Posted on 03/01/2006 11:21:07 AM PST by JZelle
RICHMOND -- A federal judge has ruled that a southeastern Virginia school district didn't violate a teacher's free-speech rights by removing Christian-themed postings from his classroom walls. U.S. District Judge Rebecca Beach Smith rejected arguments that York County school officials deprived William Lee of his First Amendment rights when they ordered the removal of postings that included articles about President Bush's religious faith and John Ashcroft's prayer meetings with his staffers when he was attorney general. "This case is not about what free-speech rights Lee has as an individual expressing himself on private property," Judge Smith wrote in her opinion filed last week. "Rather, this case is a question about what free-speech rights Lee has as a public school teacher-employee." The postings were removed from Mr. Lee's Spanish classroom at Tabb High School at the start of the 2004-05 school year after a parent complained.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
APPEAL!
Leave the hershey highway posters alone....don't even think about touching the Islam is peace posters and God have mercy on you if you even think about touching the Hitlery for president posters.
But get those Christian posters OUT....
This has got to be the most random decision I've seen. Why in heaven's name is he allowed to have a poster of Mayan and Incan religious practices and prayer for 9/11 and our troops when he can't display George Washinton praying at Valley Forge (a very famous painting, mind you) and a National Day of Prayer poster?
I think my next poster, were I this teacher, would read:
"Do Not let any one claim to be a true American if he should ever attempt to remove religion from politics."
--George Washington
Post this at the next Demcratic convention and watch them go nuts.
Once again, this looks like a very selective enforcement of this right.
I think this decision is vulnerable for overturning. It sounds very much like viewpoint-based discrimination. I believe the courts have ruled that a teacher can wear a crucifix in a public school, as an expression of her personal beliefs, and that there is no presumption that this represents an endorsement of religion by the school district itself. I wonder what the school district would say if teachers were ordered not to have political bumper stickers on cars they drive to school and park in the school lot.
In recent years many public schools have adopted curricula which sympathetically treat Native American creation myths, religious beliefs - e.g., the Sacred Salmon - yet no one ever says this is a church/state issue.
Only secularist, atheist, and homosexual promoting viewpoints allowed!
Whatever is not mandatory is prohibited!
Stand peacefully in line and take your soma!
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