Pubdate: Fri, 06 Jul 2007 Source: Daily Herald, The (Provo, UT) Copyright: 2007 The Daily Herald Contact: http://www.heraldextra.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1480 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bong+Hits+4+Jesus (Bong Hits 4 Jesus) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) HERALD POLL: STUDENTS AND FREE SPEECH The Supreme Court recently considered a 2002 Alaska case involving the question of limits on the free speech rights of public school students. In a 5-4 vote it said that school principals could punish students for making statements that could be "reasonably" construed as advocating illegal drug use. At the center of the case was a banner spread in public view at the Olympic Torch Relay as runners headed for Salt Lake City. In big letters the banner proclaimed "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS." Students at Juneau-Douglas High School had been allowed to leave class to watch as the Olympic flame passed before their school. Joseph Frederick, then a senior, was late for school -- presumably making ready his banner -- and joined other students across the street from the school. Out came the sign, and up went the eyebrows of the school principal. The principal, Deborah Morse, ordered the banner taken down. Frederick refused and Morse confiscated the sign and later suspended Frederick for 10 days. Frederick said his suspension was initially for five days, but Morse doubled it after he quoted Thomas Jefferson's warning that "speech limited is speech lost." Morse said she interpreted the sign as advocacy -- or at least publicity -- for the smoking of marijuana, putting it in violation of school policy. Frederick argued that the sign signified nothing at all. It was merely "nonsense" designed to catch the eye of TV camera crews covering the event, he said. Yet he held that confiscation and suspension violated his constitutional rights to free expression. Chief Justice John Roberts, writing for the court, declared that the free-speech rights of students are not trampled when schools restrict pro-drug messages. "We hold that schools may take steps to safeguard those entrusted to their care from speech that can reasonably be regarded as encouraging illegal drug use," Roberts wrote. While Roberts admitted that the banner's wording was "cryptic," he concluded Morse reasonably thought the message was advocating drug use, as "bong hits" is a slang term for using a water pipe to inhale marijuana smoke. "At least two interpretations of the words on the banner demonstrate that the sign advocated the use of illegal drugs," Roberts wrote for the majority. "First, the phrase could be interpreted as an imperative: "[Take] bong hits . . ." -- a message equivalent, as Morse explained in her declaration, to "smoke marijuana" or "use an illegal drug." Alternatively, the phrase could be viewed as celebrating drug use -- "bong hits [are a good thing]," or "[we take] bong hits" -- and we discern no meaningful distinction between celebrating illegal drug use in the midst of fellow students and outright advocacy or promotion." "The best Frederick can come up with," he continued, "is that the banner is 'meaningless and funny.' Gibberish is surely a possible interpretation of the words on the banner, but it is not the only one, and dismissing the banner as meaningless ignores its undeniable reference to illegal drugs." It's hard to argue against restricting blatant advocacy of illegal drugs in a school setting. But does this decision restrict free speech too much? History has shown us that once censors get an inch, they quickly seize a mile. Critics say this decision creates an opening for censors to shut down student speech well beyond open advocacy of illegal drug use, just as the court did nearly 20 years ago in Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier. The court in that case said that school principals could censor student publications for educational purposes. Some like-minded principals have stretched "educational purposes" to the breaking point to block student news reports about air pollution from school bus garages and criticism of the football team, turning many high school newspapers into little more than feel-good public relations packets instead of training grounds for future journalists. The doomsayers see the prohibitions of drug advocacy potentially twisted to shut off legitimate speech. As Justice Stephen Breyer warned in his dissent on the First Amendment aspects of the case, the majority opinion could be used to prohibit a student from making a critical comment about an anti-drug film or to keep students from discussing whether people with glaucoma should smoke marijuana for pain relief. A student talking about how an American Indian church uses peyote for religious purposes might risk punishment. The potential for abuse increases when a bureaucrat, not the speaker, determines the meaning of a message. Such twisted logic creates a tyranny of the offended. The trouble in this case is that Frederick, the student, never once claimed that he was engaging in political speech or introducing a subject for responsible debate. He said only that he wanted to attract TV cameras. As a result, there were no facts in evidence that would have led five justices to acknowledge a First Amendment safe harbor for the message on the banner. At the same time, it's the radical speech that needs protection the most, not the safe speech with which few disagree. And that is true for students as well, with certain exceptions. Advocacy of illegal drug use is one of those. Why not allow students to learn free speech by exercising it? They can, except when they're advocating or promoting illegal acts. Will kids make mistakes and say outrageous things? Of course. Should they be tolerated most of the time for so doing? Certainly. But that's not the point at issue in this case. The decision is sufficiently narrow, it seems to us, that it limits only student speech that can reasonably be said to constitute a danger to others. Some people -- including four justices of the Supreme Court -- disagree. Breyer, the court's most mercurial member, even argued that the decision could be made without even reaching the First Amendment. He thought it could be decided on the basis of government immunity statutes alone. So the final 5-4 vote may not represent a significant ideological rift between conservative and liberal justices, as has been proclaimed by certain pundits. We do hope that educators will resist the temptation to censor students. Like other citizens, students should have broad latitude to exercise their great American birthright. [sidebar] WHAT DO YOU THINK? Should schools be allowed to restrict what students say about drugs? Send your comments to or call 344-2942. Please leave your name, hometown and phone number with your comments. E-mail comments should not exceed 100 words; voice-mail comments should be no longer than 30 seconds. Anonymous and unverifiable responses will not be published. The Daily Herald will publish comments on July 15. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake