PDA

View Full Version : What some schools are doing to gay teens


warrior1972
05-03-2007, 02:19 PM
ACLU Warns Arkansas School to Stop Persecuting Gay Student (3/13/2003)


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

JACKSONVILLE, AR -- The American Civil Liberties Union is challenging officials at Jacksonville Junior High School over repeated punishment of a 14-year-old student for being openly gay. In a letter to school officials sent today, the ACLU demanded that the school stop violating the student's rights and remove all unconstitutional disciplinary actions taken against him from his record by March 21 or face legal action.

In its letter, the ACLU said that school officials "outed" the gay student, Thomas McLaughlin, to his parents against his wishes and have since told him he must not discuss being gay while at school, forced him to read from the Bible and disciplined him for being open about his sexual orientation.

"My school forced me out of the closet when I should have been allowed to come out to my family on my own terms and when I thought it was the right time. And now the school has been trying to shove me back into it ever since," McLaughlin said. "I'm through with being silenced, and I don't want this happening to other gay kids at my school."

McLaughlin's troubles with the school began last year, when a school official called McLaughlin's mother to tell her that her son was gay. McLaughlin, who at that point had only come out to a handful of close friends at school, wasn't ready to tell his parents yet.

To "out" a young person to his or her parents is more than a mere overstepping of boundaries -- it can have tragic consequences, such as when a Pennsylvania youth heard a similar threat from police officers in 1997 and committed suicide rather than face what he feared would be rejection from his family. In that case, a federal appeals court has held that threatening to disclose private information violated the teenager's constitutional right to privacy. Fortunately for McLaughlin, his parents were accepting and understanding, avoiding such tragedy.

"Students should not be punished for being honest about their sexual orientation," said Leslie Cooper, staff attorney with the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project. "It's shameful how Jacksonville Junior High School has trampled on Thomas McLaughlin's constitutional rights to intimidate and silence him from being honest about who he is. If this were civics class, the school would be failing."

Now that McLaughlin has become more open about his sexual orientation, the school has made numerous attempts to punish and silence him for being out at school:

One teacher called a conference with McLaughlin's parents and the principal because she objected to his being open about being gay. During the meeting, the principal concurred that she was opposed to McLaughlin talking at school about being gay.
A different teacher ordered McLaughlin not to discuss his sexual orientation, saying that she found it "sickening," and later called his mother to complain about his homosexuality.
School officials preached their religious views on homosexuality and forced him to read aloud from the Bible in clear violation of the establishment clause of the First Amendment. This was done as punishment after McLaughlin, who is himself a Christian, disagreed with a teacher for calling him "abnormal" and "unnatural."
In violation of McLaughlin's free speech rights, the school suspended him for two days for telling other students about being made to read the Bible in school. The principal and assistant principal also told McLaughlin that if he told any of his friends why he was suspended, they would recommend that he be expelled.
McLaughlin is not even allowed to participate in typical teenage conversations about crushes. In January he was disciplined for talking between classes with a female friend about a boy they both considered "cute." He was disciplined; his friend was not.
"Thomas McLaughlin's school has completely overstepped the boundaries of the law in the way it has treated him," said Rita Sklar, Executive Director of the ACLU of Arkansas. "School officials have no place trying to convert a student's religious beliefs to their own, and they certainly have no place using religion as a way to punish students."

The case is being handled by the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project and attorney Kathy Hall of Little Rock.

The following is the text of the ACLU letter to school officials:

rendova
05-03-2007, 02:58 PM
[QUOTE=warrior1972]ACLU Warns Arkansas School to Stop Persecuting Gay Student (3/13/2003)


For IMMEDIATE RELEASE
.................................................. ...........

QUOTE]


This story is 4 years old.

DarkFantasy96
05-03-2007, 02:59 PM
Yeah, I remember at least one thread about it before.

shortstuff
05-03-2007, 03:01 PM
Why post for the sake of posting a thread. World new is a section for current world news events.. Not gossipy things or stuff that is ass old as my dog.
Sorry but move some of this to the chat section or try current events to share, please

This is not a personal attack just an observation.
Thanks

warrior1972
05-03-2007, 03:03 PM
sorry but it doesn't say it has to be current news. Just world news.
So It is perfectly legit here.

rendova
05-03-2007, 03:09 PM
sorry but it doesn't say it has to be current news. Just world news.
So It is perfectly legit here.

So my "Lee Surrenders at Appomattox" thread should fit right in.

warrior1972
05-03-2007, 03:20 PM
sure I do not care what people post. You can post about a news article from 1967. I could care less. I do not act as the forum police. If it is interesting article I will read it and post a comment. If I think it is boring I will ignore it. Pretty simple really.

OldPhart
05-03-2007, 03:28 PM
sure I do not care what people post. You can post about a news article from 1967. I could care less. I do not act as the forum police. If it is interesting article I will read it and post a comment. If I think it is boring I will ignore it. Pretty simple really.

I take from the number of posts and comments made (in less than a three week period of time) that not much bores you.

warrior1972
05-03-2007, 04:37 PM
I would say half the post I have ever made in this forum was defending myself from bullies and harassement.

Napsterbater
05-03-2007, 04:38 PM
Very poorly, might I add.

500lbguerilla
05-03-2007, 04:54 PM
sorry but it doesn't say it has to be current news. Just world news.
So It is perfectly legit here. Well if thats that attitude you going to have I would just suggest people put you on ignore.

Seriously, you post some interesting stuff sometimes. Stuff I've gotten jaded aboutposting, i'm glad someones doing it. However posting old stuff will do nothing but get people to just stop reading everything you post, including me.

Travh20
05-03-2007, 04:59 PM
So my "Lee Surrenders at Appomattox" thread should fit right in.


what?!?!? When did that happen?

Vilepagan
05-03-2007, 05:24 PM
I do not act as the forum police.

I do.

Let's not see how many threads we can create every day, ok warrior? Try picking the five most interesting topics each day and start threads about them and see how it goes. You might even find some existing threads to comment on. :)

shortstuff
05-03-2007, 05:28 PM
I do.

Let's not see how many threads we can create every day, OK warrior? Try picking the five most interesting topics each day and start threads about them and see how it goes. You might even find some existing threads to comment on. :)

Kudos