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Ninth Circuit Upholds Expulsions for Off-Campus Abusive Speech That Targets Particular Students
“Students ... remain free to express offensive and other unpopular viewpoints [at least outside school], but that does not include a license to disseminate severely harassing invective targeted at particular classmates in a manner that is readily and foreseeably transmissible to those students.”
From Chen v Albany Unified School Dist., decided today by the Ninth Circuit, in an opinion by Judge Daniel Collins, joined by Judge Ronald Gould and District Judge Roslyn Silver; the opinion is long, so I'll try to excerpt it briefly here, but you can read the whole thing for yourselves (I'll also put up a separate post shortly about Judge Gould's concurring opinion):
This case concerns a public high school's ability under the First Amendment to discipline students for assertedly "private" off-campus social media posts that, once they predictably made their way on to campus, amounted to "severe bullying or harassment targeting particular" classmates. Mahanoy Area Sch. Dist. v. B.L. ex rel. Levy (2021). We hold that, under the circumstances of this case, the school properly disciplined two of the involved students for bullying….
In November 2016, at the suggestion of a friend, [plaintiff] Epple created a private Instagram account to share comments "privately with my small group of friends." Unlike Epple's "'main' Instagram account," which he used to "share images that are appropriate for a wide audience," he intended this new account, which operated under the username "yungcavage," to be "a private forum where [he] could share funny memes, images, and comments with [his] close friends that [they] thought were funny, but which other people might not find funny or appropriate." Epple attempted to keep the account "very private," rejecting several requests to follow the account and only approving requests to "follow" the account from "close friends" that he thought he "could trust to keep the material private." Over the ensuing months, Epple only allowed about "13 people to follow the account," including [plaintiff] Chen. He "never intended any person outside [his] close group of friends to see the images [he] posted to the account." Chen "followed" the account using the Instagram username "kkkevinkkkkk." Chen likewise understood that Epple's second Instagram account was to "be a private forum (by invite only), exclusive to [their] friends, and a place where [they] could share sarcasm, jokes, funny images, and other banter privately." Not all of the persons who eventually followed the account knew who the owner of the account was.
Between November 2016 and March 2017, Epple used the account to make a number of cruelly insulting posts about various AHS students. These ranged from immature posts making fun of a student's braces, glasses, or weight to much more disturbing posts that targeted vicious invective with racist and violent themes against specific Black classmates. For example, in early February 2017, Epple uploaded a photograph in which a Black member of the AHS girls' basketball team was standing next to the team coach, who was also Black, and Epple drew nooses around both their necks and added the caption "twinning is winning." In another post, he combined (1) a screen shot of a particular Black student's Instagram post in which she stated "I wanna go back to the old way" with (2) the statement "Do you really tho?", accompanied by a historical drawing that appears to depict a slave master paddling a naked Black man who is strung up by rope around his hands. On February 11, 2017, he posted a screenshot of texts in which he and a Black classmate were arguing, and he added the caption "Holy shit I'm on the edge of bringing my rope to school on Monday." Other posts, although not referencing specific students, contained images either depicting, or making light of, Ku Klux Klan violence against Black people. One post included what appears to be a historical photograph of a lynched man still hanging from a tree; another depicts a Klan member in a white hood; and a third combines the caption "Ku klux starter pack" with pictures of a noose, a white hood, a burning torch, and a Black doll.
Epple also created several posts that, while omitting references to violence, still aimed highly offensive racist insults at identifiable Black classmates. In one, he uploaded an image of a Black student sitting in class that was captioned with the statement "The gorilla exhibit is nice today." In another post, Epple included side-by-side images of one of his Black classmates and a gorilla. Chen added a comment on that post stating, "Its too good," but one of the private account's other followers responded with a series of comments saying: "Hey not funny," "Fuck you," and "Delete this." Chen then responded to these comments with a further comment stating, "no fuck YOU you dirty zookeeping son of a bitch." Two of Epple's other posts feature the back of the head of two different Black students while each was sitting in class, with the first including his comment "Fucking nappy ass piece of shit" and the second saying "Fuck you." After a Black classmate asked to join the account, Epple made a post asking his followers, "Who the fuck is this nigger." Chen responded by "liking" that post.
In addition to the comments mentioned earlier, Chen contributed to the Instagram account on several other occasions. For example, he took a picture of a Black student during class, without her permission, and sent it by Snapchat with the caption, "She's eating a fucking carrot"; Epple then posted that captioned picture to the Instagram account. In comments on another post, Chen called a non-Black student who followed the account a "nigger" after the student guessed (incorrectly) that Chen was the owner of the account.
Although the "yungcavage" account was intended to be private, knowledge of its contents eventually spread to the school….
Chen and Epple were expelled, and the Ninth Circuit held the expulsions didn't violate the First Amendment under Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. School Dist. (1969); the court noted that public K-12 schools may punish student for speech (even when that speech couldn't be criminally punished by the government acting as sovereign, and went on to say:
[W]e readily conclude that the First Amendment would not prevent a school from punishing the sort of speech at issue here had it "occur[red] under [the school's] supervision." The posts in the yungcavage account include vicious invective that was targeted at specific individuals and that employed deeply offensive and insulting words and images that, as used here, contribute nothing to the "marketplace of ideas." Moreover, some of the posts used violent imagery that, even if subjectively intended only as immature attempts at malign comedy, would reasonably be viewed as alarming, both to the students targeted in such violently-themed posts and to the school community more generally. In particular, combining photographs of specific students with images drawing upon the horrific legacy of terroristic violence executed by the Klan against Black people would understandably be deeply upsetting and intimidating to the targeted students.
Had these posts been printed on flyers that were distributed furtively by students on school grounds but then discovered by school authorities, the "collision with the rights of [the targeted] students to be secure and to be let alone" would be obvious. As we explained in C.R., severe targeted harassment of fellow students based on their physical characteristics—there, sexual harassment that "positions the target as a sexual object" and here, racial harassment that vilifies people based on their race—threatens the targeted students' "sense of physical, as well as emotional and psychological, security." See also Monteiro v. Tempe Union High Sch. Dist. (9th Cir. 1998) ("[R]acist attacks need not be directed at the complainant in order to create a hostile educational environment."). And the likelihood of "substantial disruption of or material interference with school activities" from such malicious abuse aimed at particular students is equally obvious and, as we explain below, amply demonstrated in the record here. Even assuming arguendo that the posts at issue did not amount to unprotected true threats or fighting words, nothing in the First Amendment would even remotely require schools to tolerate such behavior or speech that occurs under its auspices.…
The central question here is instead whether the assertedly off-campus nature of the speech places it outside of the school's authority to regulate or to discipline…. Although the Supreme Court in Mahanoy declined to articulate "a broad, highly general First Amendment rule stating just what counts as 'off campus' speech" or identifying when "a school's special need[s]" as recognized in Tinker might justify regulating such speech, our caselaw has set forth additional standards that address that issue. Prior to Mahanoy, we devised a three-factor test for "determin[ing], based on the totality of the circumstances, whether [off-campus] speech bears a sufficient nexus to the school" to allow regulation by a school district. "This test is flexible and fact-specific, but the relevant considerations will include (1) the degree and likelihood of harm to the school caused or augured by the speech, (2) whether it was reasonably foreseeable that the speech would reach and impact the school, and (3) the relation between the content and context of the speech and the school." …
The Supreme Court's analysis of the school's ability to regulate B.L.'s speech in Mahanoy considered many of the same factors, including whether "'substantial disruption' of a school activity or a threatened harm to the rights of others" had been shown; the fact that B.L.'s speech, when posted, "might well be transmitted to other students, team members, coaches, and faculty"; and the "message" communicated by the post and whether it implicated matters of legitimate concern to the school's special interests or more conventionally protected content. Moreover, the additional specific considerations that the Court identified—whether the school can be said to be acting in loco parentis in regulating the speech; whether off-campus regulation threatens a student's ability to engage in certain speech "at all"; and whether the speech implicates interests in protecting unpopular ideas—all fit comfortably within the three-factor framework we articulated in McNeil, particularly McNeil's third factor. Properly applied, our sufficient-nexus test avoids the concerns that the Court identified about school regulation of off-campus speech…. [And] we think it is clear that Epple's speech bore a sufficient nexus to AHS to warrant disciplinary action by the school….
Epple contends that the students' reactions to the speech cannot be given controlling weight, because those reactions were occasioned by the offensive content of the speech and therefore raise the specter of a "heckler's veto." He argues that "even the most racist expressive conduct such as promoting the swastika as part of a Nazi party rally is entitled to government protection" and that Mahanoy underscores the school's obligation to defend "unpopular expression." These arguments are unavailing on the facts of this case. For two reasons, "the relation between the content and context of the speech and the school" here does not present the danger of censorship and instead weighs heavily in favor of upholding the school's assertion of disciplinary authority.
