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Three Christian high schoolers in Boone, North Carolina, decided to testify
to the sinfulness of homosexuality during a day-long event that promoted
that lifestyle at their school. The three students were promptly suspended
for their action, but have since been vindicated after contacting the
AFA Center for Law & Policy (CLP) for assistance.
Mark Austin, Ashley Greene and Ashley Kaylor, all students at Watauga
High School, simply wore T-shirts to school that bore Biblical messages
about homosexuality and salvation. The schools principal told them
they had to change their shirts or be suspended. The teens refused, and
were punished.
Austin, Greene and Kaylor wore their shirts on the "Day of Silence,"
an event sponsored by homosexual students in over 2,600 high schools and
colleges across the country. The event is promoted by the Gay, Lesbian
and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), a national homosexual group that
works to normalize homosexuality in the public school system.
Ironically, on the GLSEN site, the Day of Silence is said to have been
created "to peacefully protest the discrimination and harassment
faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) youth in school."
Participating students remain silent during the day, refusing to speak
even when spoken to by their teachers. Watauga administrators and staff
did nothing to discipline students for their protests.
"On the Day of Silence, the only ones who were forcibly silenced
at Watauga High School were those lifting up the name of Jesus,"
said CLP litigation counsel Michael J. DePrimo.
In an interview with AFA Journal, Austin said the principal told
him his T-shirt violated school policy. "He said I violated the school
dress code because I was being offensive to another gender," Austin
said. When the student asked the principal what gender hed offended,
"He just said that was his interpretation of the policy."
Austin said he wore the T-shirt to stand up for God. "Were
charged to stand against anything that goes contrary to Gods Word,
in a respectful way, of course," he said. "Really, I just got
sick and tired of seeing so many people stay silent when things like this
go on." Austin said that, while homosexuality is wrong, "theres
also forgiveness. Jesus is the answer."
After the CLP threatened legal action in federal court, the school backed
down. Watauga officials said they would expunge the disciplinary action
from the students records, and admitted that the schools clothing
policy was probably unconstitutional. They asked the CLP for help in revising
the policy.
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