GreyICE wrote:*sigh*
Why don't we start another thread on this, Coito? You can go complain over there. Lets summarize this simply: the 1st amendment today restricts states as much as federal, so the school board is equally bound by it.
The 14th Amendment incorporates the 1st amendment rights. It's an important distinction. Remember, your claim was that "the framers" intended the First Amendment to apply to State and local government action. They didn't. I've proved it.
Establishment of Religion: Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947) - I quote from Everson "Prior to the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, the First Amendment did not apply as a restraint against the states."
http://supreme.justia.com/us/330/1/case.html The 14th Amendment incorporated the establishment clause and made it applicable to the states.
Free exercise of religion: Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296 (1940).
Freedom of Speech: Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652 (1925)
Freedom of the Press: Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.S. 697 (1931)
Freedom of Assembly: DeJonge v. Oregon, 299 U.S. 353 (1937)
And, yes, of course, today the rights of freedom of speech, press, establishment clause, free exercise, etc., apply to limit state and local government action. That is true - but, it does so because of the 14th Amendment. They don't apply directly.
GreyICE wrote:
They violated it, and they're going to get reamed for it. Most of the founders (especially the ones we remember) did always want the rights in the Bill to apply to all Americans, it was always a question of sovereignty.
That's a big question -t he question of sovereignty. They did not intend the Bill of Rights itself to apply to the states. States were separate sovereign entities, and Virginia, for example, protected freedom of speech, press, assembly, religion, etc., in its own constitution. Jefferson never once thought that the federal bill of rights limited what Virginia could do.
GreyICE wrote:
With that question settled, there is no question in my mind that they would have had the Bill of Rights largely apply to the states as well, and you can see that the state constitutions that many of them also had a hand in drafting reflect strongly the Bill of Rights protections. And there is no power, anywhere, for the government to designate anyone with the power to violate the Bill of Rights.
Of course there is! Criminy, dude - I've already illustrated how not all of the rights embodied in the bill of rights have been incorporated as applicable to the states.
Example - Amendment V, Right to Indictment by Grand Jury - has been held NOT to be incorporated by the 14th Amendment as applicable against state or local government action. Hurtado v. California, 110 U.S. 516 (1884). Therefore, States do not need to respect that right, and you have no right to an indictment by a grand jury even though the V amendment protects that right.
Do you see that? That is one of the rights in the bill of rights. States are free to ignore it.
GreyICE wrote:
But frankly, that's all irrelevant here. Back on track, the Justice department cares about the first amendment, the 1st amendment applies to the states, the 1st amendment was violated here, and the school board is responsible for that violation. They are an agent of the government, bound by the 1st amendment, and have violated it, and thus must face the consequences. Story over, the end.
The 1st amendment applies to the states only through the 14th Amendment. The story doesn't end right there because, because what you're doing is just trying to skate out of where you were dead wrong: the intent of the framers. The framers did not intend that the First Amendment would limit state and local government power. If they did, they would have said so, and they didn't. They didn't say so in the Constitution, and they didn't say so in their own writings. Some of them even tried to make certain rights applicable to the States (like Madison, in the example I previously gave) and those efforts were rejected by the majority of the "framers."
Yes, the Justice Department cares about the 1st Amendment - but, not because of some "original intent" of the "founders." It's because the Supreme Court incorporated the rights protected in the First Amendment into the due process/iiberty clause of the Fourteenth Amendment , which is applicable to the states.