Student told to remove Marine Corps shirt
A 6th-grader's Marine Corps shirt is too much for his elementary school.
A Mississippi sixth-grader, whose brother is deployed in Afghanistan, was told by the school administrators to turn his shirt inside-out due to being offended by the depiction of the U.S. Marine Corps bulldog.
Jordan Griffith was told by school officials to remove his Marine Corps shirt.
"Jordan just idolizes Timothy," said their mother, Sandy Griffith. "Timothy gave him the shirt and told him, 'Always remember you're a leader, not a follower.'"
Officials at South Jones Elementary went against the realistic image of the dog's genitals and asked the student to either turn his shirt inside-out or have his parents bring a new shirt. Teachers did not want to look at the shirt all day, nor have younger students see it. Sandy Griffith pulled her son from class instead of bringing him a new shirt, saying that the picture of the dog is no more offensive the view that one has when walking a dog.
"Now your kid can't wear a T-shirt given to him by a member of the U.S. military that espouses a positive character trait, leadership?" Rush Limbaugh asked, when Griffith called regarding the incident. "People are fed up. They're fed up with being told what they can't eat, and what they can and can't do in their own yards and in their own homes. It's just not America anymore."
"It's almost absurd that anyone would accuse us here in Mississippi of being anti-military," said the school's superintendent, Tommy Parker. "We recite the Pledge of Allegiance every morning. This very school has sent cards and letters to our troops overseas."
The shirt's message is about leadership, something kids and adults should think about, especially when men and women are still fighting on their behalf and behalf of the country.
What do you think? Did school officials make the right call? Weigh in on the comments section below.
© 2012, Distributed by NEWS CONSORTIUM.
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Keywords: student, Marine Corps, elementary, school
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It has been my experience, the less one brings attention to bold, not crude, tee-shirts, the better everyone is. Since the young man is 13 years old, he is probably not afraid to "test" the limits of what is acceptable in school attire.
Proud or not proud of his brother, that is really not the issue here. The issue is one of distraction...has the attire caused a distraction in the learning environment? If the school administrator who was "offended" had not made a knee-jerk decision, this would have become a powerful civics lesson for the student and all involved.
Do these younger kids they are worried about not see dogs being walked in their neighborhoods at home? Generally speaking, dogs don't wear clothes, after all.