Pubdate: Mon, 10 Nov 2008 Source: Post, The (Ohio U, OH Edu) Copyright: 2008 The Post Contact: http://www.thepost.ohiou.edu/static/letter.php Website: http://www.thepost.ohiou.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1269 Author: Emily Glauser Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/bong+hits+4+jesus ALASKA COURT BATTLE GOES UP IN SMOKE AT LAST Whoever thought that a simple banner reading "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" could spark a six-and-a-half-year outcry? Thursday marked the day that a former senior high school student was finally freed from the court system's long and arduous grasp. Yes people, I am talking about Joseph Frederick. Since we were all much younger people when little Joseph's crime initially took place, allow me to explain his story. In 2002, high school senior Joseph Frederick was suspended from an Olympic torch relay at his high school in Juneau, Alaska, for displaying a sign reading "Bong Hits for Jesus." The school's accusation? The sign promoted illegal drug use. He faced suspension from school due to his antics. After appeals to the school board, the superintendent, the district court and finally the U.S. Supreme Court, the Associated Press reported that Frederick was informed that the expression on his banner was not protected under the First Amendment right to free speech. Long after graduating from the high school, it is finally officially declared that what he did was wrong. All it took was six years worth of debate! Let's play the popular game "How many things are wrong with this Supreme Court decision?" How about the fact that our tax dollars have been funding a battle against markers, poster board and a senior prank? Or that the combination of the words "Bong" and "Jesus" can take you from your principal's office to the floor of the Supreme Court? And mostly, that people cared enough to keep this fiasco going for longer than Joseph was in high school in the first place? Thank you, Alaska, for showing us where your priorities really lie. Now I don't know what goes on in Alaska, but if holding up a sign in Juneau with the word "Bong" on it gets you a half-decade court trial, it'll be a long time before I think of heading up north. This was an 18-year-old kid playing a joke on an uptight community. Furthermore, the sign doesn't specifically reference drugs whatsoever. For anyone familiar with the local Import House, a "bong" is called a "tobacco product," not a weapon of destruction and anarchy. I can recall some pretty risky senior pranks in my high school that involved rats, roaches and clogged up toilets that caused more chaos than the thought of Jesus toking up. But I think the Supreme Court could care less. It's amazing that in a such a long, drawn-out court decision process, no one stopped to think, "This whole case seems like it's being controlled by people who are more stoned than Joseph Frederick could ever hope Olympic torch-watchers to be." But opinions can run wild. Religious fanatics and drug enthusiasts galore can protest this case, but the end result is that the Juneau, Alaska, school system is out $45,000 because of it. Put that in your bong and smoke it. The moral of this story? In Alaska, nothing is more offensive than bongs and Jesus, and Juneau is willing to spend as much money as possible to make that clear to all -- smokers or not. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin