--Welcome to the brave new world where even children can't speak freely without the SS coming to take them away...
Threatening the President's life (or anyone else's, for that matter) is not a free speech issue. The TV station tried to paint it as one, but the newspaper article revealed that the 'certain ideas' expressed by the teens had to do with shooting the president, not expressing criticism of the Iraqi war.
And it's not new either. The Secret Service has done this for at least three decades when threats are reported to them. In fact, they are mandated by law to investigate threats that are made.
Again,
the First Amendment does not give you the right to threaten anyone's life. This is not a free speech issue.
The KRON report tried to spin the incident as supression of dissent and danced quite nicely around what was actually said. KRON's report never even quoted anyone who had anything to do with the incident. Instead they quote teachers who had nothing to do with it at all.
The newpaper article on the other hand, reports what the teens are accused of saying and the subseqent admission from one of them that he did indeed make 'ill-advised remarks', as well as the dissent from some of the other teachers that KRON's article noted.
The
Tribune article strikes me as a textbook piece of balanced journalism while KRON's report is a heavy handed attempt to portray the federal government as stifling dissent in a classroom.
The only troubling aspects of the incident are:
The teacher's lack of discretion.
She should have just told them that threatening the President's life is worth 5 years in a federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison. And if they persisted in it, do what she did anyway as a real life lesson to the rest of the class on just what happens if you threaten the President's life.
The reported denial of legal council.
However, the
Tribune article makes no mention of this, and I frankly don't believe KRON's version of events as it's a secondhand allegation made by a teacher who has nothing to do with what happened.
The lack of parental involvement:
Apparently it's not illegal under California law, and the Oakland teacher's union has no jurisdiction over the Secret Service. Despite this, I think the parents should have been notified.