FrostyM288 wrote:I feel it's the school's call for stuff posted on the outside of a locker. However, if the posting was meant to be disruptive, then I feel it's the school's responsibility to take it down. For example, a kid walking in with a shirt saying "i hate fags" should definitely be forced to change shirts. Posting religious beliefs is obviously less clear...
In general, the school should stress personal choice/expression as much as possible short of it causing a disruption. A kid wearing a cross cross or yarmukle (sp?) is obviously ok, so its not the act of showing your beliefs that is the problem, just the flaunting of it to provoke others.
If one's freedom of speech is constrained only to that which does not 'provoke others,' then it's not freedom of speech. The entire idea behind the first amendment isn't to make certain that those whose speech is comfortable and agreeable may speak--but that those whose words are NOT comfortable and agreeable may do so. While it may be a problem for schools, as public institutions, to display the Ten Commandments, what a student posts on his or her locker is up to the student--not the school. In fact, to insist that a student may not post the Ten Commandments (or any other statement of religious, political or cultural beliefs) is in itself an institutional imposition of belief; in the case of the Ten Commandments, it is an imposition of atheism upon the student.
The solution, of course, is simple; forbid the posting of anything at all on the lockers (I believe that another poster has eloquently explained that one). However, if a student can put anything on a locker--even a 'go (insert the school football team name)!" sign, then the Ten Commandments should also be allowed.
personally, I think everybody went the wrong way from the beginning. Rather than disallow all mention of religion in public areas, there should have been a universal invitation to all religions to post. Atheism IS a religious belief, if only in one aspect: when atheists concern themselves with the religions of their neighbors, or get upset when religious beliefs are displayed. Therefore the prohibition of all religious items IS an imposition of a religious belief; atheism.
As for me, I think it would be delightful to walk into a hallway full of lockers and see the Ten Commandments, crosses, CTR emblems, crescents, pentagrams, Stars of David, Darwin fish and question marks adorning all the lockers in the place; that would be true freedom--of speech, of religion, and of academia.