Posted on 06/21/2023 8:08:10 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
School administrators were not infringing on a student’s constitutional rights when they ordered him to remove a shirt that said “there are only two genders,” a district judge ruled on June 17.
A Massachusetts boy in a file image. (Courtesy of Alliance Defending Freedom)
Massachusetts middle-schooler Liam Morrison’s lawyers said the order violated his First Amendment rights to free speech and his Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process, but U.S. District Judge Indira Talwani said the violations have not been proven.
The school “permissibly concluded that the Shirt invades the rights of others,” Talwani, an Obama appointee, said.
Schools can bar speech that is in “collision with the rights of others to be secure and be let alone,” Talwani said, quoting from the 1969 ruling in Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. School Dist.
That means the administrators appropriately exercised their discretion when concluding the statement “may communicate that only two gender identities–male and female are valid, and any others are invalid or nonexistent, and to conclude that students who identify differently, whether they do so openly or not, have a right to attend school without being confronted by messages attacking their identities,” she added.
Talwani’s ruling rejected a request from the boy for a temporary restraining order that would have stopped administrators from prohibiting the student from wearing the shirt at John T. Nicholas Middle School.
The case has not been thrown out and Talwani could ultimately rule in the boy’s favor.
Tyson Langhofer, senior counsel and director of the Center for Academic Freedom at Alliance Defending Freedom who is helping defend the plaintiff, said that the ruling was disappointing.
“Public school officials cannot censor a 7th grader’s free speech by forcing him to remove a shirt that states a scientific fact,” Langhofer told The Epoch Times via email. “Doing so is a gross violation of the First Amendment and we will be appealing this ruling to the First Circuit Court of Appeals.”
Lawyers for the defendants, which include acting principal Heather Tucker and Middleborough Public Schools Superintendent Carolyn Lyons, did not return an inquiry.
First Amendment expert Eugene Volokh said the ruling does not appear to be consistent with the Tinker ruling, which held that school officials in Iowa illegally ordered students to remove armbands amid protests against the Vietnam war. Lawyer Hans Bader, who is not involved in the case, said the ruling was wrong, noting that previous cases have upheld students’ rights to convey messages “as long as they weren’t vulgar or likely to cause a disruption,” including a ruling in favor of wearing a shirt that said “Be Happy, Not Gay.”
“The judge suggested that the T-shirt interfered with other students’ ‘right to attend school without being confronted by messages attacking their identities,'” Bader said. “But other courts have refused to recognize a right to attend school without being confronted by messages attacking one’s identity, when the messages don’t disrupt school, and don’t involve ‘independently tortious speech like libel, slander or intentional infliction of emotional distress.’”
Liam , 12, wore the shirt to school on March 21.
Tucker removed the boy from class and said other students had complained about the shirt. Tucker said the student could remove the shirt or that they could go to another room to discuss the matter.
In the other room, joined by a school counselor, the student asked what the problem was. Tucker reiterated the removal order but the student said he could not in good conscience remove the shirt. Tucker then called the boy’s father, who came to pick him up.
The following day, the father emailed Lyons to inquire “why my son was removed from class and ultimately missed out on a day of class instruction.”
Lyons said she supported what she termed as dress code enforcement. The content of the shirt “targeted students of a protected class; namely in the area of gender identity,” Lyons said.
Part of the dress code bars messages on clothing that “state, imply, or depict hate speech or imagery that target groups based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religious affiliation, or any other classification.”
Notified of a possible lawsuit, lawyers for the school district said that the district “has, and will continue to, prohibit the wearing of a t-shirt by L.M. or anyone else which is likely to be considered discriminatory, harassing and/or bullying to others including those who are gender nonconforming by suggesting that their sexual orientation, gender identity or expression does not exist or is invalid.”
Liam was later ordered to remove another shirt he wore to school that said, “There are censored genders.”
During a public hearing, the student decried what happened, noting that the school allows posters referencing gender, including one stating people should “rise up to protect trans and GNC students,” and a rainbow flag, which is used in support of gay and transgender people.
Liam decided to wear the shirt because he believes there are only two sexes, male and female, and equates the word gender with sex, according to his lawyers.
Some of the language from the school supports the view. For instance, the student handbook says at one point that all aspects of education “must be fully open and available to members of both sexes” and at another point says that sexual harassment is defined as … “written materials or pictures derogatory to either gender.”
Lawyers for the defendants said the plaintiff neglected to acknowledge that discrimination, harassment, and bullying based on gender identity is prohibited by Massachusetts law and that school officials “have the responsibility by law to provide a safe and inclusive environment for all students.”
“By prohibiting Plaintiff from wearing the t-shirt, Defendants were properly upholding Massachusetts law and protecting the rights of all students to learn in a safe non-harassing, and inclusive environment,” they said in their opposition to the request for a temporary restraining order.
Amazing how many seemingly intelligent people cannot make this distinction.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohen_v._California
First Amendment rule articulated in Cohen v. California (1971) requiring people exposed to unwanted speech to avert their eyes and ears.
That case was not about political speech (opposition to the draft) but obscene speech. The ruling determined that obscene words were protected.
Had the shirt said, "Resist the draft," it would never have gotten to court. Everyone would have agreed that it was protected speech.
Judge is wrong. This is a political issue, the First was directly related to that.
could also wear a t-shirt that says there is no freedom from offence.
or one that says DNA does not lie
Our Nation is dying and we are witnesses to its demise.
The murderers have lied to us for decades. The Press and most media outlets have pulled the wool over our collective eyes for decades.
We are distracted by the loons amongst us that strive to convince us that there are more than two sexes, Blacks are still enslaved by wicked “Whitey,” And men can have babies.
We have seen the Department of Justice changed to a weapon that can be used on a former President because he plans to run for office again.
Our Dollar has lost the respect of the World and will soon be, changed to a chip that will enable the government to track everything you do, privately, with cash.
Our Military is no longer tough enough to fight and is ill equipped to win on the battlefield..
But, we should never lose hope. It could be all that is left.
Neuter is not a recent addition. I learned about neuter when I took German in high school 40 years ago. Not sure about “common”.
If he is brave enough to take on his peers, his school’s administration, and social media at 12 this young man has a bright future ahead of him, far better than the conformist herd. See my new tagline.
They may have other problems, but I think having difficulties defining a male and a woman isn’t one of them.
I'd say the majority of Americans and Brits haven't abandoned their common sense either, as shown by the pushback from otherwise liberal people like JK Rowling. It's a just a shrill minority of ivory tower dwellers who genuinely believe this malarkey and a slightly larger number of people who go along to get along with said elites. Admittedly, the minority has disproportionate social power relative to their numbers, but I am confident that we can prevail if we keep speaking up. You don't have to look to Russia (or even to the red states) to find people willing to stand up to the gender bullies.
Utterly illogical and unsupported. These people are running out of control. This ass should be pointedly ignored.
How about a shirt that said “pseudo science is not science”?.
I meant as it pertains to humans not objects.
“There is no such right.“
That a Judge arrived at such a conclusion is all the proof you need that she’d jail you for that t-shirt. That makes this judge dangerous.
XX or XY, YOU’RE ONE OR THE OTHER.
Since when does speech NEED to be 'protected?
Do they REALLY want to go here?
How about a shirt that said “pseudo science is not science”?.
That’s the point period
Not yet but the Demoncrats are sure trying to kill it. If they succeed in packing SCOTUS then it probably is dead.
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