RangerDave wrote:
I would agree if the intent of the kids wearing the American flag was simply to express their own patriotism. Calling attention to someone else's dickery, though, is a sketchier proposition. There are times when it might be appropriate - a black man sitting at a "white's only" lunch counter, for instance. However, more often than not, it's just someone trying to provoke a response by being a douchebag - for instance, transvestites dressing up in flamboyant drag to attend Easter Mass as a means of "calling attention" to the Church's dickery towards homosexuals.
The problem with your example is that students have to attend school. A person going dressed in drag to Easter Mass is purposefully invading someone else's private funcation (churches being private, after all). Your example of the black man is closer to the mark; while a lunch counter is a private enterprise, like a church, disrupting someone else's service is an aggressive action in and of itself, while eating lunch is... not aggressive. Neither the black man nor the kids in the story are being douchebags; they're calling attention to someone else's douchebaggery, while the protestor in the church is calling attention to what he perceives as douchebaggery by being a douchebag himself, and arguably an even bigger one.
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Basically, I think that even if you have a totally valid underlying point, being deliberately disrespectful and provocative is juvenile (and of course, therefore entirely predictable from a bunch of high school students who think they have some incredibly profound point to make).
They don't have an incredibly
profound point to make. They have a very simple one. They go to high school with a bunch of people that think we owe respect to other nations' holidays beyond letting people celebrate it. The ones being disrespectful are not the kids wearing the flag attire; it's the ones getting up in arms because they are.
Imagine if the same thing had happened because one kid wore a "My dad is in Iraq" shirt with a flag on it, without all his buddies.
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All that said, the biggest douchebag in this story is still the vice-principal who kicked the kids out of school.
That much is true.
RangerDave wrote:
Aye, it's not a perfect analogy. I think the point is valid, though. There's a difference between shining a light on massive injustice and being an obnoxious sh*t-stirrer. High-school kids trying to piss off other high-school kids? Strikes me as the latter 9 times out of 10.
Look, no one is taking issue with the assertion that these kids were trying to stir **** - of course they were. However, 9 times out of 10 high school **** stirring is either A) overly idealistic teens stirring **** over issues they don't really understand, often egged on by teachers who use the kids as proxies and don't understand much better or B) it's self-centered bullshit which amounts to "I don't like something adults are telling me, so I'm going to pretend its a matter of principle even though there's holes in my position you could fly a 747 through - if my position is anything beyond 'the school is being mean by not letting me <insertwhateverhere>"
This is the tenth time, where the kids actually had a perfectly valid point, and illustrated it in a perfectly mature way. It isn't like they went up to the Mexican-American kids and said "Hey biatch, I'm cruisin' with a flag on your holiday, mofo! Whatcha gonna do?"