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The End of Freedom in America?
By John W. Whitehead
April 21, 2008
According to the New Jersey ACLU legal director, Marcus
Borden has fostered a “destructive environment” for
students. What did Borden, a high school football coach in
East Brunswick, N.J., and a recipient of the national
Caring Coach of the Year award, do to create such a
“destructive” environment?
He bowed his head—silently. Sometimes he knelt
down on one knee—silently. Coach Borden
wasn’t attempting to pray with his football players, nor
was he leading them in prayer. He was showing silent
respect for their longstanding pre-game tradition by
bowing his head.
But the forces of political correctness have gotten so
absurd that even the most obscure, non-verbal
expressions are targeted for censorship if religion is
even remotely involved.
Yet as a student athletic trainer who worked with Borden
during his first year as a coach at East Brunswick
remarked, “The tradition of student-initiated prayer
goes back many, many years. I think with all that is wrong
in our schools today, gun violence, bullying, promiscuity,
etc., that the energy being spent on Marcus Borden bowing
his head and taking a knee is a waste. Here is a man
trying to support the youth in his care and be a positive
role model and all these administrative yahoos can worry
about is his presence in a room with his players while
they pray. It is time people stopped obsessing over the
positive messages a coach is trying to send and start
worrying about the real problems in school today.”
Indeed, Borden has been recognized for his efforts to
positively impact young people with the Power of Influence
Award, given only to deserving high school football
coaches for positively impacting their players, schools
and communities.
Our schools are in a deplorable state, and our young
people are surrounded by dangers on all sides—from
premarital sex, school shootings and drug and alcohol
abuse to low literacy standards and a lack of
understanding about the difference between right and
wrong. In light of this, you’d think the schools would
be grateful for a teacher who serves as a positive, moral
role model for young people. But when religion is
involved, even heroes like Borden find themselves under
fire.
Pre-game, student-led prayer has been a regular part of
football for many years. In fact, East Brunswick High’s
practice of player-initiated, pre-game prayer has been in
effect for over 25 years, with more than 2,000 former East
Brunswick football players opting to voluntarily pray
before taking the field on game days. The prayers are a
simple, solemn request for safety and honor on the field:
“Dear Lord, please guide us today in our quest in our
game. Please let us represent our families and our
communities well. Lastly, please guide our players and
opponents so that they can come out of this game
unscathed, no one is hurt.”
But after some parents reportedly complained about a
prayer that was offered at a pre-game pasta dinner, the
practice became a target for official school censure.
Quick to jump on the “thou-shalt-not-offend”
bandwagon, school officials passed a policy in October
2005 prohibiting representatives of the school district
from participating in student-initiated prayer.
But school officials went so far as to order Borden, who
also teaches Spanish, to stand still rather than bending a
knee and silently bowing his head while his players
recited pre-game prayers. The penalty for disobeying was
disciplinary action, including the loss of his job as a
coach and tenured teacher. School officials justified
their actions by insisting that while student athletes
have the constitutionally protected right to pray, that
privilege does not extend to coaches, who are public
employees and whose participation would violate the
so-called “separation of church and state.”
Borden responded by offering his resignation in protest.
But after thinking further about the matter, he changed
his mind and rescinded his resignation so he could
continue coaching. At the same time, believing that he was
taking “a stand for every high school football coach in
America,” Borden also filed a lawsuit asking the courts
to review the school’s prayer policy.
Although school officials in this instance were lacking in
common sense, the federal district court was not. In
siding with Coach Borden, Judge Dennis Cavanaugh ruled
that the school district had violated Borden’s
constitutional rights to free speech, freedom of
association and academic freedom when they prohibited him
from silently bowing his head and “taking a knee” with
his players while they engaged in student-initiated,
student-led, nonsectarian pre-game prayers.
But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
recently overturned Cavanaugh’s decision and ruled that
a football coach may not silently bow his head or “take
a knee” with his team as a gesture of respect for
student-led prayers prior to a game.
Borden’s case is being closely watched by athletic
directors across the country who were instructed to cease
praying with their players. According to Grant Teaff,
executive director of the American Football Coaches
Association, more than 50 percent of high school football
coaches nationwide have engaged in team prayer.
Furthermore, if this ruling is allowed to stand, it could
very well mean that high school teachers across the United
States will have no free speech or academic
freedom rights.
We have become a politically correct society—one that
stands for uniformity, not diversity. If someone might
be offended, freedom of speech is erased.
But if all freedoms hang together, then they will fall
together, too. And if America continues on its present
course, it will mean the end of freedom.
WC: 922
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Constitutional attorney and author John W. Whitehead
is founder and president of The Rutherford
Institute. He can be contacted at johnw@rutherford.org.
Information about The Rutherford Institute is
available at www.rutherford.org
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