School’s anti-gun bigotry is what’s offensive
We read:
""School offended by student's slogan on T-shirt," the CBS 13/CW 31 (Sacramento, CA) video title tells us. What was so offensive?
12-year-old Zachary Fisher won a national trapshooting competition. Understandably proud of his accomplishment, he wore a T-shirt commemorating the event to George A. Buljan Middle School in Roseville CA. The slogan?
"I love the smell of gunpowder in the morning."
Horrors! We can't allow humor, enthusiasm or practiced excellence--not when it comes to...g-g-guns!
So the institution did what politically correct government indoctrination facilities do--they forced him to remove a heretical idea that contradicts their anti-gun orthodoxy from the premises.
Source
6 comments:
You would think Mexifornia's Fascist indoctrination camps would have learned by now that their ultra-leftist, Marxist, Communist ideology does not trump the Constitution. Just how many lawsuits do they have to lose?
I can't help but wonder if the school would have reacted the same way if the T-shirt didn't have a cutesy slogan, but simply stated something like "I'm a National Trapshooting Champion" and had a picture of a shotgun on it.
-sig
They've already been through that. They have a "0" tolerance policy towards guns, which includes "any" reference to guns, and even includes an image of a gun, even an abstract image. Last year, a small child was sent home from one of the camps out there because he used his fingers to imitate a gun while playing. In Calif. the bizarre has become the norm.
So, no images of guns in history books? I guess they can airbrush them out and replace them with sausages.
no need, they can just remove anything from history that would lead to a need to show a picture that has a gun in it.
Everything like WW1, WW2, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Storm, 9/11, the American Revolution, the American Civil War, etc. etc.
No mention of the JFK assassination (or more likely in Kommifornia mention of the zionist CIA/FBI plot against JFK0, etc. etc.
I can't help but wonder if the school would have reacted the same way if the T-shirt didn't have a cutesy slogan, but simply stated something like "I'm a National Trapshooting Champion" and had a picture of a shotgun on it.
The tee shirt in question has a "ghost" image of a shotgun and an image of 3 shotgun shells that are not ghosted.
The kid has worn a shirt similar to the one you mentioned with the typical "event" information and an image of a guy firing a shotgun.
The school did not send the kid home for that one.
In other words, a ghost image of a shotgun with a cute saying is wrong, but an image of a guy firing the shotgun is acceptable.
There are a couple of things of note here. First, the tee shirt had not caused nor was likely to cause a disruption in the school as evidenced by the child wearing the other shirt previously.
Therefore, the school told the kid to take off the shirt based on content alone, and they cannot do that.
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