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Simon,
I hesitate to respond given restraints levied on me by you that I don’t understand.
If what follows is taken as off-topic or anyway contrary to forum guidelines, it’s unintentional.
“The school district, the speaker (implied through ripping up his speech), the reporter.”
Without presupposing it, I have seen no evidence that the speaker agreed or had to agree to deliver and only deliver a preapproved speech, whether in writing or otherwise.
I can see you assert the school district required this agreement, and I can see your assertion that the speaker agreed to this. But saying this is so does not make it so. I’m looking for evidence; not speculation.
“The school district, the school, the speaker, the audience, the reporter, anyone who watched the YouTube video and everyone else except you.”
I don’t see where any reporter asserted a student was forbidden from sharing his or her personal religious view, and you have not shown this. Quote the reporter who says this. Quote the school official who says this. Certainly the YouTube video given at the beginning of this discussion offers no such information.
“Go on then. Prove we're lying.”
I’ve not asserted you or anyone else here has lied. Hence I fail to see why the request that I prove you or anyone else here is lying.
I’ve asked for evidence of assertions made.
About the closest thing to evidence in support of the claims above is an apparent position taken by the school system “to no longer include prayer at graduation ceremonies”.
A school system adopting that position has not adopted a position prohibiting students from expressing their personal religious view.
Moreover, for a student to take it upon him or herself to share their personal religious view at a school event is not necessarily an act of the school system including prayer at a school event. This school system policy dictates what it endorses and/or includes. This school system policy does not prohibit what students do with their personal freedom of speech. The school system has taken a neutral stand on religion, which it should, and it has taken a stand against endorsing and/or including religious display.
Marvin Shilmer