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“Superstitious nonsense” comment heads to appeals court

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If your kid’s teacher makes disparaging comments about religion, is it a First Amendment Establishment Clause violation?

The 9th Circuit will consider that question. The WSJ Law Blog writes:

The teacher, James Corbett of Capistrano Valley High School in Mission Viejo (which graduated former Los Angeles Raider Todd Marinovich) referred to Creationism as “religious, superstitious nonsense” during a 2007 lecture. Corbett made a host of other controversial statements as well. One of his students, Chad Farnan, sued Corbett and the school district, alleging a violation of his First Amendment Rights.

In May, a federal judge in Santa Ana, Calif., James Selna, granted summary judgment, partly in favor of Farnan and partly in favor of the defendants. Click here for the opinion. Specifically, Judge James Selna ruled that the “superstitious nonsense” comment violated Farnan’s rights, but ruled that nearly two dozen statements did not. Both sides appealed to the Ninth Circuit.

What do you think? Was the teacher out of line? Constitutionally? Professionally?

Category: first amendment, religion

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