Posted on 07/18/2024 7:42:46 AM PDT by artichokegrower
A California judge has ruled that teachers were right to punish a seven-year-old girl over a Black Lives Matter drawing because 'she's too young to have First Amendment rights.'
The first grader was banned from recess and drawing pictures at Viejo Elementary in Orange County after she added the words 'any life' below Black Lives Matter on a picture she drew and and gave to a black friend.
The picture showed the words 'Black Lives Matter' with four round shapes in various different tones of brown, beige and yellow, which was intended to 'represent her friends' who were 'racially-mixed'.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
Thanks, that make sense.
This kid should be in jail for life. Throw away the key. Skip the trial.
I guess the teacher failed to indoctrinate properly. Hang the teacher for failing?
Did this judge ever attend public school? Is there ANY one who wasn’t opressed, denigrated, bullied, lied to, laughed at, assaulted in evety way possible. Grow up. Toughen up. Learn to love.
I can’t find an age restriction in my copy of the First Amendment.
I would like to see this appealed to the USSC. I’m not an attorney but am confident his would definitely be overturned. If a child can choose their sexual identity and transition to the opposite sex, then they surely have the right to free speech and expression.
I would like to see this appealed to the USSC. I’m not an attorney but am confident this would be overturned. If a child can choose their sexual identity and transition to the opposite sex or have an abortion without parental knowledge and consent, then they surely have the right to speak freely and express themselves openly without censorship, approval or consent from adults.
California is sick.
The media propaganda indeed
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.