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Tuesday
Feb 09th
The Schools Are Destroying Freedom of Speech Print E-mail
Written by John W. Whitehead   
Wednesday, 25 March 2009 08:39
jw_2008-3_72dpi_rgb.jpgMarch 25, 2009
By John W. Whitehead
Rutherford.org

"The Constitution makes clear there can be no religious test for holding office, and it is just as clear there can be no religious test for individual expression of free speech--or censorship thereof, including at a high school graduation."--Nat Hentoff, author and journalist

Looking at America's public schools, it is difficult to imagine that they were once considered the hope of freedom and democracy.

That dream is no longer true. The majority of students today have little knowledge of the freedoms they possess in the Constitution and, specifically, in the Bill of Rights.

For example, a national survey of high school students reveals that only 2% can identify the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court; 35% know the first three words of the U.S. Constitution; 1.8% know that James Madison is considered the father of the U.S. Constitution; and 25% know that the Fifth Amendment protects against double jeopardy and self incrimination, among other legal rights. Clearly, high school civics classes are failing to teach the importance of our constitutional liberties.

Public educators do not fare much better in understanding and implementing the Constitution in the classroom. A study conducted by the University of Connecticut found that while public educators seem to support First Amendment rights in principle, they are reluctant to apply such rights in the schools. Consequently, the few students who do know and exercise their rights are forced to deal with school officials who, more often than not, fail to respect those rights.

Unfortunately, instead of being the guardians of freedom, the courts increasingly are upholding acts of censorship by government officials. As a result, the horrific lesson being taught to our young people is that the government has absolute power over its citizens and young people have very little freedom. Two incidents come to mind to illustrate this sad state of affairs, both having to do with school officials heavy-handedly silencing student expression at high school graduation ceremonies.

The first incident involves Nicholas Noel, the senior class president of his graduating class at Grand Rapids Union High School in Michigan. With more than 1,000 people in the audience listening to Noel deliver his commencement address, school officials turned off the microphone when he strayed from his approved speech and referred to the high school as a "prison." Noel said he described the school as a "prison" because it stressed conformity and students were "expected to act alike." His message was that high school paints an incomplete picture of life for students. "The colors of life are yet to come," Noel said. "It was really nice, nothing in bad taste. I tried to be different, and I was punished." Adding insult to injury, school officials even initially refused to award him his diploma.

The second incident, strikingly similar to Noel's, also involves a student whose microphone was cut off during her graduation speech simply because she voiced her personal convictions. Brittany McComb, the graduating valedictorian at Foothill High School in Nevada, was instructed by school officials to reflect over past experiences and lessons learned, say things that came from her heart and inject hope into her speech. Brittany adhered to the school's guidelines and wrote about the true meaning of success in her life--her religious beliefs. However, when she submitted her speech in advance to school administrators, they censored it, deleting several Bible verses and references to "the Lord" and one mention of "Christ."

Believing that the district's censorship amounted to a violation of her right to free speech, McComb attempted to deliver the original version of her speech at graduation. The moment school officials realized that she was straying from the approved text, they unplugged her microphone. The move drew extended jeers from the audience, with some people screaming, "Let her speak!"

School officials justified their actions by claiming that McComb's speech amounted to proselytizing. McComb disagrees. "I was telling my story," she said. "And if what I said was proselytizing, it was no more so than every other speaker who espoused his or her personal moral viewpoint about success. We're talking about life here: opinions about the means of success in life, from whatever source, are indeed forms of individual religious expression. It's also hard for me to believe that anyone at graduation could think I or any other speaker was speaking on behalf of the school system."

McComb filed a First Amendment lawsuit in federal court. But on March 19, 2009, a federal appeals court held that school officials did not violate her First Amendment rights by censoring her speech and unplugging the microphone. McComb, who is majoring in journalism at Biola University, plans to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

She should not expect much help from the ACLU. Despite being a longtime champion of student expression, the ACLU actually condoned the school's act of censorship. As ACLU lawyer Allen Lichtenstein remarked about the case, "It's important for people to understand that a student was given a school-sponsored forum by a school and therefore, in essence, it was a school-sponsored speech."

