Free Speech: Signed Epstein's Mother
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit: Frazier v.Winn
In the 70's TV show Welcome Back Kotter, Juan Epstein always had a note for his teacher. And every note was “signed Epstein’s Mother.” That won’t cut it in Florida public Schools where the state Pledge Law requires public school students from K to 12 to recite the pledge at the beginning of each day. The only way to be excused from this obligation is by an authentic written request from the student’s parent. Once you submit a note, you can exercise your right to remain silent during the pledge, but the law still requires you to respectfully stand at attention.
Cameron Frazier thought he was old enough to take a stand on sitting out the pledge. The high-school junior challenged the statute claiming the Pledge Law violated his First Amendment rights. The court’s answer to his objection was basically “Sit Down!”
Mr. Fraizier claimed the statute “robbed him of his right to make an independent decision.” The court disagreed. While it overturned that part of the statute that requires students to stand if they opted out of the pledge (the constitutional right to sit during the pledge was long ago established), it determined that the Pledge Law is “largely a parental-rights statute.” Accordingly, it concluded that “the State’s interest in recognizing and protecting the rights of parents on some educational issues is sufficient to justify the restriction of some students’ freedom of speech.” The only way out of the pledge for Cameron Frazier was a real note, signed Frazier’s mother.
Depending how you score this, it’s either one against the rights of free speech, or one for the rights of parents. Funny how age and circumstance can affect your view of what is and isn’t constitutional. Now if only the courts would rule on our children's right to opt out of cleaning their rooms or taking out the garbage...