Me? A random person on the internet? Of course. But I also condemn flag burning. Do you? |
I’m saying that political figures sure do care what random school board members do. And a small number of non-political school administrators and SBs are being called “The Dems”. As in, “ThE DeMs ClOsEd tHe ScHooLs!” So, suck it, the GOP wants to burn books. |
You are missing a lot. Those are not valid comparisons. Flag burning is legal as a protest and the protesters mean to trigger you. It’s constitutional as a form of speech. It isn’t an effective way to persuade other people to their point of view. It’s for shock value. But it isn’t a protected protest to take and burn someone else’s flag or try to prevent you from flying a flag or prevent a school or other public entity from flying a flag. Similarly, if you want to buy a book you think is too woke or too gay and burn your own copy of the book as a protest, you can do it, but you don’t get to burn the school’s library books. That’s not protected speech. |
I'm not missing anything at all, thanks. I'm well aware that flag burning (and book burning) are "protected speech." I answered the question posed to me. You, however, have not answered the question posed to you. I've helpfully bolded it for you. |
It’s a dumb question. One is legal and the other is not. It doesn’t matter whether you or I condone or condemn a method of protest if it does no harm to anyone. Protests don’t seek or require everyone’s approval. My point is that there is a difference between protests, even very unpopular ones, and theft, vandalism, and destruction of public property. The book burners are proposing the latter. You are raising a false analogy in their defense. |
Well, I didn't ask the original question in the first place - I merely answered it. If you asked it, then you asked a dumb question. I'm not defending anyone in either scenario. |