School Newspaper Disbanded Over Flag-Burning Photo

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REDDING, Calif. — A high school newspaper in California was disbanded after it published a front-page photo of a student burning an American flag, triggering criticism that the administration was stifling free expression.
Shasta High School Principal Milan Woollard said the school year's final issue of the student-run Shasta High Volcano was embarrassing.
"The paper's done," Woollard told the Record Searchlight newspaper of Redding. "There is not going to be a school newspaper next year."
The school newspaper also ran in its June 3 edition an editorial written by editor-in-chief Connor Kennedy that defended flag burning as speech protected by the First Amendment.
Kennedy graduated last week from the high school in Redding, about 160 miles north of the state capital. He told The Associated Press he chose the topic because he had just studied flag burning in a class on government.
"I'm deeply saddened, and I find it terribly ironic a high school newspaper would be shut down for exercising free speech — particularly when the curriculum being taught was that this was free speech," Kennedy said in a phone interview Tuesday.
A press-freedom advocate said the student journalists were within their legal rights to publish the photo and editorial.
"I don't think any newspaper should ever be discontinued as punishment for things students have written, especially when what they've written about is the defense of free speech and what they have said is absolutely correct," said Terry Francke, general counsel of the nonprofit Californians Aware, which advocates for First Amendment issues.
Nevertheless, state law does not require schools to spend money on student newspapers or elective journalism classes, Francke said.
The school principal said eliminating the paper had been an option before it published the flag photo because the school expects to get less state funding next year and needs to save money.
The students' decision to showcase flag burning "cements the decision" to pull funding from the newspaper, he said.
The newspaper's cover was a collage of photographs, some of which showed students in what appeared to be prom attire. Prominently displayed at the top of the collage was a photograph of a student holding a flag pole, with the American flag burning at its edge.
Woollard did not respond to a telephone call Tuesday from The Associated Press.
The Redding controversy is the latest example in recent years of high school and college administrators in California attempting to censure student-run newspapers or punish those who oversee them.
In Los Angeles, a high school newspaper adviser was removed after he refused to withdraw a November 2006 student editorial criticizing random searches on campus. In 2003, Novato journalism teacher Ronnie Campagna was similarly replaced when the student paper published stories critical of San Marin High School.



Website link http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,365381,00.html
 
What's disturbing is the lack of respect the young folks have in the USA and feel that it is more than ok to burn an American flag the same as our enemies like to do. Theu truly don't get the facts taught in History class I guess but they automatically seem to be expert at knowing that their Government class taught them they can burn the American flag. Freakin retards if you ask me, ought to be deported.
 
As far as I'm concerned I believe burning the American flag should be illegal.

I don't give a **** if people call it "free speech."
 
It's alright, over here during independence day I saw a bunch of kids stepping on South Korean flags. A group of veterans sorted them out.
Sometimes I wonder if we're pointing our guns at the wrong people. Just sometimes.
 
i maintain my right to burn whatever the hell i want that i own. Sure, it's a flag, but at the end of the day it's a piece of cloth with a pretty design. He didn't shoot the president or anything. He's just exercising free speech and wrote a bit of a controversial article. It's being blown out of proportion.

Also, T13R, i think that stepping on the flag on INDEPENDENCE DAY is taking it a bit far... use discretion with your free speech ;p
 
As far as I'm concerned I believe burning the American flag should be illegal.

I don't give a **** if people call it "free speech."

I don't like it but I'll sure as hell defend that person's right to burn the flag.

1st Amendment - Freedom of Speech.

I cannot stand aside to seeing the 1st taken away, but be excepted to stand up and defend the 2nd.

I will stand and defend all of our rights.
 
Freedom of speech. FREEDOM OF FREAKING SPEECH.

Remember "Bong Hits For Jesus"? Apparently students have no rights. :evil:
 
I don't like it but I'll sure as hell defend that person's right to burn the flag.

1st Amendment - Freedom of Speech.

I cannot stand aside to seeing the 1st taken away, but be excepted to stand up and defend the 2nd.

I will stand and defend all of our rights.
---------------------------------------------------------

I am trying very hard to disagree with this, but I just can't...

Well said.
 
Hmmm,... the consequences of literal translation of the law.

Personally I think anyone burning the Flag of their own country is at least shameful, and at worst treasonous. However, if that is how the law stands, I guess the answer is either to let them get away with it or change the law.

I'm sure that some of these eventualities were never considered when the laws were originally drafted.

One's Flag is a very emotive issue, and I could easily see myself getting caught in this mess if fr example, the "Politically Correct" ever get the Flag changed in Australia. I would not recognise the new flag, because it is not "My" Flag, it would be no more than a pretty dish towel.
 
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The whole "we were the oppressors" crap. I guess it's true to a point but you don't have to go back and hate yourself forever for it to the point you try and change history and such.

I guess under freedom of speech it's legal... but trying to believe in it completely is hard with the amount of Pro-North Korean stuff going on here. My grandmother said this morning actually that she's afraid of war because if the North Koreans come, the majority of the South Korean populace, in their infinite wisdom, may greet them as liberators. How has it come to this point where the public supports its enemies more than its friends? Ironically freedom of speech.
Actually if such a thing was going to happen I'd have to leave. Under Kim Jong-il's leadership I'd be prime execution target.

I believe in it in principle but I sometimes wonder if we're just letting enemy saboteurs and spies have uninhibited fun.
 
The whole "we were the oppressors" crap. I guess it's true to a point but you don't have to go back and hate yourself forever for it to the point you try and change history and such.

I guess under freedom of speech it's legal... but trying to believe in it completely is hard with the amount of Pro-North Korean stuff going on here. My grandmother said this morning actually that she's afraid of war because if the North Koreans come, the majority of the South Korean populace, in their infinite wisdom, may greet them as liberators. How has it come to this point where the public supports its enemies more than its friends? Ironically freedom of speech.
Actually if such a thing was going to happen I'd have to leave. Under Kim Jong-il's leadership I'd be prime execution target.

I believe in it in principle but I sometimes wonder if we're just letting enemy saboteurs and spies have uninhibited fun.

There are two types of evil in this world. The first is absolute evil. The second is good being indifferent towards evil.

If North Korea invades the South, those that side with the enemy shall get their just rewards in the end. Whether it is on this world or the next.

If the USA is invaded or worse if a unjust government takes over I know that there will be those in my own population that will side with the enemy. But I also know that I will spend my last breath fighting for my freedoms. I believe that there are those in South Korea that would do the same.
 
Collaborators tend to get away pretty well.
Some of South Korea's richest and most powerful are descendants of collaborators of the Japanese. It's a major sticking point actually.
As for fighting back here... if the North Koreans are greeted like liberators, there simply won't be a point in sticking around and fighting for anything. In that case, I must leave and let the population learn about its errors on its own. Maybe I'll come back after public opinion isn't so pro-Kim Jong-il... when people won't be looking for guys like me to hang in a town square just to relieve pent up frustration.
 
Hey, you're Welcomed into the USA. Look.... millions of illegal migrants are welcomed. I figure we can fit can fit one hard working devil dog in here.
 
I'm working on it but you'd be surprised man... you'd be surprised.
Because I obey the law I'm herded away and given criminal treatment. Seems like illegals get a good welcome simply for being poor. Why I get the s**tty end of the stick for being creative and resourceful (and lucky) is beyond me.
I'm kinda busy watching a game right now but I think I'll write a post on what a law abiding "foreigner" must do in order to cement a place in the US.
 
Hey, if waving a the flag of a rebel army that attempted to take over the US (yes, the stars and bars) is allowed, then flag burning has to be allowed by default.
 
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