8th Grader arrested and suspended for wearing NRA T-Shirt to school

Yurt may have trouble with the word 'magistrate.' This will help him.

Magistrate - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

United States

Magistrates are somewhat less common in the United States than in Europe, but the position does exist in some jurisdictions.

The term "magistrate" is often used (chiefly in judicial opinions) as a generic term for any independent judge who is capable of issuing warrants, reviewing arrests, etc.[7][8] When used in this way it does not denote a judge with a particular office. Instead, it denotes (somewhat circularly) a judge or judicial officer who is capable of hearing and deciding a particular matter. That capability is defined by statute or by common law. In Virginia, for example, the Constitution of 1971 created the office of magistrate to replace the use in cities and counties of the justice of the peace, which is common in many states for this function.

As noted above, the terms "magistrate" or "chief magistrate" were sometimes used in the early days of the republic to refer to the President of the United States, as in President John Adams's message to the U.S. Senate upon the death of George Washington: "His example is now complete, and it will teach wisdom and virtue to magistrates, citizens, and men, not only in the present age, but in future generations, as long as our history shall be read" (December 19, 1799).
Federal courts
Main article: United States magistrate judge

In the United States federal courts, a magistrate judge is a judge authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 631 et seq. Magistrate judges are appointed by the life-term federal district judges of a particular court, serving terms of eight years if full-time, or four years if part-time, and may be reappointed. Magistrate judges conduct a wide range of judicial proceedings to expedite the disposition of the civil and criminal caseloads of the United States District Courts. Congress set forth in the statute powers and responsibilities that could be delegated by district court judges to magistrate judges. To achieve maximum flexibility in meeting the needs of each court, however, it left the actual determination of which duties to assign to magistrate judges to the individual courts.
State courts

In many state court systems in the United States, magistrate courts are the successor to Justice of the Peace courts, and frequently have authority to handle the trials of civil cases up to a certain dollar amount at issue, applications for bail, arrest and search warrants, and the adjudication of petty or misdemeanor criminal offenses.
 
so you're not american and don't live in america

no wonder you don't jack about americans

we have magistrates here in America, Yurt.

notice he does not deny that he is not american nor does he live here

i'm right about him

btw...unless he lives in the 5 jurisdictions that have magistrates, he does not live here

jake obviously can't read and note he still does not deny he is not american
 
Many schools today do not allow t-shirts with slogans nor political t-shirts. Why is this surprising?
 
I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.
Gotta love those addled-minded cliches like "gun nuts".
They're usually uttered by the same intellectully lazy dolts that carry "racist", "hate-mongering", "disenfranchising", "homophobic", "extremist", etc. as part of their arsenal of debate comebacks when they are losing the debate.
 
I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.
Gotta love those addled-minded cliches like "gun nuts".
They're usually uttered by the same intellectully lazy dolts that carry "racist", "hate-mongering", "disenfranchising", "homophobic", "extremist", etc. as part of their arsenal of debate comebacks when they are losing the debate.

Or keep repeating "liberals" like parrots.
 
The child in question is too young to have an opinion on gun control, ask him how he feels about the right to bear arms, and I bet he channels the opinions of his father.
 
I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.

Let's suppose for a moment that the student had been an eighth grade girl wearing this shirt:

keep-abortion-legal-pro-choice-t-shirt-made-in-the-usa.american-apparel-juniors-fitted-tee.ash-white-stripe.w760h760.jpg


Would I be justified in saying, "I actually feel sorry for this kid. Her parents most likely are baby killers and she is in training to be one too."?
Or is only your right to freedom of expression protected by the 1st Amendment?
 
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I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.

Let's suppose for a moment that the student had been an eighth grade girl wearing this shirt:

keep-abortion-legal-pro-choice-t-shirt-made-in-the-usa.american-apparel-juniors-fitted-tee.ash-white-stripe.w760h760.jpg


Would I be justified in saying, "I actually feel sorry for this kid. Her parents most likely are baby killers and she is in training to be one too."?
Or is only your right to freedom of expression protected by the 1st Amendment?

I don't think children should be making any kind of political statement in school, but that is just me.
 
The child in question is too young to have an opinion on gun control, ask him how he feels about the right to bear arms, and I bet he channels the opinions of his father.

You know this how? Because when you were 12, you couldn't form rational opinions on issues that were of importance to you and your family?
Sorry, dismissing a child's opinion because you disagree with it is self righteous, at best. Dishonest at the worst.
 
The child in question is too young to have an opinion on gun control, ask him how he feels about the right to bear arms, and I bet he channels the opinions of his father.

You know this how? Because when you were 12, you couldn't form rational opinions on issues that were of importance to you and your family?
Sorry, dismissing a child's opinion because you disagree with it is self righteous, at best. Dishonest at the worst.

