Wednesday, April 28, 2021

At Supreme Court, Mean Girls Meet 1st Amendment : NPR

At Supreme Court, Mean Girls Meet 1st Amendment : NPR
At Supreme Court, Mean Girls Meet 1st Amendment






Even Supreme Court advocates can look at a case before the court with their own teenage years in mind. And lawyer Gregory Garre sums up Wednesday's case this way: "Mean girls meet the First Amendment."

More than a half-century ago, the court, in a 7-to-2 vote, ruled that students do have free speech rights at school, unless the speech is disruptive. Now, the justices are being asked to clarify whether, in the internet age, schools can punish students for off-campus speech.

The case was brought by a 14-year-old high school cheerleader, Brandi Levy. A freshman on the junior varsity cheerleading team, Brandi failed to win a spot as a varsity cheerleader for the following year, and she failed to get the position she wanted on the softball team too. So that weekend, frustrated and upset — and off campus — Brandi took a photo of herself and a friend flipping the bird to the camera. She then typed the words at the center of this dispute: "F*** school f*** softball f*** cheer f*** everything."

"I posted it on my Snapchat, so I was expecting everyone to see it," she says. Still, she CONTINUE READING: At Supreme Court, Mean Girls Meet 1st Amendment : NPR