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@splitshockvirus
>Judge Nina Y. Wang wrote that wearing a sash during a graduation ceremony falls under school-sponsored speech, not the student’s private speech. Therefor, “the School District is permitted to restrict that speech as it sees fit in the interest of the kind of graduation it would like to hold,” Wang wrote.
If they're not disallowing **any** changes/additions to the gowns, caps and etc., then this is a content restriction, not a time/place restriction. People frequently put on pins, write things on their cap, maybe attach a photo of someone who died, etc. There's really no difference between those and this person wearing two country flag designs.
They either need to allow every change within a clear framework that's written down in the Big Book of Don't, or they need to allow no changes at all and enforce a uniform policy.
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