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Interesting Court Ruling concerning the Battle flag.........

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About the only good thing coming from the ACLU in a while......
If you have kids in school you might want to save this case. You may need to show it to school officials, Who would have ever thought you would be in court over silly things as this?


***********************


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: media@aclu.org

CHARLESTON, WV -- A federal court today found that school officials violated a high school student's rights when they disciplined him for wearing a t-shirt bearing an image of the Confederate flag. The ruling comes in response to a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia.

"The court recognized that allowing some expressions of political speech by students while banning others is a flagrant violation of the First Amendment," said ACLU of West Virginia Executive Director Andrew Schneider. "We hope that the school district will use this as an opportunity to teach students about their constitutional rights and encourage debate over future controversial subjects before resorting to censorship."

Franklin Bragg, an 18-year-old senior at Hurricane High School, was born and raised in the Teays Valley area. When he appeared at school in November wearing a t-shirt bearing an image of what he refers to as the "rebel flag," he was disciplined for violating the school's dress code. Although Bragg said he wore the t-shirt to express pride in his Southern heritage, he was told that he could not wear a depiction of the flag because some people were offended by it. According to Bragg, however, other students often wear clothing expressing a variety of political and cultural viewpoints without incident, and no students had made any comments about his t-shirt.

In today's ruling, United States District Judge John T. Copenhaver, Jr. struck down the school policy that bans a student from wearing an image of the Confederate flag, stating that, "to suggest a ban is warranted simply because some associate it with racism proves too much for First Amendment purposes."

In his opinion, Judge Copenhaver cited the famous 1969 Tinker v. Des Moines case, which was brought by the ACLU of Iowa. In that case, the United States Supreme Court ruled that students had a right to wear black armbands to school in protest of the Vietnam War.

ACLU affiliates across the country have successfully defended students who have been punished for wearing t-shirts that school officials deemed "inappropriate," including t-shirts bearing anti-war, gay pride or Christian messages.

In addition to overturning the flag ban, today's court order requires that the disciplinary action be expunged from Bragg's record. The court also noted that if the flag is used in the school in the future "as a tool for disruption, intimidation, or trampling upon the rights of others," then a ban on the flag might be entirely appropriate.

Bragg is represented by ACLU of West Virginia cooperating attorney Roger Forman and ACLU staff attorney Terri Baur.

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"All the South has ever desired was that the union, as established by our forefathers, should be preserved; and that the government, as originally organized, should be administered in purity and truth." ~~ Gen. Robert E. Lee, 1866
 
gatorstick,

Good find indeed. Somebody needs to send this to the h@llhole of Naples High School.

Couple of years now they've banned it and suspended students there for flying it.

Probably have to get rid of a few yakees in that administration before even trying!

Basketcase
 
There is another case decided in Federal court in Kentucky. It was the Castriota (?) case. WE won that one too. If you know of someone down there who is willing to challenge the system. I will be happy to feed them the information.

Often, showing a school official a ruling will get them to back down. If they don't, show these cases to a lawyer, they see an established legal precedent and easy $$$$. It's rulings as these that we need.

Now, we could use a few rulings for airboats............
 
Im rather amazed the ACLU took this one on. Sure am glad they did because ti shows that even they wont stand for school censorship in the form of dress codes.

Sure hope this makes its round.

Thanks Stick.

Scotty
 
Love the South. Love the battle flag. Nowhere else on earth that I'd rather live. But I'm all over the board on this issue and can't seem to plant my feet firmly on one side or the other. On one hand I'm very proud to be Southern and to have ancestors that fought on behalf of the South. On the other hand I'm even more proud to be American. I cringe to think of what the world would be like today if America had not existed in the 20th century as a force against the likes Mao Tse-tung, Pol Pot, Stalin, Hitler, etc., etc... If the South had won the Civil War we'd surely be living in a very different world today. We like to think that it would be one of endless hunting, fishing, airboating and BBQs without interference from our Yankee neighbors, but that's not reality.

My wife and I opted to send our kids to private schools for several reasons, one of which was the clothing issue. We wanted them to be there to study and learn, not to be focused on whether or not their jeans and tennis shoes bore the right labels. The uniforms curtailed all of that. When they got home the Dixie Pride T-shirts and Wranglers went on and the uniforms came off. They, too, are proud to be from the South.

I get sick of the ignorance that persists around the Southern battle flag. That ignorance exists today due in large part to people such as the ACLU, who would much rather have our kids taught that the Civil War was fought over slavery versus state's rights, and that they are descendants of apes and not a creator God. These people have done so much to degrade American society that when they take up a cause in which I believe it makes me question whether or not I'm on the right side of the issue. It also makes me want to take a shower!
 
10-4 Frog,
I find it difficult to applaud the aclu for anything.
They gotta do a whole lotta goods, to overcome all the bads they've done in my mind.

Just one opinion.... everybody has one.
Looks like they screwed up, and did something right for a change.
I'm sure they'll try their best not to let that happen again
 
Frog wrote:
These people have done so much to degrade American society that when they take up a cause in which I believe it makes me question whether or not I'm on the right side of the issue. It also makes me want to take a shower!

I agree. Don't care for them either but better they took this case than another gay rights case............... Maybe start hitting them to take airboat discrimination cases.........better than another feminist case!

Kinda like the mass media. They are not our friends, won't support our values and will stick us in a heartbeat. However, if properly corraled and saddled correctly, you may get a ride from them occasionally.
 
This is a little off the subject but my cousin was watching Opera the other day. Opera was at an all black colledge graduation. ( Opera quoted ) When I was a little girl my grandmother told me to get me a good white family to work for when I grow up. Opera said she wishes her grandmother could see me now, cause ( Quote ) I did find a good white family, but they all work for me. Now where is the racism screamers now when one of there own race shoots off at the mouth? HUH!
 
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