Students were reminded of upcoming reading assignments and ....
Class completed the following activity and then discussed findings:
Class completed the following activity and then discussed findings:
This article has language that you might find offensive; however
it is an important issue related to the 1st Amendment. You may use
the margin to take notes about this event and the 1st Amendment
issues that seem related to it.
Quiz: Make a chart, list, or
write a paragraph that describes as many 1st Amendment issues and
rights as you can. Be sure to consider both sides of the issues involved and
the role of the government (including police and schools) and the press. There
will be a brief lecture to put the event in context, you may take notes on that
as well. (Submit a separate paper.)
Church protests high school’s Gay-Straight Alliance
On
Thursday morning, members from the Westboro Baptist Church convened at Grant
High School to protest its Gay-Straight Alliance. However, the protesters were
overwhelmed by the response of an estimated 200 counter-protesters that carried
completely unrelated signs designed to draw attention away from the subject.
In a letter addressed to Portland Police Chief
Rozie Sizer and three commanders of the Portland Police Department, the
Westboro Baptist Church’s attorneys advised that it would be in the WBC’s jurisdiction
to stage “public demonstrations regarding the dangers of promoting
homosexuality.”
In addition, the letter requested that law
enforcement “place a reasonable ‘dead zone’ between the groups to deter attacks
against [WBC] members.”
Attached to the letter was a press release,
headlined, “WBC will picket these fag-infested, pervert-run, Oregon and
Washington High Schools [sic].” Portland’s Grant High School, among other
schools, was listed as the site for Thursday’s demonstration.
Kelly Welch, a 25-year-old Portland State graduate
who is now a student of the PSU Graduate School of Education, felt that the
most effective way to combat the protest was to not to give the WBC any
attention.
“However, we’re Portlanders. We are not quiet
people,” she said.
Welch therefore organized a counter-protest via
Facebook.
According to Welch, the WBC’s goal is to destroy
gay-straight alliances. In order to curb this, Welch and the other
counter-protestors raised $144.19 during the protest.
Welch said she is in communication with Grant High
School’s GSA adviser to figure out the logistics of how to donate the money to
the GSA. She expects the money to be released to the GSA by next week.
Welch is also asking the GSA to help “kill the WBC
with kindness” by sending the WBC a thank-you card for their help with
fundraising.
She and PSU student Badger Vance, who also worked
on the counter-protest, originally designed the card to give to Pastor Phelps
of the WBC, who did not attend the protest, according to Welch.
Vance planned to respond to the protest with
humorous slogans on signs, such as “I can’t find my keys” and “More hot
pockets,” rather than add fuel to the WBC’s cause.
Other groups came to the counter-protest with signs
that read, “Is this where the spaceship is landing?” and “This is boob.”
PCC student Josh Olsen, a counter-protester who
held a Pacman game sign, brought it with the idea that a sign about something
silly would satirize the WBC.
On Thursday morning, counter-protesters had already
arrived at the scene when the WBC showed up 30 minutes before their announced
arrival time, according to Welch.
After a few minutes, the protesters left and the
crowd cheered, although counter-protesters stayed for an hour or more before
dispersing, Welch said.
“It makes me really proud to live in Portland when
I see the community rally like this with such love and understanding,”
she said. ??
Metropolitan Learning Center student Aaron
Schroeder, 16, saw about seven people protesting against the GSA at Grant High
School at around 7 a.m. In the meantime, counter-protesters covered the
sidewalks and street corners, he said.
Aaron’s 13-year-old brother Zachary was also
present. The teenagers’ father called the MLC to let them know that the
students would be protesting, Aaron said.
Dustin McSherry, 21, graduated from Grant High
School in 2007 and was a member of its GSA. He said that the protest is
personal to him because the Grant High School area is where he grew up.
According to McSherry, the GSA is a safe place for
students of all sexualities to express their voices. After researching the WBC,
he said he could not stay away from the protest.
McSherry thought the signs he and other
counter-protesters carried were positive and drew attention away from the focus
of the protesters.
The spokesperson for the Portland Public
School District, Matt Shelby, arrived at the school at 7:30 a.m. on the day of
the protest to find the front lawn roped off as planned. In addition, the Grant
High School Choir was singing on the steps of the school, he said.
“The WBC folks were already gone [by then],”
Shelby said.
Though students were originally encouraged to come
in through the school’s rear entrance, Grant High School’s administrators were
allowing students to come in through the front entrance, according to Shelby.
A few of the school’s students snuck under the rope
with signs, but were asked to demonstrate from the sidewalk, Shelby said.
Other curious high school students stood around watching.
Among the other counter-protesters, Shelby also said
he saw clergy members from other churches and a group of women in their
late sixties.
According to Shelby, everyone he saw was
counter-protesting with signs and banners in a positive way, including students
who respected the streets and gathered on the sidewalk.
Overall, Shelby believes the protest was a success,
even though school started late. In addition, he said that students conducted
themselves in a peaceful and productive manner.
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