ICE

So what happens if the student wishes to protest but the parent says no?

Not questioning the decision of the schools in their duty to supervise, just wondering how all of this works for a student who is doing something they see as justifiable but maybe their parents see otherwise.
Then the students get to learn a fundamental principle of civil disobedience....the willingness to peacefully accept the punishment for violating the law/rules to show that the law/rule is wrong.
 
Then the students get to learn a fundamental principle of civil disobedience....the willingness to peacefully accept the punishment for violating the law/rules to show that the law/rule is wrong.
Also, if the school had a different treatment of students on senior skip day, the school might learn a lesson about free speech.
 
BREAKING: A Nebraska man has been arrested after assaulting a female teen ICE protestor. He was stopped and attacked himself by classmates of the girl who had skipped school to protest ICE, and he suffered a significant beating at the hands of High School Teens.

Just weeks after a Texas man was charged for attacking anti-ICE student protestors, 54-year-old Nebraska man Michael Brown allegedly drove his vehicle near student protestors and yelled pro ICE comments to taunt them. One teen responded by yelling and throwing a water bottle.

Elliott said Brown then got out of his vehicle, chased a female student he believed had thrown the water bottle, and brutally attacked her.

The students rushed to defend her, pulled him off, and wrestled Brown to the ground, kicking him. A teacher came and demanded they let him go.

Brown then yelled, and screamed before fleeing the scene in his truck.

Brown was layer arrested for child abuse.
 
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