Pubdate: Wed, 27 Jun 2007 Source: Havelock News, The (NC) Copyright: 2007 Havelock News Contact: http://www.havenews.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1734 Author: Corey Friedman RULING ERODES PARENTS' RIGHTS Court Sides With Principal In 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' Case If the Supreme Court's latest thrashing of student expressive rights doesn't infuriate America's moms and dads, maybe the ruling's implications on their parental authority will. Public schools can stifle student speech that promotes drug use, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Monday in the case of a student suspended for hoisting a banner with the message "Bong Hits 4 Jesus." In Frederick v. Morse, the Supreme Court ruled that high school administrators didn't violate Joseph Frederick's rights when they suspended him for waving the banner at a Juneau, Alaska public assembly off school grounds in 2002. This shortsighted ruling emphasizes the federal government's fear of illegal drugs and its fervor to ban not only the substances themselves, but even favorable mention of what's become a national taboo. But it also sets a startling precedent -- school administrators now have more authority than parents. Joseph Frederick brought his handmade "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" banner to a public assembly when the Olympic torch was carried through Juneau in 2002. He didn't attend school that day, presumably leaving his home with the banner and arriving at the torch ceremony. There, at the very same assembly, were Frederick's classmates, teachers and principal on a school-sanctioned field trip. Whether you agree with Frederick's right to display his bizarre message; whether you believe it was irresponsible, objectionable or just plain silly, suspend your judgment of his banner long enough to absorb the following facts: 1. Frederick, though a minor, was a public citizen in a public place 2. He presumably had his parents' permission to stay home from school, create and display the banner 3. His high school principal approached him, confiscated the banner and suspended him from school Free speech concerns notwithstanding, the real jaw-dropper here is not that Frederick's message was censored, but that the principal of his high school exerted parental authority over a child not entrusted to her care that day. Parents, you should be seething -- the arbiters of American justice seem to think a school administrator should have more rights to regulate your child's actions in a public place than you do. If a high school principal can suppress your child's expression at a public event where she happens to be present, what's to stop her from approaching your son or daughter in a shopping mall and barking orders like a preening drill sergeant? If the Supreme Court continues down its slippery slope of delegating parental authority to teachers and administrators off school grounds, we're in for scary times. Schools already are gleefully meting out punishment for taunts and jeers posted on MySpace from students' home computers; what's the next erosion in parental rights? Many -- I'd guess most -- parents would prefer their son or daughter avoid skipping school to hoist a cryptic banner sardonically linking inhalation to salvation. Frederick's parents probably weren't thrilled about it, but they supported his right to express himself. "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" was more nonsensical than nefarious, anyway. Frederick had seen the slogan on a snowboard and copied it to attract television cameras panning the crowd, according to an Associated Press story. So, what's to stop that overzealous administrator from acting less like a school principal and more like a parent? Nothing, according to our Supreme Court. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek