler seems comfortable in the magnifying glare of the media spotlight. He sat at home recently contemplating interview requests from at least four national television talk shows and a scheduled appearance Feb. 7 as the featured speaker at the conservative Eagle Forum's annual convention. "
'Good Morning America' is a little shaky,'' he scoffed, referring to efforts by producers to get him on the prestigious show. "They're real liberal. "
4
posted on
03/15/2004 7:51:02 PM PST
by
ConservativeMan55
(There is no problem so great that it cannot be solved with high powered explosives.)
To: Conservative Bueler; Admin Moderator
Please fix the paragraphs, Admin. Welcome to FR, CB!
5
posted on
03/15/2004 7:51:21 PM PST
by
WinOne4TheGipper
(If YOU were rude during a job interview, you'd be turned down. (Take a hint, Kerry))
To: Conservative Bueler
Bad link.
6
posted on
03/15/2004 7:51:41 PM PST
by
Redcoat LI
( "help to drive the left one into the insanity.")
To: Redcoat LI
7
posted on
03/15/2004 7:56:51 PM PST
by
ConservativeMan55
(There is no problem so great that it cannot be solved with high powered explosives.)
To: ConservativeMan55; Conservative Bueler
Garrgh! That's almost physically impossible to read!
Please format your posts, as a favor to older eyes.
8
posted on
03/15/2004 7:56:54 PM PST
by
Valpal1
(Impeach the 9th! Please!!)
To: Conservative Bueler
"He has a right to his opinions, and nobody wants to deny him his rights, but...I'd bet good money this guy idolizes Howard Stern, thinks the FCC is populated with "right-wing goons", and wonders what the Janet Jackson uproar was all about.
9
posted on
03/15/2004 7:58:16 PM PST
by
randog
(Everything works great 'til the current flows.)
To: Valpal1
LOL!
Maybe you're "not supposed" to read it.
I know that I just read the headlines, and comment from there.
10
posted on
03/15/2004 7:58:33 PM PST
by
ConservativeMan55
(There is no problem so great that it cannot be solved with high powered explosives.)
To: Conservative Bueler
so the kid has learned that whoever yells loudest gets the most attention. Frankly,y if he's really following Micheal Savage to learn how to be a conservative, he's going to have some issues. You call people names, they tend to get worked up, and then everyone starts yelling, and nothing gets solved. And it doesn't seem that anyone has tried to 'silence him' using anything else but the tactics he used in the first place.
right or wrong, we seem to have devolved into a culture of base insults as discourse. This young man will make a lot of money off of screaming insults at his classmates and teachers (if he's smart, which I'm doubting) It's his right to say anything he wants to, that's fine, but it's people like him who give conservatives a bad name, we used to be the people who would win rational arguments against the angry emotionalism of the Leftists, what happened to that?
To: ConservativeMan55
If you post an article,you should post a valid link,especially if you decide against using paragraphs.
12
posted on
03/15/2004 8:09:36 PM PST
by
Redcoat LI
( "help to drive the left one into the insanity.")
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