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Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Daily Show

Jon Stewart, showing the banner Joseph Frederick held up on that snowy day at the Olympic torch relay, along with video of the large Olympic torch...
"If Jesus had a bong, that is totally the lighter that He'd use."


10:09:07 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Progress report

Imagine having an employee who was completely incompetent. Everything this person did on the job was a disaster. He failed to do the proper research or listen to his co-workers who had. He pushed through his own agenda despite all market research clearly saying it wouldn't work. And he put a huge chunk of the company's funds into this boondoggle, which promptly tanked.

Now imagine that they he was required to write a self-evaluation to justify his continued paycheck. The employee, realizing his own incompetence, still hopes to delude his bosses.

What he wrote would look something like this:

United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime World Drug Report:

This year's edition reports signs of long-term containment of the world problem. The overall trend masks however contrasted regional situations, which the report examines in detail. For instance, while an impressive multi-year reduction in opium poppy cultivation continued in South East Asia, Afghanistan recorded a large increase in 2006. Growing interceptions of cocaine and heroin shipments across the world have played an important part in stabilizing the market. However, as we witness successes in some areas, challenges appear in others. Although drug abuse levels are stabilizing globally, countries along major and new trafficking routes, such as those now going through Africa, may face increasing levels of drug consumption.


6:08:20 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Further thoughts on Bong Hits for Jesus

Congratulations, Joseph Frederick!

At age 18, Frederick was fed up with his lack of rights as a student and decided to shake things up a bit. Take a provocative nonsense slogan from a surfboard, put it on a banner, and see if maybe the TV cameras will pick it up. It succeeded beyond his wildest dreams -- the predictable over-reaction by authority, the subsequent firestorm of publicity, Ken Starr, the Supreme Court, finally ending up with the Justices of the Supreme Court debating the meaning of the phrase, and the entire country having a discussion about the rights of students. Not bad. (Current Google count: "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" 935,000; "Chief Justice John Roberts" 273,000)

The majority on the Supreme Court looked pretty silly on this one. The bizarre way in which they determined to make "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" be specific advocacy for illegal behavior is surreal.

At least two interpretations of the words on the banner demonstrate that the sign advocated the use of illegal drugs. First, the phrase could beinterpreted as an imperative: "[Take] bong hits . . ."--a message equivalent, as Morse explained in her declaration, to "smoke marijuana" or "use an illegal drug." Alternatively, the phrase could be viewed as celebrating drug use--"bong hits [are a good thing]," or "[we take] bong hits"--and we discern no meaningful distinction between celebrating illegal drug use in the midst of fellow students and outright advocacy or promotion.

The pro-drug interpretation of the banner gains further plausibility given the paucity of alternative meanings the banner might bear. The best Frederick can come up with is that the banner is "meaningless and funny." The dissent similarly refers to the sign's message as "curious," "ambiguous," "nonsense," "ridiculous," "obscure," "silly," "quixotic," and "stupid," Gibberish is surely a possible interpretation of the words on the banner, but it is not the only one, and dismissing the banner as meaningless ignores its undeniable reference to illegal drugs.

There's almost a... petulance on the part of the Justices. Just like a school principal who feels "out of it," there's a fear of kids pulling one over on them. "Oh, no, you can't fool me. I know what it means!" And so they, too, walk right into the trap set for them by Fredericks, and give the phrase a whole lot more power than it had.

The dissent really gets it right when they say:

When First Amendment rights are at stake, a rule that "sweep[s] in a great variety of conduct under a general and indefinite characterization" may not leave "too wide a discretion in its application." Therefore, just as we insisted in Tinker that the school establish some likely connection between thearmbands and their feared consequences, so too JDHS must show that Frederick's supposed advocacy stands a meaningful chance of making otherwise-abstemious students try marijuana.

But instead of demanding that the school make such a showing, the Court punts. Figuring out just how it puntsis tricky; "[t]he mode of analysis [it] employ[s] is not en-tirely clear," On occasion, the Court suggests it is deferring to the principal's "reasonable" judgment that Frederick's sign qualified as drug advocacy. At other times, the Court seems to say that it thinks the banner's message constitutes express advocacy. Either way, its approach is indefensible.

The majority screwed up.

But the good news is that the results of the screw-up are likely to be limited. There's been no ruling that allows schools to censor anything that interferes with their message. There's been no ruling allowing schools to censor political advocacy speech regarding drugs. What we've got is a confusing blip about a particular phrase in a particular location that will create some argument in future situations over whether a different nonsense phrase constitutes political speech or the advocacy of illegal drugs, and some more of those cases will come back to the Court.

Ultimately, this case may well be remembered for words that were not in the main opinion. These are words that may resonate for years to come, in cases beyond the unfurling of a banner at a school-released event.

I join the opinion of the Court on the understanding that... it provides no support for any restriction of speech that can plausibly be interpreted as commenting on any political or social issue, including speech on issues such as 'the wisdom of the war on drugs or of legalizing marijuana for medicinal use.'
- Justice Samuel Alito

Surely our national experience with alcohol should make us wary of dampening speech suggesting--however inarticulately--that it would be better to tax and regulate marijuana than to persevere in a futile effort to ban its use entirely.

- Justice John Paul Stevens
Nice going, Joseph!

[More interesting reading on the case by Eugene Volokh and Scott Morgan and, of course, if you're needing to catch up on the background, visit my comprehensive Bong Hits 4 Jesus page.]

10:38:18 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []






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There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

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