The Washington Parish School District finds
itself mired in controversy over the issue. Apparently, by custom at its Pine
Junior/Senior High School seniors have designated parking spots where they may
have painted whatever isn’t negative, rude, or offensive in language, pictures,
or symbols.
Senior Ned Thomas had a representation painted of
Republican Pres. Donald
Trump from mid-waist-up, with the nation’s chief executive wearing a suit
and tie, stars and stripes bandana, sunglasses with stars on one lens and
stripes on another, and overall looking serene. Not long afterwards, he was
informed that the picture was too “political” and the district had it painted
over.
Thomas, who is the nephew of Democrat Washington Parish
Pres. Richard “Ned” Thomas, argued not only was that stipulation not part of
the rules, but that it was applied selectively. He said he knew of other parking
spot art that was political nature, and also that another student had a part
painted over which had read “Trump 2020.” He plans to sue the district to
recover the $200 spent on the art, attorney’s fees, and to have the opportunity
to have it painted again.
But in his filing Thomas doesn’t have to claim discrimination
in rules application. Much more simply, his attorney can point towards Tinker v. Des
Moines Independent Community School District that assures that (along
with other cases since) schools can’t censor student public political expression
unless it disrupts a school’s educational mission or promotes vulgarity or illegal
drug use. Even the most virulent Trump-hater can’t argue that the art on Thomas’
spot fails on any of these accounts.
This echoes the justification behind letting
students engage in disrespectful behavior towards the American flag such as
failure by a team member to stand at attention during the national anthem at
events such as athletic contests. School can’t penalize students with a condition
like unless they show respect to the flag when asked they won’t be allowed to
participate in extracurricular activities.
Thomas has set up a crowdfunding appeal
to raise money for legal representation. He shouldn’t have to; the district should
recognize it violated his rights and pay for painting his spot with the same
image.
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