Speaking Out With Your T-Shirt (1/30/2006)
In 2005, 16-year-old
Zach Hust was punished by his school for wearing this t-shirt. After the ACLU of Ohio intervened, Dublin Jerome High School officials agreed to stop censoring Zach and other students who wanted to wear t-shirts supporting marriage for same-sex couples.
>> Click here to download a PDF version
T-shirts – as well as hats, buttons, and other wearable items – are a
common way for students to express their views on everything from political
races to social issues. Schools have a long history of trying to censor
this form of speech, especially when it's about lesbian, gay, bisexual, and
transgender people.
In 2005, the ACLU filed a lawsuit in federal court against a Webb City,
Missouri high school that twice punished LaStaysha Myers, a heterosexual
15-year-old student, for wearing t-shirts expressing her support for gay
rights. In contrast, administrators routinely allowed students to wear
shirts expressing other messages, including endorsements of the Bush and Kerry
presidential campaigns and opinions on abortion. The lawsuit was settled
when the school promised that it would no longer censor Myers for wearing
t-shirts bearing gay-supportive messages.
The ACLU often hears from students whose schools have told them they can't
wear t-shirts with messages about their opinion on LGBT people. If you're
thinking about wearing an LGBT-positive t-shirt to school and you expect
trouble, here's what you should know and what to expect.
No Obscenities, No Threats, Nothing Lewd or Vulgar
Wearing an LGBT-positive t-shirt is speech or expression, protected by the
First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. In Tinker v. Des Moines
Independent Community School District, the landmark case establishing student
free speech rights, the Supreme Court said that students are not required to
"shed [their] constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the
schoolhouse gate."
This does not mean that you can put anything on your t-shirt and parade it
around the campus. The law allows schools to ban obscene, threatening, or
"lewd or vulgar" speech. You probably get what "obscene" or "threatening"
speech is, but what is "lewd or vulgar?" The best way to explain that is
to give you a real-life example. In Bethel School District No. 403 v.
Fraser, the Supreme Court ruled that a school could suspend a student for making
this speech nominating another student for student government office:
I know a man who is firm – he's firm in his pants, he's firm in his shirt,
his character is firm – but most of all, his belief in you, the students of
Bethel, is firm.
Jeff Kuhlman is a man who takes his point and pounds it in. If
necessary, he'll take an issue and nail it to the wall. He doesn't attack
things in spurts – he drives hard, pushing and pushing until finally – he
succeeds . . . .
Well, you get the point.
Nothing That Will Disrupt Classes
The law says that other than for speech that falls into one of the banned
categories listed above, students may express their views freely. There is
a big "but" to this rule and that's where most of the court battles about
t-shirts have focused. Students may express themselves freely but this may
not significantly disrupt classes or interfere with the rights of others.
In deciding whether school authorities acted lawfully when punishing a
student for wearing a particular t-shirt or forcing a student not to wear a
controversial t-shirt, courts rigorously examine the facts of the matter to make
sure that what's really going on is not flat-out censorship of an unpopular
opinion – something the law is clear that schools can never do. If school
authorities claim that a message on a t-shirt will cause a disruption, their
fear of disruption must be backed up by facts.
Tinker provides a good example. In this case, a group of students who
wanted to protest the Vietnam War planned to wear black armbands to
school. When school officials learned of the plan, they adopted a rule
banning the armbands. The Supreme Court decided that despite strong
feelings surrounding the war and student dissent of it (a former student of the
high school had been killed in the war), school authorities did not have enough
evidence to support their fear that wearing black armbands in class to protest
the war would significantly disrupt the school or impair the rights of
others.
Courts are clear that a school's concern about other students' possible
hostile reactions to a message on a t-shirt does not justify censoring it.
This point is critical because school officials often try to justify censoring
LGBT-positive expression by claiming that they are fearful of disruptions caused
by students offended by the expression.
Two examples. In Boyd County High School Gay Straight Alliance v. Boyd
County Board of Education, a federal court ruled that public protests over the
presence of a GSA at a high school, including a sick-out by half of the high
school, did not justify shutting down students' expressive activity, which was
not itself disruptive. And in Fricke v. Lynch, another federal judge ruled
that a principal's concern about other students' possible violent reactions if a
gay couple were allowed to attend the prom did not justify suppressing the
couple's right to free expression. This judge explained his decision this
way: "[t]o rule otherwise would completely subvert free speech in the
school by granting other students a 'heckler's veto,' allowing them to decide
through prohibited and violent methods what speech will be heard."
Legal Tips
If you end up in a fight with school authorities over your t-shirt, the facts
are critically important, so collect and write them down. Find out, for
example, whether the same or similar t-shirts have been worn to school and what,
if anything, happened. Keep track also of when school authorities stepped
in to tell you to turn your shirt inside out or to send you home to
change. If it happened before classes started, for example, it's pretty
hard to say that your t-shirt disrupted anything.
Find out, too, whether other students have been allowed to express opinions
at odds with yours at school. In a recent case the ACLU did in support of
a student wearing a t-shirt that said "I'm gay and I'm proud," the fact that
another student had earlier worn a t-shirt that declared "Adam and Eve, not Adam
and Steve" without interference from the principal was critical to the success
of the case.
If you're censored, keep things cool and simple. Remain calm and polite
and comply with any order from your principal or teacher. Obeying an order
from a school official does not mean you agree with it and does not affect your
right to challenge it through the proper channels later on. Refusing to
change t-shirts or getting into an argument with school officials only muddies
the issue, and not cooperating might provide the school with an excuse to
deflect blame for its censorship onto you by saying you were insubordinate or
disruptive. Remember to keep a copy of any written document the school
gives you on this matter and to write down the name and contact information of
any person who witnessed any exchange between you and a school official over
your t-shirt.
You should know that the law about expressive t-shirts in school as described
above applies just to students in public schools. Private school students
have fewer rights.
Speak Out
In giving you this summary of the law on t-shirts and student expression in
schools, the ACLU does not mean to discourage you from speaking out in support
of equality for LGBT people. That so many schools today treat their LGBT
students with fairness and respect is due directly to students like you who
spoke up against injustice.
If you decide to speak out, whether it be
through your t-shirt or otherwise, and get in trouble, let us know. We can
help. Contact us at getequal@aclu.org, fill out our online intake form, or call us at (212) 549-2673. It's confidential – we won't ever contact your school, your parents, your friends, or anyone else without your okay, and any
communication between you and the ACLU is private.
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