I was under the impression you meant school bus, but in any case, this is not how it works.
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Originally posted by Retro
His work was entirely separate from his representation of the school and his standing as a student.
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And? If I strip out of my uniform and use an alias while I cause a public disturbance or do something controversial online. I'm not suddenly exempt from accountability because I didn't intend to be identified.
Quote:
Originally posted by Retro
There is no justification for this discipline. What he did is made public by the private entity that produced the material, yes, but nobody is forced to see what he did and Sean Cody is hardly an enterprise that is advertised on the street or in most public institutions.
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It doesn't have to be advertised on the street or in public, the fact that anyone and everyone can see it is the problem. If I set up a hateful website, and I am exposed, I don't need to be advertising my website in public, to face consequences. Even though it's legal, and nobody is forced to look at it. anybody and everybody can see it, and it can damage the schools reputation being associated with a racist/sexist etc. Although what you're saying is coming from a good place, it's not exactly realistic now, is it?
