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Indiana T-Shirt Drama Hits Home
BY SARAH HENRY • SEPTEMBER 2019

“When you’re accustomed to privilege, equality feels like oppression.” This unattributed quote oft used by progressive activists sums up the controversial goings-on of late in my hometown of Georgetown, Indiana.

That conversation was launched by another saying, one that often appears on the t-shirts, posters, and home décor of the same activists: “Why be racist, sexist, homophobic, or transphobic when you could just be quiet?” This message of tolerance and acceptance induced horror at Highland Hills Middle School when an eighth-grader wore a shirt adorned with the text above. Repeatedly pulled out of class and eventually not allowed to attend her extracurricular football practice, the student was denied valuable educational time because administrators couldn’t tolerate the idea of acceptance and inclusivity.

The next day, dozens of students protested with a sit-in at the school’s common area. And while those students should be applauded, I’m personally finding it challenging to move on from the bigotry and dismissal on display from administrative professionals at the school—in large part because the decision-maker in this case is my former elementary school teacher.

As one student noted, “It’s not something you’d expect from your school or a place you’d feel safe.” But I sort of expect that. I don’t think that Highland Hills Middle School, and much of southern Indiana, is (yet) a place where LGBTQ or other socially marginalized students feel safe. And this flash-in-the-pan controversy, which will likely disappear from headlines before week’s end, demonstrates why.

When teachers report students for clothing that, objectively, does not violate the dress code, they feed a culture of distrust and anxiety. When teachers and administrators pick and choose what portions of the dress code apply and to whom, they reinforce sexist and racist beliefs, and teach students that those in charge do not view members of the student population equally. When urging tolerance is a “potential distraction,” administrators reinforce the idea that the mere classroom presence of marginalized communities is a disruption. And if you remember middle school, you’ll remember that middle school bullies don’t often miss the opportunity to target a person who attracts any controversial attention.

And it’s not just the behavior of Highland Hills Middle School educators and administrators the day the thirteen-year-old wore the “offensive” t-shirt that perpetuates these harmful messages. The next day, parents were called to pick up their protesting students, as the demonstration of solidarity was apparently deemed disruptive to the school day. In truth, there could be no better way to learn about our rights to assembly and to speech than to exercise them.

Walking through the halls of Highland Hills, and its next-door neighbor, Floyd Central High School, I carried a significant amount of privilege. But that didn’t stop someone from slipping a letter into my locker as I began my freshman year promising that the devil would come to steal and rape me in the night unless I “welcomed the Lord” into my heart. And it didn’t stop my little brother from being physically hit with a Bible on the school bus when other students discovered we were the atheist family in the neighborhood. And it didn’t stop my principal from fighting tooth and nail against my attempts to form a Secular Student Alliance affiliate (and threatening to shut down all clubs once she was reminded of the unconstitutionality of her behavior).

Of course, there were teachers that countered these narratives and systems. The teacher who sponsored that secular club is, to this day, one of the bravest women I have ever met—willing to risk her career for a place where a very small group of us could be welcomed. The happily (and proudly) married lesbian civics teacher who truly changed my life, and many other’s lives, by creating a lunchtime refuge in her classroom. I hope this eighth grader finds those instructors and the others like them.

My time at Highland Hills Middle School taught me far more about our personal responsibility to be kind than about geometry or sentence structure. In unjust, unfair systems, we each have a responsibility to be a force for good, for positive change, for acceptance, and for inclusion. I was lucky to find those people in a community that never really seemed to count me as one of its own. To flip the message of the girl’s shirt: “To be accepting, inclusive, positive, and good, sometimes you have to speak up!”

[thehumanist.com]

NoPlanetB 8 Sep 12
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5 comments

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0

That's not tolerance, telling people to be quiet is still bigoted and hateful, and it's exactly the kind of thing that everyone was fightig against in the first place.

If the shirt said " Why be lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, quer, when you can be quiet" many people would be outraged because it is threatening.

The right to free speech means both of these statements are protected equally, so long as it doesn't hurt anyone.

That also means this slogan ought to be protected: "necrophilliacs, pedophiles, and zoophiles, should be part of LGBTQ"

Although I personally don't think that any of those things should be, because they are not really sexual orientations, there are goups that want to be. These groups are also actually highly marginalized and stagmatized, but I give it no more than a decade before they all have the rights and legal privaledge to what they want.

The difference is that one is attacking who people are innately while the other is attacking who people have chosen to be in ignorant and hateful response to who other people are innately. It’s not even remotely the same thing.

@brainyactress Which part is innate and which part is chosen exactly? I ask to clarify what you mean exactly.

2

Wisdom is hard to come by as of late! Unless, I just don’t remember my young years correctly. The things that some people are subjected too, today...could be made better with common sense, but this is from my very old self...surely I must be wiser now?

5

Bravo to Sarah Henry and her supporters in middle school for standing her ground against unconstitutionally repressive teachers and administrators. It is the same old tale of the privileged, who judge who is or is not worthy of equality with them. They will prevent anyone different or marginalized from expressing their viewpoint, if it does not tally with their own. Such willful disregard for the 1st amendment constitutional right to free speech deprives the marginalized of their equality, but the privileged will claim the marginalized are a danger to everyone else.

2

I think it’s cool that the students actually protested with a sit-in. Very brave! My Chinese stepdaughter started school in Indiana when she was 13. She hated it because of the bigotry. She couldn’t wait to leave when she graduated and vowed to never return.

6

Excellent writing by Sarah Henry. I'm hopeful that more people in these little towns will step up and support anyone who brings this bigotry by the religious toward those that don't believe as they do out in the open.

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