I ordinarily don't pay much attention to these types of stories, but there was an aspect to this one that caught my attention.
Note the last sentence. Rather than being satisfied with an objective reporting of the facts along with a couple of quotes representing both sides of the issue, the author has to promote his liberal agenda by making the unfounded assertion that the community is "nearly unanimous" in its support of the kid and his parents. The scant support he does offer is a couple of quotes from what appears to be other teenagers. If this was Seattle or L.A. I might be willing to buy into that claim. However, Greensburg is a prime example of heartland America, halfway between Cincinnati and Indianapolis just off I-74; no doubt we've all driven past it many times, and I seriously doubt that most of the adult population there supports this brat and his parents. It just irritates me to no end that these limp-wristed media types continually drift away from the facts to promote the notion that children should be allowed to do anything they want anytime they want to with no rules or restrictions to their behavior. I'll bet these same people wonder why our public schools are such disaster zones.According to a number of sources, the Indianapolis Star and Associated Press chief among them, the parents of a Greensburg (Ind.) Community Junior High School student have filed a lawsuit against the district citing discrimination against their son, who was kicked off the team because his hairstyle violated a code of appearance established by Greensburg High coach Stacy Meyer, pictured above, which was stipulated in the school's extra-curricular code.
TheIndyChannel.com reported the lawsuit claims coaches told the player he wouldn't be allowed on the court if he failed to cut his hair by a certain date. When the 14-year-old questioned why that was necessary, he was also told that he would be kicked off the team if his parents -- Patrick and Melissa Hayden -- protested the policy.
Obviously, the player and his parents decided to fight for his rights rather than acquiesce to the extracurricular policy's claim that a player's hair be above his eyebrows, collars and ears.
Interestingly, this is the second time in two past calendar years that Greensburg Junior High's basketball team has garnered regional attention for issues it would rather avoid. According to the Greensburg Daily News, the junior high program was involved in a nasty hazing scandal in February 2009, with little official punishment resulting from an episode in which some players hit their teammates in the face with genatalia.
While the banned player's parents feel they have a strong case based on unequal enforcement of the code -- girls are not required to meet similar hair standards to compete in basketball -- the school district claims that a student's right to participate in extracurricular activities is a privilege, not a right.
"In Indiana, everybody is entitled to an education, and that's a right," Greensburg School District Tuck Hopkins told TheIndyChannel.com. "Playing extracurricular activities, we believe the law is it's a privilege, and that's the distinction."
Whether or not the law agrees with that contention is another matter. Regardless of how judges rule, the local public certainly seems to be nearly unanimous in it's support of the athlete in question, as a number told TheIndyChannel.com...(emphasis mine)
Teen kicked off basketball team for hairstyle - Prep Rally - High School* - Yahoo! Sports