I try to avoid unnecessary profanity. In part, I figure that I’m saving my profanity up for really important moments. That way, if someone I know hears me using profanity, they know I’m worked up about something. Maybe it doesn’t work that way. Also, it’s how I was brought up. I’m just uncomfortable with it.
Meanwhile, for other reasons, the Supreme Court remains a place where you just don’t hear casual F-bombs being dropped. So the deliberation that led to last week’s decision in Mahanoy Area School Board v B.L. were interesting because the speech at the center was decidedly profane. A spectator could be forgiven for listening in to see how the proper and conservative Supreme Court handled an incident of free speech that included four separate instances of “the f- word.”
Their decision might have surprised some, but as a long-time teacher and principal, I found that the decision aligned with common sense interpretations of free speech.
It also allowed me to reflect on meeting and learning from Mary Beth Tinker, who was at the heart of the most famous free speech at school case prior to this week’s decision.
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