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Middleboro student appeals free speech T-shirt case to U.S. Supreme Court. What to know - MSNMIDDLEBORO — Liam Morrison — a Middleboro student who unsuccessfully sued the town for allegedly violating his First Amendment right to free speech — is appealing his "two genders" T-shirt ...
The Supreme Court on Tuesday turned down a middle-school student’s claim he had a free-speech right to wear a T-shirt stating there are “only two genders.” Ov ...
Whiting cited several cases, in support of his argument that the school district violated Morrison's free speech rights, including a 1969 U.S. Supreme Court case, Tinker v.
That is the T-shirt slogan that instigated a hailstorm of debate in Gainesville, Fla., about where to draw the line between offensive speech and speech that is intended to incite harm or violence. The ...
For example, in California, the state Supreme Court ruled in 1979 that free speech is protected even on private shopping center property because such places are gathering spots, not merely businesses.
The legal travails of the NSA continue to mount, with it admitting making mistakes in how it handled a free speech issue. To wit: It should not have demanded a parody t-shirt be removed.
A Massachusetts middle school student said his free speech rights were violated when the principal said he couldn’t wear the “only two genders” T-shirt in school.
The lawsuit cites the landmark Tinker v. Des Moines case from 1969, which upheld students' free speech rights. What does Mary Beth Tinker think of it?
MIDDLEBORO — Liam Morrison — a Middleboro student who unsuccessfully sued the town for allegedly violating his First Amendment right to free speech — is appealing his "two genders" T-shirt ...
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