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LINK ACLU sues school district that banned After School Satan Club meetings

The Saucon Valley School District in Pennsylvania illegally treated Satanists different from Christians, and the paper trail is extensive.

The ACLU is suing the Saucon Valley School District in Pennsylvania after it banned the After School Satan Club from holding meetings, even though the Satanists followed all their rules. It’s not just about equal access; there’s an astonishing amount of evidence showing that district officials held the Satanists to different standards than they did several other extra-curricular clubs.

You may recall that, back in February, the After School Satan Club announced that it would soon hold meetings at Saucon Valley Middle School. That should have been perfectly fine! After all, ASS clubs do not promote Satan, Satanic beliefs, Satanism, or anything else like it. The Satanic Temple, which sponsors these groups, doesn’t even believe in a literal Satan. These groups aren’t interested in indoctrination. Rather, the Satanists “focus on free inquiry and rationalism, the scientific basis for which we know what we know about the world around us.” It’s like a science club with a devilish twist.

Just look at this flyer announcing the meetings:

Delightful.

But on Tuesday, February 21, after the school board approved the club’s use of the space, someone left the district a voicemail basically threatening to cause harm if the Satanists were allowed to meet.

District officials were understandably worried and canceled all after-school activities that Tuesday. They also canceled all classes and activities the following day. That’s how disruptive the threat was. Superintendent Jaime Vlasaty also contacted police.

Then things took a weird turn.

Vlasaty said on that Wednesday that the district would “review” the “Satan Club’s [sic] use of our facility.”

Why? What did the Satanists have to do with any of this? No clue. They didn’t phone in the threat. They didn’t put kids in danger. They only launched the group in response to a Christian Good News Club that already existed at the middle school.

The review was completed by Friday, and Vlasaty said “she had rescinded approval for the club to use the facilities, due to violating district policy.”

“As a result of this violation, the educational programming and activities of the District has been significantly impacted and it has caused unequivocal disruption to the District’s daily operations.

“Our community has experienced chaos. Our students, staff and teachers have had to endure a threat to their safety and welfare. The gravity of feelings of instability, anxiety and fear have been profound.

“Aside from my decision to rescind approval, I implore the Saucon Valley community to eliminate threatening, hateful and divisive language and behavior, and make a commitment in supporting our students and reinforcing the values of our community.

The bottom line was that The Satanic Temple was being punished for what some unknown culprit did. It made no sense at all.

There was also an unintended consequence: The district inadvertently created a playbook for Christian terrorists to follow anytime there was an atheist or Satanic club meeting at a local school. Just call in a threat, mention the non-Christian group as your motivation, and watch the chaos unfold. It was a horrible precedent.

The school district could easily have said it was working with law enforcement to ensure the safety of all students and that extra security would be provided anytime students gathered for a (perfectly legal) meeting of the After School Satan club.

Banning The Satanic Temple gave an unearned victory to the person who called in the threat, not to mention the Christian group that would benefit from it.

Despite people saying all this for weeks, the district’s position hasn’t budged. Which is why the ACLU is now suing the school district.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, alleges that the SVSD’s refusal to grant the ASSC equal access to school facilities give a “heckler’s veto” to those who dislike the group’s religious viewpoint, even though the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment prohibits the government from censoring speech based on the objections or reactions of others.

The lawsuit describes a few important details that didn’t get any attention in earlier news articles.

One of the biggest issues involves a disclaimer saying the club isn’t sponsored by the school district. The Satanists say they included that in the permission slip created for parents. Superintendent Vlasaty, however, told the Satanists that a social media posting advertising the club didn’t include the disclaimer… even though that posting wasn’t made by anyone employed by The Satanic Temple. The group didn’t ask the person to post that, either.

As for the permission slip, it was never even sent home. Vlasaty said “non-affiliated school organizations” weren’t allowed to do that. The problem with that argument is that the Good News Club was allowed to send home permission slips with kids. (Vlasaty told the Satanists the district policy “was not being followed by our building administrators consistently and has since been resolved”… which seems all too convenient.)

As for the terrorist who made the threatening phone call, he was arrested in North Carolina about a month ago. The lawsuit sarcastically notes that there’s “no evidence that the suspect might have refrained from his criminal actions if only TST had used a larger font size for its permission-slip disclaimer.”

Ultimately, the district appeared to be looking for a reason—any reason—to get rid of the club:

In any event, as the District’s letter to TST and the D.A.’s statement make clear, the suspect was not upset because he mistakenly believed that the District was sponsoring the ASSC. Rather, he was angry with the District merely because the district had approved the ASSC’s use of school facilities.

