christiefan915
Catalyst
different people have different limitations. some people have had theirs crossed.
two lines of thought on this.
1) students have the barest of rights in the school environment, limited to their private persons. rights of speech and such are, as you liberals like to use the term, 'reasonably regulated' to promote the best possible educational environment.
A few months ago I used this very same argument re: the woman who wanted to start a Concealed Carry group on a local campus. I don't recall if you were one of the posters who said I was flat-out wrong, but a number of them did, stating 2nd Amendment rights. So why is it different for the prom issue?
2) personally, this isn't a free speech issue, but a 14th amendment issue.
I'm going by what a court ruled. "The cancellation, according to the judge, was clearly intended to prevent Constance's attendance at the prom with her girlfriend and their refusal to accommodate a lesbian prom attendee violated the First Amendment. This is clear. Expression can encompass actions as well as words and showing up in pants with a girl on your arm in a conservative Mississippi town certainly sends a political message. The Court rightly clearly found that Constance's first amendment rights had been violated."
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/emma-rubysachs/lesbian-prom-decision-a-h_b_510804.html?alacarte=1
I disagree. Threats are right up on the line. anything after that is debatable.
Wish I could figure out this quote-box stuff. (I typed that so the response above would show.)