Showing posts with label free speech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free speech. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Students Are Not Rats

“I prefer to die than to live like a rat,” said Charlie Hebdo’s top editor Stéphane Charbonnier, in regard to life without free speech.   
            In America, free speech is a defining feature of our political conscience.  
A poll of high school students and teachers by the John S and James L Knight Foundation found that while 24 percent of students thought the first amendment was overreaching, “65 percent of the students who see digital news on a daily basis agreed strongly that people should be able to express unpopular opinions,” according to an article on The Guardian.
            Yet the free speech of American high school students is constantly up for debate. When will we find the line that separates freedom of expression from communication with intent to incite violence? 
            This question was raised once again on May 5th, 2010 when a group of high school students wore t-shirts displaying the American flag to school on Cinco de Mayo.
            The principal required the students to either turn their shirt inside out or go home. The students proceeded to go home, and their parents filed a lawsuit against the school for violating the right to free speech.
            After San Francisco Federal judges ruled in favor of the school principal, the case was appealed to the Supreme Court, according to The Los Angeles Times.     
So far the Supreme Court has ruled that students have the right to wear black armbands in protest of a war (Tinker v. Des Moines) and that students, in order to communicate a political message, may use particular offensive words (Cohen v. California).
However, if the any of the above actions could cause harm to others, the right is taken away (Schneck v. United States).
            Yesterday, the Supreme Court refused to take the case. By their refusal the court is supporting, by omission, the San Francisco court’s decision that the principal had legal justification to restrict the student’s free speech right because “The Live Oaks High School south of San Jose had seen at least 30 fights between white and Mexican American students,” according to The Los Angeles Times.
            This is just one scenario among many; sometimes the courts make the right decision, and sometimes they don’t.
            It’s up to us to make our voices heard in support or in protest. Join the conversation at The Los Angeles Times or sign-up for the ACLU newsletter to get involved.