There’s also an interesting smoking gun: The lawsuit notes that the Good News Club never included the disclaimer that it wasn’t sponsored by the district in its material… until any of this became an issue:

Through at least February 23, 2023, the front/landing page for the Church’s website linked to a PDF of a permission slip with the file name “Good-News-Club-Permission-Slip-2023.” The permission slip was identical to the 2022 permission slip sent home with students, except that it stated that meetings would take place on “Thursdays for 6 weeks, Feb 23 through Mar 30.” Like the 2022 permission slip, the 2023 form did not have any explicit disclaimer of District sponsorship. The 2023 Good News Club permission slip, with no explicit disclaimer, remained on the Church’s website through at least February 27, 2023…

On information and belief, that permission slip remained on the church’s website until it was replaced by a PDF of a revised permission slip, which now includes an underlined disclaimer stating in red, “The Good News Club is not affiliated with the Saucon Valley School District in any way.” According to the PDF file’s metadata, the “Saucon Permission Slip spring 2023 revised” was not created until March 1, 2023, at 6:06 p.m. 

It’s a mic drop moment, buried deep within the document, suggesting the district applied different standards to the Christian and Satanist groups.

The lawsuit doesn’t just point out how several ads for the Christian club, now deleted from social media, lacked the disclaimer. It says that was also true of non-religious clubs:

The District’s failure to enforce Policy 707 against other non-school organizations—in the same manner, and to the same extent, that it is purporting to enforce the Policy against TST—constitutes a preference for these organizations based on their viewpoints, resulting in further viewpoint discrimination against TST.

The District’s failure to enforce Policy 707 against the Good News Club—in the same manner, and to the same extent, that it is purporting to enforce the Policy against TST— constitutes a preference for the religion promoted by the Good News Club, resulting in further religious discrimination against TST.

The 37-page lawsuit offers a litany of double standards in how the district treated the Satanic club compared to the Christian club and other extra-curricular clubs. It calls on a judge to force the district to make things right, both by reinstating the After School Satan club and paying any necessary costs and fines.

Given all the examples of what the Satanists were up against, it’s hard to imagine how the district will even try to defend itself. Officials had plenty of warnings, though. They just chose to listen to the wrong people.

snytiger6 9 Mar 31
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3 comments

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2

The ACLU, doing what i send them $$ for...sic 'em!

1

“Why? What did the Satanists have to do with any of this? No clue.”

Clue:

“They only launched the group in response to a Christian Good News Club that already existed at the middle school.”

“ASS clubs do not promote Satan, Satanic beliefs, Satanism, or anything else like it. The Satanic Temple, which sponsors these groups, doesn’t even believe in a literal Satan.”

In other words, their intent was only to provoke, and when they got what they wanted they pretended innocence.

If they had called their group the Science Club there would have been no problem. They were disingenuous about their intentions going in and disingenuous in their defense.

The irony here is that if they had been real satanists they may have had some standing in a First Amendment case. As it is, they can be seen as nothing more than deliberate troublemakers. They are pretending to be a religious variant, while they simultaneously admit they are not.

I am usually on the side of the ACLU, but this is a case they should lose. A fair test of this issue would be when a group of real Muslims get turned down for an after school group.

Remember, the school’s first response was to accept the Satanist group. This is a situation in which there is no “there” there. The ACLU should have noticed that.

skado Level 9 Mar 31, 2023

Either way, it infringes on religious freedom. Even if the Satanist club doesn't actually believe in Satan, the Christians thought it did and are trying to force their religious views onto the school. Religious freedom means the students have the right to NOT believe. So, whether or not the students believe in Satan is beside the point. The constitution is supposed to guarantee "freedom of association", and the school is denying the student's rights.

@snytiger6
If that was what was motivating the school’s response, why did they accept the group originally? They only rejected the group after it attracted threats. Whether the school administrators took the most courageous path or not, their motivation appears oriented only toward student safety in the age of school shootings. The so-called Satanist group was carelessly willing to attract violence to the school in order to make a political point, when, if they just wanted to meet, they could have chosen a name that reflected their true values, but they thought it was clever to “own” the Christians by stirring up social unrest through false pretenses. No religious freedom was abridged here, because the Satanists were not, by their own admission, a religious group. Their only mission was political agitation.

2

Such hypocrisy needs to be stamped out vigorously with widespread publicity.

Yes, the hypocrisy of claiming to be satanic when you’re not.

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