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Post Info TOPIC: Mom upset students can fly Confederate flags on H.S. campus


Hooker

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Mom upset students can fly Confederate flags on H.S. campus
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Smyrna mom upset students can fly Confederate flags on H.S. campus

 

RUTHERFORD COUNTY, Tenn. (WKRN) – A local mother is upset because kids at her child’s school are allowed to fly Confederate flags on campus.

The mom, who would like to remain anonymous, contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School in Rutherford County.

She said her 14-year-old son, who is in ninth grade, came home this week and told her that kids were wearing Confederate flag T-shirts to class.

The mother said she saw them herself while dropping off her son Wednesday morning. She said she also noticed students flying Confederate flags in the back of their trucks.

“I felt sad and hurt when I saw that,” she told News 2.

The Confederate flag has remained a controversial symbol since the Civil War, and the mom said, “I just don’t think it should be in schools.”

While driving by Stewarts Creek High School, News 2 counted as many as three Confederate flags on vehicles in the parking lot. There were also some American flags being displayed.

One of the Confederate flags had the message “heritage not hate” printed on it.

Still, the mom says she sees the flag as a source of hate and is afraid for her son’s safety.

“I don’t think it is the appropriate place for my child to be subjected to this,” she said.

She said she contacted the school district and was told nothing could be done about students displaying Confederate flags.

News 2 contacted Rutherford County Schools spokesperson James Evans who said students have the right to express their beliefs under the First Amendment.

He said “As a school district, we can’t prohibit such items unless it is causing a disturbance at school.”

The mother said she would like to see a policy change in the district.



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Well actually they can prohibit it. A " disturbance" is very subjective so if they choose they could ban them at School.

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Yeah, we don't roll that way...

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Lady Gaga Snerd wrote:

Well actually they can prohibit it. A " disturbance" is very subjective so if they choose they could ban them at School.


 They have to be careful there.  The Supreme Court has ruled in favor of students before when it comes to this kind of thing.  Lower courts have ruled against the Confederate flag - but the Supreme Court hasn't gotten that one specifically, yet.  The Supreme Court did rule in favor of students protesting the Vietnam War by wearing black armbands. 

 

 

The nation's highest court has had plenty to say about everything from free speech at school to teenagers' rights in the legal system.

For those of us on the outside, the U.S. Supreme Court can seem remote and mysterious. But the Court, whose nine Justices are appointed for life and deliberate in secret, exerts a powerful influence over the course of the nation and over the lives of Americans—including teenagers.

In a landmark 1967 case known as In re Gault ("in re" is Latin for "in reference to"), which concerned the arrest of a 15-year-old Arizona boy, the Court ruled that teenagers have distinct rights under the U.S. Constitution. (Prior to that, the law generally regarded children as the property of their parents). In the 40 years since, the Court has weighed in on a host of issues involving people under 18—from freedom of speech and privacy at school to the rights of teenagers in the legal system.

Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District (1969)
Issue: Freedom of Speech at School
Bottom Line: You Have the Right To Express Yourself—Up to a Point

Background
In December 1965, John and Mary Beth Tinker and their friend Chris Eckhardt wore black armbands to school in Des Moines, Iowa, to protest the war in Vietnam. School officials told them to remove the armbands, and when they refused, they were suspended (John, 15, from North High; Mary Beth, 13, from Warren Harding Junior High; and Chris, 16, from Roosevelt High). With their parents, they sued the school district, claiming a violation of their First Amendment right of freedom of speech.

Ruling
The Supreme Court sided with the students. Students and teachers don't "shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate," the Court said.

The Court did not, however, grant students an unlimited right to self-expression. It said First Amendment guarantees must be balanced against a school's need to keep order: As long as an act of expression doesn't disrupt classwork or school activities or invade the rights of others, it's acceptable. Regarding the students in this case, "their deviation consisted only in wearing on their sleeve a band of black cloth," the Court said. "They caused discussion outside of the classrooms, but no interference with work and no disorder."

Impact
In 1986, applying the "disruption test" from the Tinker case, the Supreme Court upheld the suspension of Matthew Fraser, a 17-year-old senior at Bethel High School in Tacoma, Washington, who gave a school speech containing sexual innuendos (Bethel School District v. Fraser). The Court said "it is a highly appropriate function of public school education to prohibit the use of vulgar and offensive terms in public discourse."

Lower courts have relied on Tinker in rulings on school attire, allowing nose rings and dyed hair, for example, but disallowing a T-shirt displaying a Confederate flag.

In June, the Supreme Court weighed in on another student expression case, Frederick v. Morse, ruling that schools can limit student speech that seems to advocate illegal drug use. The case concerned Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old senior at Juneau-Douglas High School in Alaska, who was suspended in 2002 for holding a banner that said "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while standing across the street from the school during the Olympic torch relay.

 

 



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"The Confederate flag has remained a controversial symbol since the Civil War, and the mom said, “I just don’t think it should be in schools.”

The flag is not being displayed by the school. If it were then I could see that as problematic.
The flag is not banned, if students wish to display the flag on their own self or on their vehicles, that is up to them.


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apple wrote:

"The Confederate flag has remained a controversial symbol since the Civil War, and the mom said, “I just don’t think it should be in schools.”

The flag is not being displayed by the school. If it were then I could see that as problematic.
The flag is not banned, if students wish to display the flag on their own self or on their vehicles, that is up to them.


 I agree.



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Lawyerlady wrote:
apple wrote:

"The Confederate flag has remained a controversial symbol since the Civil War, and the mom said, “I just don’t think it should be in schools.”

The flag is not being displayed by the school. If it were then I could see that as problematic.
The flag is not banned, if students wish to display the flag on their own self or on their vehicles, that is up to them.


 I agree.


Excellent point. 



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Ohfour wrote:
Lawyerlady wrote:
apple wrote:

"The Confederate flag has remained a controversial symbol since the Civil War, and the mom said, “I just don’t think it should be in schools.”

The flag is not being displayed by the school. If it were then I could see that as problematic.
The flag is not banned, if students wish to display the flag on their own self or on their vehicles, that is up to them.


 I agree.


Excellent point. 


Does this include both inside the school and /  or in the school parking lot? 



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and ....

"disallowing a T-shirt displaying a Confederate flag."

This seems to be relevant.

 

To someone (maybe many, many someones) this flag is a symbol, not of "Southern Pride" or of solidarity of some kind,

it is a symbol of hate, dominance and oppression of anyone who is NOT white and Christian.

 

I think to a black teenager, it seems just like a Nazi flag would to ME.

And if some fool was displaying a Nazi flag on their car at my local high school, they could be riling up people who might take some adverse action.

 



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Your offense does not prohibit my first amendment right.

And yes, they can wear flag tees in school...

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Ohfour wrote:

Your offense does not prohibit my first amendment right.

And yes, they can wear flag tees in school...


Nazi flag tees? 



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ed11563 wrote:
Ohfour wrote:

Your offense does not prohibit my first amendment right.

And yes, they can wear flag tees in school...


Nazi flag tees? 


 I wouldn't wear one, but they are not illegal...(and selling very well on Amazon BTW)    



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FB_IMG_1439416405680.jpg



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Look. These shirts, decals, flags, coffee mugs, tags, bathing suits, everything, have been around for 154 years.

Get over it already.

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lilyofcourse wrote:

FB_IMG_1439416405680.jpg


 This made me laugh and laugh. If we made a list of things people get offended by these days it would be the size of the Encyclopedia Britannica set (for those of us who remember encyclopedias with fondness).



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ed11563 wrote:

and ....

"disallowing a T-shirt displaying a Confederate flag."

This seems to be relevant.

 


 


 And that is why I mentioned it.  But, you left off the "Lower courts have ruled" part - not the Supreme Court.



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the mother should get over herself


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No it's not up to them. They cannot wear or dress anyway they want to We make school code and policy and all the students sign it and so do their parents on the first week of school.

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Not up to who? This is not banned in the school dress code so if it doesnt violate the rules, then they are fine...

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Not true. If deemed a "distraction" then they can't wear it. It's the Principal's call

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Its actually not the principal's call. The superintendent says that county rules do not prohibit it. And they wont deem it a distraction. Peoples hurt feelungs are not the school dictricts problem...

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burns07 wrote:


the mother should get over herself


People need to stand up to bullying. And to tyranny.



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Oh geez...people need to quit being so offended. ....

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I am saying the Super could shut it down if they want to. The Super doesn't want to. And that's fine too.

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ed11563 wrote:
burns07 wrote:


the mother should get over herself


People need to stand up to bullying. And to tyranny.


 They are. That's why they are wearing the shirts and flying the flags.

 

See how that works?



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I don't like seeing kids wearing shirts with the gay pride flag. It offends me.

Should I go to the media over it? Or just respect their right to express themselves?

Darn that pesky first ammendment.

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Lady Gaga Snerd wrote:

I am saying the Super could shut it down if they want to. The Super doesn't want to. And that's fine too.


 You are correct. But he wouldnt have a job long....we're pretty vocal round here...:)



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Maybe the Super doesn't agree with the parent. Just because you run up to the school and beyotche doesn't mean the school has to roll over for you.

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Is there a difference between being "offended" and being "frightened"?

If I see a group of "skinheads" with swastikas walking down the street toward me, I'm going to change my route.



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Because they know somehow you are Jewish? Do you wear a yamaka? How would they know you are jewish?



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ed11563 wrote:

Is there a difference between being "offended" and being "frightened"?

If I see a group of "skinheads" with swastikas walking down the street toward me, I'm going to change my route.


 Wouldn't that be racist?

 

No one is doing anything but wearing a shirt in school. 

If a shirt scares you. Seek professional help.

 



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Yeah, we don't roll that way...
- Ohfour

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Unfortunately some of Tennessee's other school districts disagree with you. A quick Google search of "tennessee schools ban confederate flag" yields the sad results that indeed some school districts do ban them, and that judges have upheld those bans.

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ed11563 wrote:
burns07 wrote:


the mother should get over herself


People need to stand up to bullying. And to tyranny.


 Where is the bullying in that story?  The tyranny?  They have a flag and it actually has "heritage, not hate" on it.  They are not bullying - SHE is, by trying to control what they do.



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Oh FFS. Just because you don't like something is not necessarily a reason for everyone else to stop doing it.

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ed11563 wrote:
burns07 wrote:


the mother should get over herself


People need to stand up to bullying. And to tyranny.


 Darn right.  They should stand up for their right of free speech to wear and display what they want to.  they need to stand up to this bully of a busybody mom who thinks that just because she wants to do something she should be able to bully an entire group of students to do so.

 

If it was actually the school itself displaying it I might have an issue--they need to represent all students.  But that's not the case here.



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"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

 

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?

 



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ed11563 wrote:

"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

 

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?

 


Not at all.  Not at ALL. 



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ed11563 wrote:

"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

 

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?

 


 Why was some ones shirt or flag going on a rampage?



-- Edited by Tinydancer on Thursday 13th of August 2015 03:48:45 PM

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ed11563 wrote:

"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

 

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?

 


 Any right?  I guess she has the right to feel however she wants to.  Is it reasonable? NO.  Is it stupid?  YES.



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Last I heard, the flag was still a legal symbol. Why should it be banned from schools? It might not be wise for a white student to wear it to a predominantly black school or area, but here there are no facts to indicate it is likely to incite violence or immediate harm.

I wonder...now that marijuana is legal in California, are students allowed to wear t-shirts depicting the leaf? I remember they were banned when I went to school.

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FNW wrote:

Last I heard, the flag was still a legal symbol. Why should it be banned from schools? It might not be wise for a white student to wear it to a predominantly black school or area, but here there are no facts to indicate it is likely to incite violence or immediate harm.

I wonder...now that marijuana is legal in California, are students allowed to wear t-shirts depicting the leaf? I remember they were banned when I went to school.


I would think that since it's not legal to purchase unless you are 18, then they would still be banned.  Just like shirts depicting alcohol or cigarettes... 



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Good point. I believe the shirts are still banned from some amusement parks.

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FNW wrote:

Last I heard, the flag was still a legal symbol. Why should it be banned from schools? It might not be wise for a white student to wear it to a predominantly black school or area, but here there are no facts to indicate it is likely to incite violence or immediate harm.

I wonder...now that marijuana is legal in California, are students allowed to wear t-shirts depicting the leaf? I remember they were banned when I went to school.


 Since it is still illegal under federal law I would think it could be banned.

 

From LL post (this was considered a school event as they brought the students out to attend):

In June, the Supreme Court weighed in on another student expression case, Frederick v. Morse, ruling that schools can limit student speech that seems to advocate illegal drug use. The case concerned Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old senior at Juneau-Douglas High School in Alaska, who was suspended in 2002 for holding a banner that said "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while standing across the street from the school during the Olympic torch relay.



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cadiver wrote:
FNW wrote:

Last I heard, the flag was still a legal symbol. Why should it be banned from schools? It might not be wise for a white student to wear it to a predominantly black school or area, but here there are no facts to indicate it is likely to incite violence or immediate harm.

I wonder...now that marijuana is legal in California, are students allowed to wear t-shirts depicting the leaf? I remember they were banned when I went to school.


 Since it is still illegal under federal law I would think it could be banned.

 

From LL post (this was considered a school event as they brought the students out to attend):

In June, the Supreme Court weighed in on another student expression case, Frederick v. Morse, ruling that schools can limit student speech that seems to advocate illegal drug use. The case concerned Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old senior at Juneau-Douglas High School in Alaska, who was suspended in 2002 for holding a banner that said "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while standing across the street from the school during the Olympic torch relay.


What's illegal under federal law? 



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Ohfour wrote:
cadiver wrote:
FNW wrote:

Last I heard, the flag was still a legal symbol. Why should it be banned from schools? It might not be wise for a white student to wear it to a predominantly black school or area, but here there are no facts to indicate it is likely to incite violence or immediate harm.

I wonder...now that marijuana is legal in California, are students allowed to wear t-shirts depicting the leaf? I remember they were banned when I went to school.


 Since it is still illegal under federal law I would think it could be banned.

 

From LL post (this was considered a school event as they brought the students out to attend):

In June, the Supreme Court weighed in on another student expression case, Frederick v. Morse, ruling that schools can limit student speech that seems to advocate illegal drug use. The case concerned Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old senior at Juneau-Douglas High School in Alaska, who was suspended in 2002 for holding a banner that said "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while standing across the street from the school during the Olympic torch relay.


What's illegal under federal law? 


 Pot.



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cadiver wrote:
Ohfour wrote:
cadiver wrote:
FNW wrote:

Last I heard, the flag was still a legal symbol. Why should it be banned from schools? It might not be wise for a white student to wear it to a predominantly black school or area, but here there are no facts to indicate it is likely to incite violence or immediate harm.

I wonder...now that marijuana is legal in California, are students allowed to wear t-shirts depicting the leaf? I remember they were banned when I went to school.


 Since it is still illegal under federal law I would think it could be banned.

 

From LL post (this was considered a school event as they brought the students out to attend):

In June, the Supreme Court weighed in on another student expression case, Frederick v. Morse, ruling that schools can limit student speech that seems to advocate illegal drug use. The case concerned Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old senior at Juneau-Douglas High School in Alaska, who was suspended in 2002 for holding a banner that said "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" while standing across the street from the school during the Olympic torch relay.


What's illegal under federal law? 


 Pot.


AH! Gotcha!!!!!   



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My spirit animal is a pink flamingo.

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ed11563 wrote:

"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

 

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?

 


 To paraphrase a popular quote, how does my shirt affect your safety? 

 

 



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ed11563 wrote:

"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

 

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?

 


Given the information we have--no.  Was there a threat of physical harm?  Mom doesn't say so.

 

Just because you perceive an issue in your deluded mind does not mean there is one.   One crackpot doesn't get to dictate rules for everyone else.   



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"The mom... contacted News 2 with concerns about her son’s safety at Stewarts Creek High School"

Do you think she had any right to be afraid for her child's safety?
- ed11563

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Because some people want to wear a flag that she doesn't understand the meaning behind, or they have one on their car? No.

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So let me understand this. She has a problem with the kids at SCHOOL and she goes to the TV NEWS to settle it? She does not go to the school and talk to the principal? Of course not. Because that doesn't bring enough drama to her butt hurt. To maximize her butt hurt she goes to the local news and publicizes her butt hurt. Gotta love it. Good move mom! I'm so proud of you! Cause if you thought your kid was in "danger" before now you've really done it.

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