• Gutless Supreme Court declines to review free speech case involving stu

    From In Plain Sight@21:1/5 to All on Wed May 28 15:26:39 2025
    XPost: law.court.federal, alt.atheism, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.freespeech, talk.politics.guns

    There is no such thing as a transgender. SCOTUS again elevates
    intentional mentally ill perverts over normal heterosexuals
    in violation of their civil rights.

    The Supreme Court declined to hear a case involving a Massachusetts
    student who was banned from school for wearing a shirt criticizing the transgender movement on Tuesday.

    The student, Liam Morrison, brought the case through his father and
    stepmother, Christopher and Susan Morrison. The plaintiffs argue Nichols
    Middle School violated his free speech rights when it banned him from
    wearing two T-shirts to school with the words "There are only two
    genders" and "There are [censored] genders" on the front.

    Liam was sent home both times after he refused to change shirts. The
    school argued the shirts made his classmates feel unsafe, and a federal
    court agreed, saying the message was demeaning for transgender students.

    Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito both issued separate dissents, arguing the court should have taken up the case.

    The decision comes nearly a year after the First Circuit Court of
    Appeals ruled against Liam and his parents in June 2024, finding that
    the school was justified in asking him to remove the shirt and sending
    him home when he refused.

    Morrison, who was in seventh grade at the time, was sent home with his
    father in May 2023 after he refused to take off the shirt, according to
    court documents. He later wore the same shirt with the words "only two"
    covered with a piece of tape on which "censored" was written. The school
    also told him to take this shirt off.

    In a 2023 interview with Fox News Digital, Liam stressed that his
    T-shirt was not directed toward anyone, specifically people who are
    "lesbian or gay or transgender or anything like that."

    "I'm just voicing my opinion about a statement that I believe to be
    true," he said at the time. "And I feel like some people may think that
    I'm imposing hate speech, even though it's not directed towards anyone."

    The Morrison family was represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom
    and the Massachusetts Family Institute.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/supreme-court-declines-review-free-speec h-case-involving-student-who-wore-only-two-genders-shirt

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)