Would You Let Your Kid Wear This Shirt To High School


THAMES

Active Member
http://www.detnews.com/2003/schools/0302/19/e01-89021.htm

Wednesday, February 19, 2003


John T. Greilick / The Detroit News

Dearborn High School junior Bretton Barber was told Monday to turn his shirt inside out, take it off or go home. He decided to go home rather than surrender his freedom of expression.



Student gets sent home over his anti-Bush T-shirt

Free speech debate in Dearborn

By Karen Bouffard / The Detroit News



Anti-war expression

A Dearborn High School student was sent home from school for wearing a T-shirt displaying an anti-war message, because of concerns that the shirt could spark tensions in a district where more than 50 percent of students are Arab-American. Did the school make the right call?


DEARBORN -- A Dearborn High School junior was sent home from school this week for wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with an anti-war message.

Bretton Barber, 16, said he wanted to express his opinion Monday when he wore a T-shirt he bought over the Internet that shows a picture of President Bush and reads, "International Terrorist."

Concerned the shirt could spark tensions in a district where more than 50 percent of students are Arab-American, school officials told Barber to turn the shirt inside out, take it off or go home.

Barber said he decided to go home rather than surrender his freedom of expression. He returned to school Tuesday without the shirt.

"Bush has already killed over 1,000 people in Afghanistan -- that's terrorism in itself," said Barber, noting he wore the shirt for a presentation he made that morning in English class. The assignment was to write a "compare and contrast" essay -- and he chose to compare Bush with Saddam Hussein.

Dearborn Public Schools spokesman Dave Mustonen said students have the right to freedom of speech and expression, but educators are sensitive to tensions caused by the conflict with Iraq.

"It was felt that emotions are running very high," said Mustonen. "The shirt posed a potential disruption to the learning environment at the school. Our No. 1 obligation is to make sure we have a safe learning environment for all of the students."

Mustonen said the incident had nothing to do with the many Arab-Americans in the 17,600-student district.

Officials said they don't know how many Arab-American students are enrolled in the district, but in 2000, they estimated the figure at about 55 percent.

Imad Hamad of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee thinks school officials took the right approach. He hopes they'll take it one step further and use the experience to educate students on how to exercise freedoms in positive ways.

"I see no winner here," Hamad said. "The school did the right thing to diffuse any potential conflict among the student population. I assume they would do the same thing if another message was displayed that was offensive to a different culture.

"Sometimes our very precious freedom of speech is used to justify spreading hatred or to display our bigotry. I see this as a good opportunity for the school to guide students through this issue or to help our youngsters to understand our tough circumstances and to encourage them in positive and constructive debate."

Junior Lindsey Hoganson, 16, thinks students can handle discussions about today's political climate without passions rising. She disagrees with the school's decision not to allow the shirt.

"I didn't hear anybody say anything about the shirt until we heard the administration was making him change it," she said. "A lot of people are worried about the war. We talk about it at school a lot. Talking about it isn't going to disturb the learning environment, because the topic's already been brought up in school. (Barber) was just giving people a different way of looking at it."

Barber's parents support their son's decision to express his views at school.

"It didn't cause any problems at the school, and I think he has a right to wear his T-shirt," said his mom, Tricia Barber.

Barber said he isn't giving up on expressing his views.

"I'm putting a group together at the high school, and working on putting a march together," he said. "It's hard to do it through the school because you need a teacher to support it, but I'm going to try."

You can reach Karen Bouffard at (313) 561-9646 or kbouffard@detnews.com.



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I don't think anything those Arabs do over here is funny. They probably thought 9/11 was funny too.
 
To answer the question, no, I would not let my child wear a t-shirt like that to school. There is no freedom of expression for non-voters and minors can't vote. Squash that bug right away.

Secondly, there is no freedom of expression in our home unless my wife and I grant it. Bug #2 is dead.

Thirdly, Bush has the RESPONSIBILITY of protecting the US interests both foreign and domestic. Unfortunately, we in the western world don't understand that there are no rules in war. War is a harsh thing. The decisions are big. I'm sure that I would not want to have to make them.
 
So this war is about protecting interests? Let me stop, i'm not even gonna get into that debate.
 
I'd let my son wear the shirt. He is old enough to have an opinion and in my house freedom of expression is granted with the ability to explain a rational position.
 
NO I would not and I don't agree. My reason is a high school should not be a place to make political statements like that. I am not necessaryliy disagreeing with the shirt and he can wear it at home all he wants, but not to school.
 
Yeah I would let him wear the shirt. It is all a point of view matter. Just because he is the president, doesn't mean he is immune from criticism.
 
I would let one of my children wear it, but they couldn't wear it to school, and they couldn't wear it with me. It is form of expression, but that doesn't mean I'm trying to be around it.

I already pimp slapped some cracker when I was pregnant with the twins because he called my oldest a "little monkey," and all she was trying to do was get a dayum donut.

I'd have to stab someone behind a shirt like that!
 
STR8 BULL!

FROM THE ARTICLE:

Imad Hamad of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee thinks school officials took the right approach. He hopes they'll take it one step further and use the experience to educate students on how to exercise freedoms in positive ways.


This is a crock of isht! Everything in life is not positive. Contrast and Comparison...this is what he chose...that's his right! I'm sure on the assignment the teacher didn't put..."Please make sure it's a wholesome, fairytale, happy go lucky assignment."

Is is not true that contrast and comparison a combination of opinions and facts of individuals who feel a certain way about different apsects of things. Again...it shows...Adults need to sit their arses down and stop the drama.

If I had a kid, he could wear the shirt...whereever...whenever...
and it wouldn't be up for discussion! Especially within the confines of the assignment that he was given.
 
Yeah, you same mofos complainin will protest when you see someone wearing a racist epitaph on a t-shirt like "If I had known it would have been this much trouble then I would have picked my own cotton". If it's freedom of speech then don't get mad when skinheads send their kids to school with hatred laced across their chests.

You mofos make me sick with this selective indifference.

If it is offensive or non-sensitive to any group then it should be removed, period.

Have the ability to respect someone elses point of view and you may have a better perspective.
 
What the hell does that have to do with anything racial? LOL Just picked a good time to try to throw that in. :rolleyes:
 

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Lawd Ham Mercy!

Originally posted by Vinita
I already pimp slapped some cracker when I was pregnant with the twins because he called my oldest a "little monkey," and all she was trying to do was get a dayum donut.

Note to all passerbys: Don't mess with a woman in hormone hell carrying twins and never, ever cfuk with a her child. Girl the baby just wanted a donut, he said the wrong dayum thang and he had to be slapped! :lol:

Krispy Kreme send help!

P.S. No I wouldn't let my child wear that shirt to school.
 
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