Pubdate: Sun, 01 Jul 2007 Source: Monterey County Herald (CA) Copyright: 2007 Monterey County Herald Contact: http://www.montereyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/273 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bong+Hits+4+Jesus (Bong Hits 4 Jesus) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) FREE SPEECH UP IN SMOKE? The conservative Supreme Court majority may be using wildly mixed reasoning on First Amendment issues, but the inconsistencies don't ease fears about this court's capacity for a coordinated, all-out attack on free speech. In the same week that the court expanded First Amendment protections for unregulated campaign advertising by special-interest groups, the justices ruled 5-4 that an Alaska high school was right to suspend a student for displaying a silly and innocuous banner during an off-campus parade. "Bong Hits 4 Jesus," read the sign, part of student Joseph Fredericks' attempt to get on TV. It has brought him far more attention than he could have imagined. The majority held that because previous rulings seriously limit the free speech rights of students, it was fine for the school to suspend the boy. Five justices concluded that the nearly nonsensical sign advocated illegal drug use, which the schools are expected to combat. Justice Clarence Thomas took an extreme line. He wrote that students don't really have any First Amendment rights. And even if Fredericks was simply being silly, Thomas felt that providing constitutional protection for "such impertinence ... would be farcical." Fortunately for those who don't consider sassiness a sin, others in the majority weren't as stiff or as fully convinced of their righteousness. Justice Samuel Alito led the not-so-sure camp, and his attempt to qualify his position may be giving false hope to free speech advocates. It is an extremely thin reed. Alito said he voted with Thomas only because the sign was about illegal drug use, which presents such a grave threat to students. He said that if the banner had been about something else, he wouldn't have been able to ignore the First Amendment. Optimists say Alito's position makes the ruling extremely narrow -- applicable only in cases of students promoting illegal drug use. That thinking may not hold up, however, considering the ambiguity of the young man's banner and the subjectivity of the court opinion. "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" hardly translates directly to "Smoke Marijuana." It amounts to a whimsical bumper sticker that contributed little to Alaska's drug problems. Even so, Alito concluded that "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" is such a dangerous sentiment that it exempts itself from constitutional protection. If the line remains that fuzzy, school administrators will be hard pressed to permit any writings or utterances that mention drugs without utter condemnation. Fredericks unfurled his banner across the street from school, after classes were out for the day. If location, intent and effect aren't elements of the equation, what happens now when a teacher at the mall spots a student wearing a T-shirt decorated with a marijuana leaf? Thomas and Alito were correct when they wrote that the schools need to help fight drug abuse. But Alito's view that ambiguous statements must be seen in the worst light, coupled with the brittleness of Thomas' position, add up to a scary attack on the First Amendment. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake