Posted on 10/13/2009 12:28:37 PM PDT by motoman
A Christian middle-school student is suing his school district after a principal ordered him to remove a T-shirt bearing the message "Abortion is not health care" on the day of President Obama's speech to schoolchildren.
Alliance Defense Fund attorneys filed a lawsuit in federal court against the West Shore School District in Lewisberry, Pa., Oct. 5 on behalf of a male, Christian middle-school student identified as E.B.
The boy's parents, identified as the Boyers, said they were concerned about the president's speech and the national health-care debate, including reported funding of abortion within proposed legislation.
"[T]he Boyers, like many others, felt that President Obama was bypassing them and speaking directly to their children without their permission," the complaint states. " Like many others, the Boyers struggled with whether they should send their children to school on that day. E.B. attended school and decided to voice his religious viewpoint as it relates to the issue of abortion."
The boy wore the T-shirt to his classes at Crossroads Middle School and said he received no complaints until his fifth-period teacher ordered him to go to the principal's office to determine whether the shirt was "appropriate."
E.B. claims he was immediately told to remove his shirt "because it might insult somebody."
(Excerpt) Read more at wnd.com ...
I wonder: In how many abortions has the fifth-period teacher been involved?
The problem is that the principal made a subjective judgment ( possibly insulting) not one based on the policy. If he had simply said the shirt was not allowed because it violated the policy then you would be right. Since he made a value judgment outside of policy then he's in the wrong.
Up to the School Board to review.
Any principal or teacher who is insulted by a pro-life message is not fit to teach children.
How many of the fellow fifth-graders had an abortion in his classes?
Certainly his classmates who WERE aborted can't voice their support for the shirt.
I think the principal really meant "it might insult a liberal". I bet shirts that insult conservatives are a-ok in that school.
Why did’nt the family sue the principal?Anyone know?Seems to me the kids 1st amendment was violated by the principal
Don’t worry. I’m sure the ACLU is going to rush to his aid! /s
And Al Gore cultists are welcome to their farcical beliefs. Except they try to impose their beliefs and morality on everyone (carbon footprint, going green, carbon offset credits, no filament lightbulbs, low flow toilets, meatless Mondays...).
If you are pro life then you agree with the t shirt, therefore no offense.
If you are pro abortion then it is just discussing a medical procedure to remove an unwanted tissue mass, therefore no offense.
So who could possibly be insulted?
If you are “pro-choice”,
you know what the “procedure” IS,
and don’t want to be reminded of your depravity.
So, just when
would you propose kids get some hands on experience learning to cope with such different perspectives, constructions on reality, opinions . . .
in the real world . . . as real as classrooms get . . .
. . . Oh, I know . . .
just before OThuga’s health care pulls the plug on you for being a useless eater in an old folks home.
brilliant.
Sheesh.
Sorry, but the unfortunate tragedy is that the public schools is where the fight is being lost!!!
This insidious form of indoctrination in our public school systems is producing a generation of kids, many of which have little parental direction at home, who are being led to believe nothing is wrong with regards to abortion, and that it is just a “blob of flesh”.
Kid’s have every right to free speech in the public schools. I’m not worried about the opposing, leftist side of the argument. In the arena of free speech, the correct argument always prevails.
The classroom is a highly structured environment. Slogans and radical dress styles disrupt the experience and help hobble the ability to learn.
Disrupters and sloganeers are quick and pat at getting around dress rules. Gang colors, style of shoes, pins, extra short skirts, extra long legs on short pants — anything can become s disruptive message at times. A Principal has to be given the authority to make judgment calls, withing a broadly, not specifically framed policy.
Ckassrooms are not romantic places, there is no tolerance for dreamy ideals. Let the kids learn, and not be tossed into chaos.
Hooray for the school or district that has kids so self-controlled and mature that no rules or ad-hoc Teacher’s or Principal’s actions against such disruptions are needed, or in which what would be disruptive dress in a more agitated group of kids can be allowed! But do not imagine that the uncommonly high-standard group is the norm. Our popular culture trains and encourages the kids to be disruptive, to be disrespectful.
Fire the principal.
While we’re at it, we might want to look into firing anyone in the public schools who teach without an education...and by this I mean ANYONE with a worthless, comic book degree in “education”.
If you want your child to learn history, you might try a teacher with a degree in that subject. Etc, etc.
Just think of that the next time your school’s basketball coach teaches physics (and global “warming”). Yup, this one exists.
I agree that too many of today’s schools are ruinations — one cure is MORE local authority and an elimination of all federal mandates and a major reduction of state ones.
The overabundance of rules and regulations — boxes and boxes, volumes and volumes, means NO PERSON IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ANYTHING. The local boards are stymied by the invocation of the mantra “State Mandate” or “Federal Requirement”. It breeds disconnection, inability to act in bold ways to problems needing bold solutions.
Funny, they usually have the coaches teach “English”.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.