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In reply to the discussion: A Cheerleader's Vulgar Message Prompts a First Amendment Showdown [View all]mahatmakanejeeves
(67,997 posts)21. That happened in Leesburg, Virginia.
Sun Dec 27, 2020: A Racial Slur, a Viral Video, and a Reckoning
ISSUEALLTHEPARDONShat Retweeted
What most strikes me about this story, which is troubling in a great many different directions, is that we are saddling children with the consequences of decades of adult failures, and then calling sporadic excessive punishment "progress."
Link to tweet
A Racial Slur, a Viral Video, and a Reckoning
A white high school student withdrew from her chosen college after a three-second video caused an uproar online. The classmate who shared it publicly has no regrets.
By Dan Levin
Dec. 26, 2020
[To read more stories on race from The New York Times, sign up here for our Race/Related newsletter.]
LEESBURG, Va. Jimmy Galligan was in history class last school year when his phone buzzed with a message. Once he clicked on it, he found a three-second video of a white classmate looking into the camera and uttering an anti-Black racial slur. ... The slur, he said, was regularly hurled in classrooms and hallways throughout his years in the Loudoun County school district. He had brought the issue up to teachers and administrators but, much to his anger and frustration, his complaints had gone nowhere.
So he held on to the video, which was sent to him by a friend, and made a decision that would ricochet across Leesburg, Va., a town named for an ancestor of the Confederate general Robert E. Lee and whose school system had fought an order to desegregate for more than a decade after the Supreme Courts landmark ruling. ... I wanted to get her where she would understand the severity of that word, Mr. Galligan, 18, whose mother is Black and father is white, said of the classmate who uttered the slur, Mimi Groves. He tucked the video away, deciding to post it publicly when the time was right.
{snip}
{In June,} friends began calling, directing her to the source of a brewing social media furor. Mr. Galligan, who had waited until Ms. Groves had chosen a college, had publicly posted the video that afternoon. Within hours, it had been shared to Snapchat, TikTok and Twitter, where furious calls mounted for the University of Tennessee to revoke its admission offer. ... By that June evening, about a week after Mr. Floyds killing, teenagers across the country had begun leveraging social media to call out their peers for racist behavior. Some students set up anonymous pages on Instagram devoted to holding classmates accountable, including in Loudoun County.
Link to tweet
The consequences were swift. Over the next two days, Ms. Groves was removed from the universitys cheer team. She then withdrew from the school under pressure from admissions officials, who told her they had received hundreds of emails and phone calls from outraged alumni, students and the public.
{snip}
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I also believe in free speech, as well as facing its consequences, but I hope
The Velveteen Ocelot
Dec 2020
#1
What about race hatred speech, or religious intolerant speech? I believe that the Court
Blue_true
Dec 2020
#53
I realize it's a two edge sword, with a thousand different situations ln different contexts.
IsItJustMe
Dec 2020
#4
with the prevalence of social media "outside of school" takes on a new meaning.
Blue_true
Dec 2020
#54
I meant two different situations. Racist speech off of school grounds I would want regulated.
Beakybird
Dec 2020
#14
The vast majority of employers can fire you for almost any reason they can think of.
IsItJustMe
Dec 2020
#20
Speech is free. Consequences are paid in full. Over-reactions are ridiculous.
Moostache
Dec 2020
#16
Wasn't there also a one about a 14 year old making a sexually suggestive nomination for student
meadowlander
Dec 2020
#37
Do you really want to go down the road of school regulating every minute of a student's life?
NutmegYankee
Dec 2020
#42
I don't have a view one way or the other. I'm just trying to identify the relevant issue.
meadowlander
Dec 2020
#45
One of the great things Obama did was talk about "teachable moments". It would be great to
jalan48
Dec 2020
#29
Flynt was put on trial in Hamilton Co. (Cincinnati) when I was in High School
maxsolomon
Dec 2020
#47
I have no problem with speech having consequences. So long as the government isn't the one
onenote
Dec 2020
#63
I've always approached this subject that being on a team was a privilege and not a right.
Hassin Bin Sober
Dec 2020
#67