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Court Backs School That Barred Student鈥檚 鈥楾wo Genders鈥 Shirt

Student barred from wearing 鈥楾here Are Only Two Genders鈥 T-shirt to middle school loses appeal
By Mark Walsh 鈥 June 10, 2024 5 min read
ADF Senior Counsel and Vice President of U.S. Litigation David Cortman, left, and Liam Morrison speak at a press conference following oral arguments before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit on Feb. 8, 2024.
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In an important ruling on student expression, a federal appeals court has upheld the authority of Massachusetts school administrators who barred a middle school student from wearing a T-shirt that said, 鈥淭here Are Only Two Genders.鈥

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit, in Boston, ruled unanimously that 鈥減recisely because the message was reasonably understood to be so demeaning of some other students鈥 gender identities, there was the potential for the back-and-forth of negative comments and slogans between factions of students鈥 that could lead to 鈥渁 deterioration in the school鈥檚 ability to educate its students.鈥

Liam Morrison was a 7th grader at Nichols Middle School in Middleborough, Mass., in April 2023 when he wore the shirt, which he and his father viewed as a comment on the hot political topic of gender identity and not a message aimed at any group or individual at his school, according to court papers.

School administrators were aware that several students at the middle school were transgender or gender nonconforming, and that some students were bullied and had suicidal ideation or had attempted suicide. They invoked a provision of the student dress code that barred 鈥渉ate speech or imagery that target[s] groups based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religious affiliation, or any other classification.鈥

Morrison was not disciplined, but his father came to school to take him home when he refused to remove . The father emailed an administrator to question why the shirt was barred when 鈥渋t simply stated [his son鈥檚] view on a subject that has become a political hot topic ... that is being discussed ... all across our country.鈥 The school replied by citing the dress code鈥檚 prohibition of messages targeting a protected class, 鈥渘amely in the area of gender identity.鈥

About a month later, in May 2023, Morrison again wore the shirt to school, this time with the words with a piece of tape with the word 鈥淐ensored鈥 written with a marker. Administrators decided that Morrison could not wear the altered shirt because it was so closely identified with his original message. The student removed the shirt. He later wore shirts with messages such as 鈥淒on鈥檛 Tread on Me鈥 and 鈥淔irst Amendment Rights,鈥 which he was not required to remove.

District and appeals courts rule for administrators, but with a different outlook on landmark Tinker case

Morrison and his parents sued the Middleborough school system and administrators under the First Amendment. A federal district judge ruled for the defendants, analyzing the case under the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 landmark 1969 decision in , which upheld the right of students to wear black armbands to protest the Vietnam War as long as school was not substantially disrupted.

The district judge cited a passage in Tinker that suggested student speech could not be in 鈥渃ollision with the rights of other students to be secure and to be let alone.鈥

In its June 9 decision in , the 1st Circuit panel upheld the district judge, but on different grounds from the Tinker decision. Instead of relying on the rights-of-others language, the appellate panel grounded its decision in Tinker鈥檚 substantial disruption test.

The court discussed a range of rulings by its sister federal circuit courts over the last two decades that generally, though not always, sided with school administrators in regulating student speech that was perceived as targeting minority groups. One was a by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit, in San Francisco, that upheld school officials who barred a student from wearing a T-shirt that said, 鈥淗omosexuality is Shameful.鈥 (That ruling was later tossed out as moot by the Supreme Court.)

In 2008, however, the an Illinois school district to allow a student to wear a T-shirt proclaiming 鈥淏e Happy, Not Gay鈥 to protest a high school event meant to promote tolerance of gay students.

鈥溾楤e Happy, Not Gay鈥 is only tepidly negative,鈥 that court said. 鈥溾楧erogatory鈥 or 鈥榙emeaning鈥 seems too strong a characterization.鈥

However, several federal appeals courts have upheld school prohibitions on the display of the Confederate flag, the 1st Circuit noted.

Appeals courts addressing such student expression 鈥渁ppear to have converged on the shared understanding 鈥 that school officials may bar passive and silently expressed messages by students at school that target no specific student if: (1) the expression is reasonably interpreted to demean one of those characteristics of personal identity, 鈥 and (2) the demeaning message is reasonably forecasted to poison the educational atmosphere due to its serious negative psychological impact on students,鈥 Judge David J. Barron wrote for the 1st Circuit panel.

The panel disagreed with Morrison鈥檚 argument that his shirt was akin to the black armbands in Tinker or the 鈥淏e Happy, Not Gay鈥 shirt upheld by the 7th Circuit.

School administrators were not unreasonable in concluding that Morrison鈥檚 shirt 鈥渨ould be understood鈥攊n this middle school setting in which the children range from 10-to-14 years old鈥攖o demean the identity of transgender and gender-nonconforming NMS students,鈥 Barron said.

Student鈥檚 lawyers are considering all legal options

David Cortman, senior counsel and vice president of Alliance Defending Freedom, said the organization was considering all its legal options, including whether to appeal the 1st Circuit ruling.

鈥淪tudents don鈥檛 lose their free speech rights the moment they walk into a school building,鈥 Cortman said in a statement. 鈥淭his case isn鈥檛 about T-shirts; it鈥檚 about a public school telling a middle-schooler that he isn鈥檛 allowed to express a view that differs from their own.鈥

Bob Corn-Revere, the chief counsel of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, which filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the student, said the 1st Circuit 鈥済ot the decision wrong.鈥

He said Morrison鈥檚 shirt involved 鈥渢he passive expression of an idea that some people may dislike or find uncomfortable,鈥 but the appellate ruling restricts student speech rights by 鈥渆xpanding what it means to be targeted or bullied.鈥

Gary D. Buseck, a lawyer with GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders, a Boston-based advocacy group that filed a in support of the school district, said the decision could be influential nationally.

鈥淎 shirt like this may not be inappropriate for adults to wear out in the world but may cross a line to wear before a captive audience of students who might have to sit and look at this shirt that demeans them,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n this case, a T-shirt that basically says trans and non-binary kids do not exist is too much. It just crosses a line.鈥

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