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Re:Evil Teddy Bears - 06/02/2007 Actually, this is one of the rare cases where I'm glad to see the ACLU step up. Freedom of Speech does not mean "Freedom to say what I think you should say". Although it's largely coming out to be that way. That's the one reason I won't buy any music from Walmart. I'm more than capable of minding my own morality, thank you very much...
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Re:Evil Teddy Bears - 06/01/2007 antryg wrote:
"School officials need to know you've learned a lesson," Barker said.

For real? The lesson they learned was: making tasteless vulgar obscene movies is a constitutional right so get the ACLU to sue the school system for you. Yes, those young bucks sure learned a valuable lesson they won't soon forget. Talk about a plan backfiring...

I wonder if they ever actually apologized.

Yee haw and pass the apple pie.
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Evil Teddy Bears - 12/24/2006 KNIGHTSTOWN, Ind. (AP) - Making a movie in which evil teddy bears attack a teacher got two budding filmmakers expelled from their high school, but a federal judge says it was the school that was wrong.

However, the judge said the boys should apologize.

Cody Overbay and Isaac Imel, both sophomores, must be allowed to return to Knightstown High School for the second semester, U.S. District Judge Sarah Evans Barker said Friday in Indianapolis in granting a preliminary injunction. She also ordered the school to allow the students to make up any work they had missed since their expulsions in October.

The boys worked on the movie "The Teddy Bear Master" from fall 2005 through summer 2006. It depicts a "teddy bear master" ordering stuffed animals to kill a teacher who had embarrassed him, but students battle the toy beasts, according to documents filed in court.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana sued on behalf of the two teenagers last month arguing that school officials overreacted to a film parody and violated their First Amendment rights.

"I had a feeling we'd come out the winner," Imel said.

Attorneys for the school district did not say if they would appeal.

School officials had argued that the film was disruptive and that a teacher whose name was used in the movie found it threatening. Prosecutors reviewed the movie but declined to press charges.

State law allows expulsion for activity unconnected with school if the activity is unlawful and interferes with school operations.

The judge said the movie was "vulgar,""tasteless,""humiliating" and "obscene," but ruled that school officials did not prove it disrupted school.

The judge said she did not believe it was a coincidence that the teacher in the movie had the same name as a math teacher at Knightstown Intermediate School. She urged the teens to apologize to the teacher and the school administration.

"School officials need to know you've learned a lesson," Barker said.
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