How does the kid know that having a gun is important? Because he has been told that by his parents.
His father is a gun nut, who allowed his son to wear a shirt he KNEW would cause problems.
 
I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.

Let's suppose for a moment that the student had been an eighth grade girl wearing this shirt:

keep-abortion-legal-pro-choice-t-shirt-made-in-the-usa.american-apparel-juniors-fitted-tee.ash-white-stripe.w760h760.jpg


Would I be justified in saying, "I actually feel sorry for this kid. Her parents most likely are baby killers and she is in training to be one too."?
Or is only your right to freedom of expression protected by the 1st Amendment?

I don't think children should be making any kind of political statement in school, but that is just me.
Perhaps not, but seeing other political statements are allowed, how does one deny this student's rights to express his pro 2nd Amendment stance?
 
I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.
Most students in public schools and universities are in training to be socialist idiots like your hero obamaturd who can't even prove his education or citizenship. Libtard fools.

That's probably exactly what they sound like. You give me the creeps.
 
I actually feel sorry for this kid. His parents most likely are gun nuts and he is in training to be one too.
Gotta love those addled-minded cliches like "gun nuts".
They're usually uttered by the same intellectully lazy dolts that carry "racist", "hate-mongering", "disenfranchising", "homophobic", "extremist", etc. as part of their arsenal of debate comebacks when they are losing the debate.

Truth hurts, does it??? By the way, learn to spell before you call anybody lazy.
 
The child in question is too young to have an opinion on gun control, ask him how he feels about the right to bear arms, and I bet he channels the opinions of his father.

You know this how? Because when you were 12, you couldn't form rational opinions on issues that were of importance to you and your family?
Sorry, dismissing a child's opinion because you disagree with it is self righteous, at best. Dishonest at the worst.

How does the kid know that having a gun is important? Because he has been told that by his parents.
His father is a gun nut, who allowed his son to wear a shirt he KNEW would cause problems.
I knew guns were important at 5. I could out shoot just about anyone by 9 and owned and maintained my own guns at 12.
My children knew how to handle and respect guns long before they were in eighth grade. I found it was the responsible thing to teach them considering that there were guns in my home. My children all own guns and hold concealed carry permits. My youngest is the only one who ever pointed a gun at a man and that was because the man was shooting at him. Shit like that happens in Iraq.
I'm damned glad he had had my training and was comfortable around firearms. It may have saved his life and the lives of his brothers in arms.
 
Unfrikking believeable.

I would guess that a Teacher and School Administrator were Liberal Gun Grabbers and still butthurt over the Gungrabber bills losing in the Senate so they took their anger out on this young man.

8th grader gun T-shirt arrest: Arrest for NRA t-shirt has a father outraged - Jacksonville Top News | Examiner.com

New details on the 8th grader gun T-shirt arrest story have came in. Jared Marcum, an eighth grade student who attends Logan Middle School in West Virginia, has been arrested because he wore an NRA T-shirt. On April 19, Yahoo! revealed that the boy was suspended and is now facing charges for wearing the shirt to school which contained an image of a gun printed on it with the words "Protect Your Right."

After getting in a dispute with a teacher at the school, Marcum was arrested. He was shocked when he was arrested and he told WBOY that he didn't think there would be an issue.

“"I never thought it would go this far because honestly I don't see a problem with this. There shouldn't be a problem with this," Marcum said.

Jared's father Allen Lardieri is outraged at his 8th grade son's gun T-shirt arrest arrest and he told the local media,

“"I don't' see how anybody would have an issue with a hunting rifle and NRA put on a t-shirt, especially when policy doesn't forbid it," Lardieri said.

According to Logan Middle School, there policy regarding dress is as follows:

“"A student will not dress or groom in a manner that disrupts the educational process or is detrimental to the health, safety or welfare of others. A student will not dress in a manner that is distractive or indecent, to the extent that it interferes with the teaching and learning process, including wearing any apparel that displays or promotes any drug-, alcohol- or tobacco-related product that is prohibited in school buildings, on school grounds, in school-leased or owned vehicles, and at all school-affiliated functions."

The boy's father, Allen Lardieri, doesn't believe that the shirt violates the policy. He later said,

“"I will go to the ends of the earth, I will call people, I will write letters, I will do everything in the legal realm to make sure this does not happen again."

Jared Marcum was released, however the student is facing charges which include obstruction and disturbing the education process.

I wonder if the school allows those pro-gay T-Shirts?


Now that's odd given that it's deep in the "Clinging to their Guns" heart o' West Virginia but then maybe the article is playing down this:

""...After getting in a dispute with a teacher at the school, Marcum was arrested. He was shocked when he was arrested and he told WBOY that he didn't think there would be an issue."""

I wonder if someone else might have described it as a "confrontation"?


faggott liberals are in every state and like to impose their values on other people...this teacher needs to play water sports with his/her gay friends.
 

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