Pubdate: Wed, 27 Jun 2007
Source: Daily News Tribune (Waltham, MA)
Copyright: 2007 The Daily News Tribune
Contact:  http://www.dailynewstribune.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3562
http://www.mapinc.org/people/Joseph+Frederick (Joseph Frederick)

BONG HITS FOR THE FIRST AMENDMENT

In 1969, the Supreme Court ruled that students do not "shed their 
constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the 
schoolhouse gate." It was a good ruling with exceptions that allowed 
school officials to bar speech that advocated dangerous or illegal 
conduct or was substantially disruptive.

The Roberts Supreme Court has expanded schools' powers to regulate 
speech in a case in which the speech in question was described as 
"cryptic," by Chief Justice John Roberts in the majority, and as 
"nonsense," Justice John Paul Stevens dissenting. A more rugged 
description would be just stupid.

The phrase was the now infamous "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS," words now 
enshrined in First Amendment lore. It was written on a 14-foot banner 
that Alaska high-school student Joseph Frederick unfurled as the 
Olympic Torch Relay was coming through Juneau.

Frederick was not on school property - he was on a sidewalk opposite 
his school - but the presence of the students along the relay route 
was school-sponsored and -supervised. Frederick said he displayed the 
banner, whose inscription even he found meaningless, solely to get on 
television.

Why, oh why, do these things become federal cases? Nonetheless, 
principal Deborah Morse confiscated the banner and suspended 
Frederick for 10 days on the grounds that the message conflicted with 
the school's mission of fighting illegal-drug use.

By 5-4, the court agreed.

But Frederick did not seek to advocate or persuade. Wrote Stevens: 
"The notion that the message on this banner would actually persuade 
either the average student or even the dumbest one to change his or 
her behavior is most implausible."

By the majority's reasoning - and its confidence that it could divine 
meaning in "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS" - the principal could have equally 
confiscated the banner for impermissible promotion of religion during 
a school activity.

Under the "bong hits" ruling, school officials gained the court's 
backing for making students check at least part of their 
constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom