Liste des Groupes | Revenir à a tv |
On Jul 17, 2025 at 8:14:18 AM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:Not sure why you'd think such judges harder to find than any others.
On 7/17/2025 1:18 AM, BTR1701 wrote:And the distinction between the two will be left to the aforementionedOn Jul 16, 2025 at 7:39:40 PM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:>
On 7/16/2025 10:02 PM, anim8rfsk wrote:Which in a country with a 1st Amendment and a robust protection of freeRhino <no_offline_contact@example.com> wrote:>
>Her entire school had a Cultural Diversity Day and all students wereI’ve seen that and it wasn’t clear to me if maybe she got punished under a
told to wear something celebrating her own culture instead of the usual
school uniforms so she wore a dress that was essentially a British flag.
She was an A student but found herself punished for her choice of
clothing - along with other students - and her parents were called to
pick her up early.
>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PE2jV5qxE4g [8 minutes]
>
Her parents were not at all happy and her community was very agitated as
well. The school gave an after-the-fact "apology" where they promised to
reconsider how the event was run the next year. I'll believe that when I
see it!
>
flag rule. When I was her age, it was illegal to wear clothing made from
the American flag.
In today's (and yesterday's, and the day before's...) political climate,
it's also possible that she was brandishing an anti-diversity sentiment.
speech
can and should never be grounds for discipline. People, even school
children,
are allowed to have an opinion on issues of public concern that are contrary
to those of the strutting martinets who run the school.
(Yes, I know this was England and they don't have a 1st Amendment, though
they
do claim to value free speech in theory, even if less and less in practice
as
time goes on.)
Yes, but I continue to hope for a difference between speech to inform
and speech to injure.
martinets to determine, yes?
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.