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School district apologizes after students told ‘Make America Great Again’ shirts not allowed in class

September 5, 2017 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

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President Trump speaks at a “Make America Great Again” rally in Phoenix on Aug. 22. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

A Georgia school district has apologized after one of its teachers asked two high school students wearing “Make America Great Again” T-shirts to leave her classroom.

The incident took place at River Ridge High School on Aug. 31, when a teacher “erroneously told two students their shirts with campaign slogans were not permitted in class,” Cherokee County School District spokeswoman Barbara P. Jacoby said.

“Her actions were wrong, as the ‘Make America Great Again’ shirts worn by the students are not a violation of our School District dress code,” Jacoby said in a statement. “The teacher additionally — and inappropriately — shared her personal opinion about the campaign slogan during class.”

Classes at the school in Woodstock, Ga., about 30 miles north of Atlanta, had started Aug. 1. It is unclear who reported the incident to the teacher’s supervisors, though student video of the exchange soon began circulating on social media, according to the International Business Times.

The principal at River Ridge “immediately met with and apologized to these students and their families,” Jacoby said. She added district superintendent Brian V. Hightower was “deeply sorry that this incident happened in one of our schools; it does not reflect his expectation that all students be treated equally and respectfully by our employees.”

Shortly after the incident, someone started a Change.org petition calling for the teacher in question to resign. The district did not identify the teacher and said it could not discuss disciplinary action taken against an employee. However, Jacoby noted the students who wore the shirts faced no disciplinary action.

“The Superintendent also is instructing all Principals to meet with their teachers and staff to review the dress code and remind them that their political opinions should not be shared with students,” she said.

The incident drew sharp criticism from some Georgia officials.

“It’s just shocking — you can’t do that to kids,” state Rep. Earl Ehrhart (R) told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “That’s so wrong on so many levels. That individual doesn’t need to be anywhere near a classroom ever again.”

State Rep. John Carson (R), whose district includes River Ridge High School, told the newspaper in an email it was attempt to silence conservative free speech.

It’s not the first time a school has drawn controversy over action taken against political displays in the classroom.

Last August, Mariah Havard wore a shirt emblazoned with “Black Lives Matter” to picture day at her high school in Buckeye, Ariz. In a widely shared Facebook post, Havard said she was told her shirt was “disruptive in a learning environment” and was asked to change into a plain white T-shirt. A week later, after another student at the school was asked to remove a “Black Lives Matter shirt,” a small group of students staged a walkout over the incidents.

“We’re not trying to start a race war,” Genesis Santoyo, Havard’s friend, told the Arizona Republic. “We’re trying to end one.”

i woke up this very morning knowing that it’s picture day for my school we all know as Buckeye Union High School – BUHSD…

Posted by Mariah Havard on Tuesday, August 23, 2016

During the presidential campaign, Grant Berardo, then a high school junior in central New Jersey, wore a “TRUMP Make American Great Again!” shirt on picture day. When his yearbook arrived, however, he noticed his photo had been edited so the campaign slogan was missing, leaving a plain black shirt. Outraged, Berardo’s parents accused Wall Township public schools of censorship.

In a statement, the superintendent of the Wall Township school district said they were “equally outraged” and did not condone the “disturbing” yearbook edits. The high school’s yearbook adviser was later suspended, and the incident even caught the attention of the president himself.

“Thank you Wyatt and Montana — two young Americans who aren’t afraid to stand up for what they believe in. Our movement to #MAGA is working because of great people like you!” Trump wrote on Facebook. The post also noted the students had received more “Make America Great Again” paraphernalia.

Thank you Wyatt and Montana — two young Americans who aren’t afraid to stand up for what they believe in. Our movement to #MAGA is working because of great people like you!

Posted by Donald J. Trump on Monday, June 19, 2017

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Burning Man festival concludes as probe into man’s death in blaze continues

September 5, 2017 by  
Filed under Lingerie Events

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A 41-year-old man who died after rushing into a Burning Man blaze Saturday night was on his first trip to the festival, according to his parents.

Aaron Joel Mitchell died early Sunday at the UC Davis Firefighters Burn Institute in Sacramento after being airlifted from Nevada. He had broken through two rings of security Saturday night and dashed into the festival’s blazing namesake effigy, dubbed the “Man,” before event firefighters pulled him to safety.

Johnnye Mitchell told the Reno Gazette-Journal that her son grew up in Oklahoma but had most recently been living in Switzerland with his wife. He worked in construction.

“He was loving and a nice person,” Johnnye Mitchell said. “Joel liked hiking and outdoors, running.”

She and his father, Donald Mitchell, told the paper they had last seen their son Aug. 1 before he headed to a solar eclipse music festival in Oregon as a precursor to his first Burning Man.

Nevada’s Pershing County Sheriff Jerry Allen said doctors confirmed Mitchell wasn’t under the influence of alcohol, but a toxicology report is pending.

“We don’t know if it was intentional on his part or if it was just kind of induced by drugs. We’re not sure of that yet,” Allen said.

More than 70,000 people attended the nine-day Burning Man art and music celebration in the Black Rock Desert, about 100 miles north of Reno.

The festival culminates with the burning of a towering 40-foot effigy made of wood, a symbol of rebirth, which usually happens the Saturday before the Labor Day holiday. It’s followed by the burning of a temple on Sunday before the festivities wrap up Monday.

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Burning Man ethos: Embrace ‘burner’ identity, gathering’s ‘gift economy’

Sacramento Bee reporter Ed Fletcher, a veteran of several Burning Man gatherings in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, accepts help from other “burners” to explain the essence of the annual art and counterculture event that pulls tens of thousands of devotees together for their dusty version of nirvana.

Ed Fletcher

The Sacramento Bee

Festival organizers suspended further fire-related events Sunday, but the burning of the temple proceeded as scheduled Sunday with ramped-up security.

Following Mitchell’s death, organizers offered emotional support counseling on site, saying in a statement: “Now is a time for closeness, contact and community. Trauma needs processing. Promote calls, hugs, self-care, check-ins, and sleep.”

Attempts to rescue Mitchell were hampered because part of the structure was falling while they were trying to get Mitchell out of it, the sheriff’s office said.

“Rescuers had to leave him to allow the structure to fall and provide for rescuer safety before they could go back into the flames to extract Aaron from the debris,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement.

Attendees have tried before to run into the flames while the man is burning and there have been reported injuries from people trying to get a piece of the spectacle as a token and going through the hot coals. Allen said it’s a problem that the organizers have tried to contain by having their own rangers stage a human-chain to prevent people from getting to the fire. Allen said that this is the first time someone has gotten through like this and the only fatality that he’s aware of in his 15 years with the county.

Related stories from The Sacramento Bee

“People try to run into the fire as part of their spiritual portion of Burning Man,” Allen said. “The significance of the man burning, it’s just kind of a rebirth, they burn the man to the ground, a new chapter has started. It’s part of their tenets of radical self-expression.”

Known for eclectic artwork, offbeat theme camps, concerts and other entertainment, Burning Man began in San Francisco before moving to Nevada in 1990. Over the years as the event grew in popularity, deaths and crime have been reported, ranging from car crashes to drug use.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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