Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Web: Students on the Drug War's Front Lines
Title:US: Web: Students on the Drug War's Front Lines
Published On:2007-03-24
Source:CounterPunch (US Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 09:39:47
Bong Hits 4 Jesus!

STUDENTS ON THE DRUG WAR'S FRONT LINES

On March 20, student free speech joined the panoply of endangered
fundamental rights ready to be stripped away from us due to the
tragedy of the drug war. Kenneth Starr, former solicitor general, who
reached broad fame by highlighting a presidential sex scandal in the
Clinton years, stood before the land's highest court to argue the
"Bong Hits 4 Jesus" case.

It all started innocently enough when 18-year-old Joe Frederick sought
his "15 minutes of fame" by pulling a harmless prank. In 2002, in
front of his high school, during a procession of the Olympic torch
relay brigade, Joe unrolled a 14-foot banner bearing the words "Bong
Hits 4 Jesus." Soon after the cameras caught the act, his high school
principal suspended him for ten days for displaying the banner, in
apparent violation of school policy limiting speech that promotes
illegal drug use. Frederick soon brought a lawsuit against his school
principal in which the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in his
favor, finding that the principal had violated Frederick's First
Amendment rights.

The case subsequently reached the Supreme Court where Starr argued on
behalf of the former principal and the school. Starr developed a legal
strategy to defend the school's position that the language in question
on the banner clearly went against the school's anti-drug mission. He
even had former Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey stand beside him on the
Supreme Court steps for a photo op. Frederick's lawyer countered
Starr's argument explaining that the case was really all about free
speech, and not a case about drugs or drug use. Win or lose, Starr
used this worldwide platform to advocate the government's
zero-tolerance policy views on drugs.

Students are now on the front lines of the war on drugs. Whether it be
random, suspicionless student drug testing, or having police dogs
sniffing around school lockers for drugs, students are now feeling the
heavy-handedness of the government's overzealous efforts to keep them
"drug-free." Get busted smoking a joint and lose federal funding for
education. Talk about bong hits and face suspension. Where will it
end?

In the government's attempt to win the drug war, it has little regard
for our precious given rights as outlined in the Constitution. Drug
users and people wrestling with addiction everywhere are routinely
demonized by the moral majority. Chip by chip or, in this case, bong
hit by bong hit, our fundamental rights are going up in smoke.
Americans across the land must be made better aware of this travesty.

Everyone who is concerned about free speech should be concerned with
the outcome of this case. If the government can silence us about the
drug war today, they can silence us on Iraq tomorrow and global
warming the day after that.
Member Comments
No member comments available...