The ACLU, Formerly For Free Speech, Is Now For Compelled Speech
What a tragic thing, that the ACLU has betrayed most of what they used to stand for.
Wendy Kaminer lays out the ruin at Spiked:
Asserting their First Amendment rights against compelled speech, elementary-school teachers in Loudoun County, Virginia, are challenging a school-board rule requiring them to address transgender and 'gender expansive' students by their preferred pronouns. The teachers claim that the pronouns convey messages about transgenderism that violate their religious beliefs as well as their understanding of biology. As a compromise, in an effort to balance their speech rights with students' interests in being recognised, the teachers have offered to address the students only by their names, eschewing the use of any offending pronouns. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has sided against them.Confirming its transformation from a free-speech organisation into a progressive advocacy group, it has submitted a brief in Cross v Loudoun County, advocating restrictions on fundamental First Amendment freedoms. According to the ACLU, public-school teachers should be required to affirm controversial, state-imposed orthodoxies about sex and gender in violation of their conscience, in order to protect students from discrimination.
Sad to say, the ACLU's brief against the First Amendment is neither a shock nor a surprise - it was predictable. Its retreat from defending speech that conflicts with progressive values and ideas dates back at least 15 years. Still, there is a difference between avoiding litigation that requires defending the right to use whatever progressives consider harmful speech and engaging in litigation to suppress it or to compel speech aimed at mitigating its alleged harms. The ACLU has crossed a line, effectively advancing arguments about the direct, indisputable dangers of offensive language and ideas that have long been used to justify bans on 'hate speech'.
This erstwhile free-speech champion now asserts that transgender and non-binary students possess civil rights to be called by their preferred pronouns, while teachers have no civil liberties to refrain from doing so. The ACLU did not even try to balance the respective rights and liberties of students and public-school teachers. It has declared that the teachers have no rights or liberties to consider.
...Apparently the ACLU views silence, in the form of not uttering transgender pronouns, as the equivalent of transphobic hate speech (which we should no longer expect it to defend in any context).
Silence on pronouns is also not an option for public-school teachers because when addressing students, with or without pronouns, they engage in 'curricular speech', the ACLU argues. What is 'curricular speech'? It is speech delivered as part of a teacher's duties, in his or her official capacity, which does not enjoy the constitutional protection afforded a teacher's personal comments, addressing matters of public concern.
...This distinction between the official and personal or private speech of government employees is settled law that the ACLU has previously criticised or tried to limit. The doctrine was essentially codified in Garcetti v Ceballos, a 2006 Supreme Court decision that the ACLU denounced. Indeed, the ACLU submitted an amicus brief in Garcetti arguing against categorically eliminating constitutional protections for a government employee's job-related speech. Now, in Cross v Loudoun County, it cites Garcetti as authority for forcing teachers to use a student's chosen pronouns.
I don't mean to criticise the ACLU for citing a case it has opposed in other contexts. Lawyers are bound to cite precedents that support their arguments. But I do mean to suggest that the ACLU's opposition to the teachers' speech rights in Cross does not reflect a consistent, principled stance on employee speech so much as a decision to advance the pronoun demands of transgender students.
...Does a public-school teacher's principled refusal to use transgender pronouns so obviously qualify as curricula speech, subject to regulation? Not at the university level, according to a recent federal-court decision, involving a similar set of facts. In Meriwether v Hartop, the sixth-circuit court of appeals delineated an academic freedom exception to the Garcetti rule on job-related speech.
As law professor Eugene Volokh explains, the court in Meriwether recognised the First Amendment claims of a college professor who, like the Loudoun County teachers, declined to use transgender pronouns, offering instead to refer to a complaining student only by name. Pronouns embody messages, enhancing their status as protected speech, the court observed, and the Loudoun County teachers stress. Students demanding the use of their chosen pronouns prove the point, given their claims that using no pronouns or pronouns they reject conveys disapproval, contempt or erasure of their identities.
Of course, an academic-freedom claim involving pronoun use is stronger in a college or university than an elementary school, where children need and deserve compassion, understanding and solicitude, especially when they have identified or been identified as transgender or non-binary. The sorry fact that many college and university students today act and expect to be treated like third graders, protected from unwelcome speech and ideas, does not mean that actual children should be treated like young adults. If I were an elementary-school teacher, I would try to call students by their chosen names and pronouns, simply as a courtesy - but I have no religious compunctions about doing so.
And I would not assume that calling students by name and avoiding their pronouns would subject them to harassment and abuse, endanger their physical and mental health, or even contribute to their suicides, as the ACLU hyperbolically insists. The actual harms posed to students by a few teachers who decline to use their preferred pronouns are highly speculative. The assault on the First Amendment rights of teachers compelled to use transgender pronouns in deference to such questionable harms is clear.
The ACLU has sold out to trans activists -- largely a population of vicious bullies who threaten to ruin even those who believing in treating people with respect and dignity, if they don't exactly parrot the words and beliefs the activists say they must.
But a ray of hope from Kaminer:
Transgender activists and other progressive censors may win some cultural battles, but they stand to lose the coming electoral wars of 2022 and 2024 - the wars that will matter most.








Loudon is where a boy in a skirt raped a girl in the bathroom, anally and orally, got quietly transferred to another school where he struck again.
When the angry father yelled so the school board he was told his daughter made it up. He then swore at the woman who said that and was promptly arrested.
NicoleK at October 25, 2021 9:39 PM
Loudon is where a boy in a skirt raped a girl in the bathroom, anally and orally, got quietly transferred to another school where he struck again.
When the angry father yelled so the school board he was told his daughter made it up. He then swore at the woman who said that and was promptly arrested.
NicoleK at October 25, 2021 9:39 PM
How interesting.
Do let the sane among us who went Galt on public schools, government subsidized parents, and their children many years ago let us know how it all works out.
Kevin at October 26, 2021 12:33 AM
How interesting.
Do let the sane among us who went Galt on public schools, government subsidized parents, and their children many years ago let us know how it all works out.
Kevin at October 26, 2021 12:33 AM
The dems have doubled down on crazy and stupid in the last year. I hope those who were duped into voting for them, finally are starting to understand what their agenda is.
Perry at October 26, 2021 6:03 AM
Worse than that, NicholeK, when he was arrested he was forced to the ground, cuffed, and somehow got his pants pulled down to his ankles, then frog marched out.
The district didn't report either sexual assault as required by Virginia law. I doubt they'll face any real blow back from that. In that meeting, they claimed there had not been any such assaults for several years.
I R A Darth Aggie at October 26, 2021 9:44 AM
It's my understanding they did report it, that that was just a rumor.
But either way, the fact that he's being portrayed as some right wing nutjob is messed up
NicoleK at October 26, 2021 10:04 AM
A preferred pronoun in elementary school? How precocious. Fortunately, I have yet to read any ze, zer, or zim articles in any of the hundreds I've read this year. Not even in a Twitter feed. I did run across one that used "they" for all parties. I couldn't tell who did what to whom.
I hope this is just a fetish. It certainly interferes with communication.
Baker at October 26, 2021 11:04 AM
The statement that elementary students are identifying as trans is very disturbing to me. We do not let elementary age children vote, have sex, buy cigarettes, drive, get tattoos, buy a gun, buy alcohol, join the army or anything else because they are children. But they can change their sex? They have no ability to know what it is like to be either a man or a woman.
For a teacher, they can address a student by Mr. smith or ms smith--there are no "pronouns" (wrong part of speech) to use. The pronoun stuff is nuts because there are no standard ones, different people can choose different ones, and the preferred one can change hourly--that is, the arbitraryness is a trap for any speaker. No one can do it right.
cc at October 26, 2021 1:00 PM
Or even just "Smith"
NicoleK at October 26, 2021 11:33 PM
On the other hand, the ACLU just got a judge to bitch-slap a school district (Texas, of course) for kicking out boys for having long hair, so they've got that going for them.
Which is nice.
Gog_Magog_Carpet_Reclaimers at October 27, 2021 12:02 PM
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