Posted on 04/01/2006 10:12:20 AM PST by Sub-Driver
Colo. School Bans Flags Amid Protests Principal Says Students Used Flags To Taunt Others
(CBS) LONGMONT, Colo. Dozens of high school students protested a temporary school policy forbidding students from displaying the U.S. flag, as well as flags from other countries, amid racial tensions following immigration rallies.
Skyline High School Principal Tom Stumpf said American flags were brazenly waved in the faces of Hispanic students and in one case a Mexican flag was thrown into the face of another student.
"When it involves the American flag and its abuse in vilifying other people, we simply will not tolerate it," Stumpf said. "They were using the symbol derisively as misguided patriotism."
Students were warned about the policy Friday and several were suspended, although Stumpf would not provide details. Then, about 100 students protested during lunch time.
Student Dustin Carlson told the KCNC-TV, the CBS station in Denver, that he was suspended for two days.
"I'm getting suspended for it and personally I think that's uncalled for," he said. "If this country means freedom, then why can't we fly our own flag? It's ridiculous."
(Excerpt) Read more at wcbstv.com ...
I will ask you the same question. Do you have any information which refutes what the principal said? If not, from all of the reports I have seen, he was trying to deescalate a situation that was moving toward violence, which was his responsibility to do. He believed as he stated that the US flags were being used to intimidate and were not being treated with respect. Had the flag holders merely been holding the flags and not shoving them into peoples' faces, fine. But that does not appear to have been the case.
In answer to your second point, no, students do not have to behave like "sheeple", but I do not know what started it, do you? And in any case, when confronting people, do not make the US flag part of your tool chest. Keep it far enough away so it does not become involved in the confrontation. And do not use it to intimidate or harass anyone. It seems the principal was trying to convey that message and to cool things down.
LOL at your attempt to spin it without answering MY questions? I will repeat them "How do we know this was the case? Do you have inside knowledge? Or just based on principal Stumpf's opinion?" Pay close attention to the my first question please.
Based on your many worded answer, I believe you are basing it on the msm report of the principal's words. Amazing that you take such a stance based on a man that I assume you are not personally acquainted with - but kneejerk responses are becoming all too common here.
If you would rather spin than answer questions, I don't care to discuss further.
I saw three accounts of the incident. I am assuming that the principal's account is correct until I see something that says it is not. If it is not correct, I'm sure that information will be forthcoming. Now, perhaps you could answer mine?
Amazing that you take such a stance based on a man that I assume you are not personally acquainted with
And you have better information? As I said, if better information comes out that shows the US flag was not being used in an intimidating way, I may change my opinion. Sounds like you have some pretty firm inside information. Perhaps you might enlighten us.
but kneejerk responses are becoming all too common here.
You got that right. Most here immediately decided that the principal is an anti-American, US flag hating, liberal. I'm not at all sure where they got that from. I looked at the first 5 threads on this and yes, it appears to be little more than a bunch of knee jerk DU types, incapable of serious discussion, castigating anyone foolish enough to suggest that maybe there's another side to it.
If you would rather spin than answer questions, I don't care to discuss further.
So far it appears I am the only one answering anything here, either for you or others.
Well, as I said in response to the post you referred to, students do not have unfettered free speech rights, especially when they threaten good order. When a principal does try and control a situation he is excoriated on threads such as this. When things get totally out of control, similar threads will condemn the school administration for letting it happen.
"You don't ban the flag as a response, you punish the kids that acted up not the flag."
That is this whole situation in a nutshell.
I don't care that a bunch of illegal SOBs went marching all over town with the Mexican flag. I care that there are people here illegally marching in broad daylight and our police do nothing.
I don't care that a bunch of students went marching all over town with the Mexican flag...or the American flag. I care that there are students here screwing around, out of school during school hours, in broad daylight and the principal and truant officers do nothing.
Listen up guy, I just came from a birthday party for my youngest daughter. She was 21 today. Her mother, mothers best friends, two sisters, and couple of friends, me and my wife of two years. OK, long ago divorce, like '87 or so. Anyway, in the middle of a few drinks, they tell her about a tradition, of the B'day girl drinking a BJ, she is supposed to crawl across the floor, and drink a shot out of the glass balanced on a strangers lap. Of course I threw a rod, everybody else decide that I was wrong. Is the world upside down? I brought up my father, mother, g mother and father, my grand daughters name, I was sent home with a fanfare. Am I wrong, or are they wrong, or is something just flat effed up? I know the answer, just looking for some validation. so sorry.....I will NOT sleep well tonite.
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lengthy thread, same topic, different article:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1607726/posts
students do not have unfettered free speech rights, especially when they threaten good order.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Students have the same First Amendment rights as adults.
Can you see? The reason there is disorder is due to the fact the government school can not do two things at once. It can not respect student's First Amendment Rights and maintain order.
The solution is to privatized universal K-12 education.
As I said before, their rights end when good order is threatened, as it was in this case. BTW, if you think adults have unfettered 1st Amendment rights, walk into a court room and try them out some time.
Can you see? The reason there is disorder is due to the fact the government school can not do two things at once. It can not respect student's First Amendment Rights and maintain order.
No, actually I can't see that. There are times when free speech must take a back seat. When the rights of others are threatened or order is in jeopardy, then the free speech that is causing the problem must be halted.
I believe, given all the reports I have seen, that the principal did the correct thing, and brought order to a dangerous situation. I'm not sure what a private contract principal would have done differently.
You may want to read the decision in its totality. The court found no direct connection between the passive wearing of armbands and disorder. That is simply not the case here, and in the case you refer to, the courts made clear that school officials do have the authority to curtail free speech that threatens order.
I merely pointed out that the First Amendment is relative, not absolute.
For them, if they refuse to cooperate with government school officials they WILL be imprisoned. The same is true for their parents if they push that far.
I dare say only if they break the law, either the student or the parent. But I cannot see what privatization of the school system does for the Colorado case. The principal would likely have done the same thing, yes, perhaps earlier, but a similar tactic nonetheless. And both would have been right.
Well, perhaps not the fretting, but why not the disorderly conduct? Kids will be kids after all. Why would privatization change anything?
Again! Solution: Begin the process of privatizing universal K-12 education.
I don't exactly understand where you are going with this. There are plenty of private schools today at all levels, as well as home schooling. Who pays for the total bill for all those unable to cover the tuition of a private school?
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