Frankly, if the ACLU applied this logic consistently, then nowhere in the schools would students have the right to say anything that wasn't approved by their teachers or high-level school officials since every area in a public school is controlled and sponsored by the school.

Unfortunately, the trend in the federal courts is to agree with this type of skewed reasoning. However, this type of logic will only succeed in eradicating free expression by students in schools, and the ramifications are far-reaching. Eventually, it will mean that government officials can pull the plug on microphones when they disagree with whatever any citizen has to say. Yet the lessons of history are clear: every authoritarian regime from Hitler to Saddam Hussein has not only unplugged citizens' microphones but stopped those with whom the government disapproved from speaking.

Civil libertarians and the courts have long held that the First Amendment right to free speech applies to everyone, whatever their beliefs. This includes what many people consider offensive or deplorable speech. It also includes speech that persuades, as well as religious speech, non-religious speech or pointedly atheistic speech. Thus, unless we want free speech to end up in a totalitarian graveyard, no one, no matter their viewpoint or ideology, should be censored in any state institution.

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written by Liberty-Clinger, March 25, 2009
Freedom of speech is the most essential aspect of human liberty. Freedom of speech is protected by our Bill of Rights, but is not therein granted. Freedom of speech is granted by our Creator and is thereby an unalienable human right according to our Declaration of Independence, and according to self-evident reason.

"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to a*semble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances." Amendment 1, U.S. Constitution

Notice that freedom of speech is addressed by our founding fathers as a given - it had already been granted by God to all people. The first amendment restrains government from stepping on something so sacred as freedom of speech; a human right which pre-existed the Constitution and Bill of Rights.

In 1776, thirteen years before the first amendment was written, our founding fathers declared the source of human liberty - including freedom of speech:

"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it..."

Notice in our Declaration that the destruction by government of human liberty is a just cause for rebellion; and if necessary, for just war.

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written by Liberty-Clinger, March 26, 2009
“If the freedom of speech is taken away then dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep to the slaughter.” George Washington

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written by Molly, April 14, 2009
While there are certainly no restrictions in the Constitution on freedom of speech I think public schools systems are quite different from an open public forum. These are places of education with children. There are circumstances under which educators should have the right to censor what could be harmful or false information portrayed to be endorsed by the school - like school newspapers. While both these circumstances with microphones being unplugged seem ridiculous that doesn't mean there are no circumstances when this might be permittable.

You argue for freedom of speech in all areas but make no exceptions. Would you want a 17 year old giving a speech about sex or drugs to your 7 year old? No. When these kinds of inappropriate topics are infringing upon the educators job to teach they should be censored.

You mentioned that the courts have consistently held that the First Amendment rights apply to everyone. This isn't true. We have consistently found in the US Court System that speech in public schools that impedes the learning environment and purpose of education can be punished or censored. Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier, Tinker v. Des Moines - even though the students won in this case it was found that the First Amendment does not compel a public school to affirmatively sponsor speech that conflicts with its "legitimate pedagogical goals." If there's an overriding interest then the school has the right to not support that speech. Especially if the student makes it appear that the school is behind their beliefs. Bethel School district No. 403 v. Fraser (1986) recognized that the First Amendment rights of students in the public schools “are not automatically coextensive with the rights of adults in other settings and must be applied in the light of the special characteristics of the school environment” (as found in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969).
Hague v. CIO (1939) and Cf. Widmar v. Vincent (1981) established criteria disqualifying public schools as forums for public expression. Public schools do not have the characteristics of other traditional public forums such as parks, streets and other public gathering places that “time out of mind, have been used for purposes of a*sembly, communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing public questions.”

If I were the student from Nevada or either of these towns I would be furious that they pulled the plug, but graduation was a school sponsored event and she agreed to make a speech on that condition and then yells foul when she tries to break the rules?

I am a student and a firm believer in the First Amendment but I am also a firm believer in our judicial system and the decisions they have reached. Public school systems

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 March 2009 08:43
 

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