First, once Epple's posts hit their targets, the school was confronted with a situation in which a number of its students thereby became the subjects of "serious or severe bullying or harassment targeting particular individuals"—which Mahanoy specifically identifies as an "off-campus circumstance[]" in which "[t]he school's regulatory interests remain significant." … Although Epple may be correct that his parents have the primary responsibility for policing his off-campus use of social media, the school's authority and responsibility to act in loco parentis also includes the role of protecting other students from being maltreated by their classmates. Epple's conduct here strongly implicated that "significant" interest of the school….
Second, Epple's posts do not stand on the same footing as his example of the "racist expressive conduct" of those who use "the swastika as part of a Nazi party rally." For one thing, Epple never contended in the proceedings below that, like swastika-waving Nazis, he was actually espousing and communicating the view that Black people are supposedly inferior. Although his summary judgment motion described the images as "politically charged" and as "seemingly advocat[ing] for a particular political ideology through the use of satire," Epple's declaration in support of that motion explained his posts as simply "juvenile and offensive" attempts at "humor" that were posted "with the sole intention of entertaining my friends." As a result, his claim that the school was somehow censoring the promotion of a disfavored ideological message rings hollow.
Moreover, given the extraordinary nature of the abuse Epple targeted at specific classmates, his discipline does not raise the specter of punishment based on a "mere desire to avoid the discomfort and unpleasantness that always accompany an unpopular viewpoint." On the contrary, even assuming arguendo that Epple's posts did not amount to "fighting words" or true threats, they were enough of a near-miss that, in the context of minors in a secondary school environment, they are nonetheless fairly viewed as "a particularly intolerable (and socially unnecessary) mode of expressing whatever idea the speaker wishes to convey." Students such as Epple remain free to express offensive and other unpopular viewpoints, but that does not include a license to disseminate severely harassing invective targeted at particular classmates in a manner that is readily and foreseeably transmissible to those students.
Epple again emphasizes that he did not ever intend for the targets of his posts to ever see them. But having constructed, so to speak, a ticking bomb of vicious targeted abuse that could be readily detonated by anyone following the account, Epple can hardly be surprised that his school did not look the other way when that shrapnel began to hit its targets at the school. And, as we have explained, recognizing an authority in school administrators to respond to the sort of harassment at issue here presents no risk that they will thereby be able to "punish[] students engaged in protected political speech in the comfort of their own homes." Epple's actions had a sufficient nexus to AHS, and his discipline fits comfortably within Tinker's framework and does not threaten the "marketplace of ideas" at AHS.
Congratulations to Seth L. Gordon, Katherine A. Alberts, and Louis A. Leone, of Leone Alberts & Duus APC, who represented the school defendants.
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Another damn three-factor flexible fact-intensive test that lets the 9th Circuit come to the decision it wants.
I don't have any sympathy for the assholes getting expelled, just with anyone looking for objective jurisprudence coming out of 9CA.
Note the weaselly way the word "targeted" is used. This was a private forum limited to a very few people. Specific students were made fun of, some with nasty racist rhetoric. But the persons making the statements in no way directed their statements to these students.
Imagine before the internet, off-campus, one student tells a small group of students a racist joke about a black student, who is not there. Does the school have authority to expel him, merely because one of the listeners could repeat it?
“Nasty racist rhetoric” and “jokes in private” is a bit of a weaselly description of what the plaintiffs were doing. They were uploading images of students and drawing nooses on them, or placing their images next to lynching and slave violence.
And indeed, the court makes the correct analog analogy: “Had these posts been printed on flyers that were distributed furtively by students on school grounds but then discovered by school authorities, the “collision with the rights of [the targeted] students to be secure and to be let alone” would be obvious.”
But that is NOT what happened. They distributed them in a private social media group. From which they could get out, and apparently did.
“ They distributed them in a private social media group.”
Just like if you distribute a flyer with student pictures on it among a group it won’t stay in the group for long. And like the court said this wasn’t racist rhetoric it was combining student images with violent imagery!
Except for being different, it's exactly the same.
Although the "yungcavage" account was intended to be private, knowledge of its contents eventually spread to the school….
What a surprise!!
"Two people can keep a secret, if one of them is dead." - variously attributed.
So the school can control students' speech anywhere, because someone might repeat it at school? Sounds like a stretch.
No. But it can discipline the students under the unique facts of this case.
Under the "unique facts of the case"--hmm, what if a gay student overhears a kid blaring DMX's "Where the hood at"? Or what if a kid blares Ice Cube's "Cave Bitch"? What if a white kid doesn't like the "white privilege" crap?
I will say this.
Whatever the legalities, I don't think expulsion is necessarily the best course of action here. I would prefer that the perpetrators be required to educate themselves about the history of racism, about the realities of slavery, Jim Crow, and the over all (mis)treatment of African-Americans for most of our history.
Of course, it's possible that these kids are just racist assholes, and that wouldn't help, but my first guess is that they are stupid, ignorant, and insensitive assholes instead, which might be curable.
It seems like these students understood the violent nature of slavery and Jim Crow all too well. They weren’t ignorant of it, they embraced it.
I don't think mandatory reeducation is a proper function of government.
I agree.
But then, neither is education.
Enjoying life at the disaffected, inconsequential, education-disdaining fringe of modern American life, Mr. Grinberg?
Beyond the occasional militia meetings, Proud Boys marches, and Trump rallies, yours must be a bleak existence.
What about education?
Should the public schools teach history?
I mean, let's make some distinctions here instead of throwing out scare words. I'm not suggesting they be sent off to camps to learn about the glories of Marxism. I'm suggesting they be given some reading to do on the history of racism in the US.
I'm aware that the right generally doesn't like this stuff publicized, but that doesn't make it a bad idea.
bernard,
what you suggest is the equivalent of the Mother Superior telling the students that they should say five "Our Fathers" and three "Hail Marys."
It won't prevent future sin.
In general, school administrators love to, "resolve," bullying issues by treating them as teaching opportunities, quite often involving mandatory participation of the bullies and the person or people targeted. What that does to the targets can horrifically compound the damage already experienced.
Children targeted for severe bullying are typically socially isolated anyway. With one exception, anything from the school authorities except severe, one-sided punishment for the bullies gets experienced by bullying targets as confirmation that authorities will treat leniently and even protect people who victimize them.
There is little you can imagine more likely to inflict life-long psychological damage on an insecure child than that experience. It can predispose the victim to suicide forever after.
The exception, which I would endorse in instances where it might have a chance to succeed, is martial arts training. School authorities ought to pay for years-long private martial arts training for bullying victims. The course should include extensive emphasis on need for self-restraint for anyone so powerful.
After the erstwhile target gains power to defend himself, school authorities should turn an indulgent eye on any justified self-defense violence which ensues. That way the victim can heal better than by any other method available. It is a method to substitute independence and empowerment for open-ended dependence and existentially threatening insecurity.
If school authorities will not do that, parents of bullying victims must urgently pay for it themselves. And then be prepared to attack legally any attempt by the school to punish their child for any justified self-defensive violence short of use of deadly force with a weapon.
No, it can't. You're being utterly hysterical, as usual. Virtually every kid gets bullied at one time or another. It's a normal part of life, and does not result in "life long psychological damage."
Nieporent, you literally have no idea what you are talking about. You apparently think customary adolescent status jockeying is the same kind of bullying that you saw detailed in the OP. They are not the same phenomenon, and their consequences will be compared only by people as heedless as you seem to be.
I didn't see any bullying detailed in the OP. Again: they were trying not to have the 'targets' find out about it.
Under the standard articulated and applied, as outlined by the OP, no.
That was easy.
I think this is a hard case. The Supreme Court, in a series of late 20th century cases, tempered Tinker with a series of pro-school decisions that make it fairly clear that First Anendment rights of minors in schools are less than the general public, and schools have fairly broad leeway to punish distuptive speech directed at specific individuals.
Nonetheless, the implications of this case are very troubling. Could a student really be expelled if the contents of a private diary intended for no-one else’s view happen to be snooped on by someone unauthorized and become known to others at the school?
It seems to me that who’s fault it was that the matter became known is relevant.
The case seems reminiscent of the 4th Circuit’s mid-70’s Lovisi v. Slayton decision upholding a sodomy conviction (and 2-year prison sentence) of a married couple for sodomy upon each other after their children found photographs they took and circulated them in school. While married couples have a right of privacy, the 4th Circuit held, once their conduct is no longer private, it becomes fair game for the state to punish it.
But this wasn't a private diary intended for no-one else’s view; it was a group project intended for about a dozen people's view. I think that's a pretty categorical difference. (Not saying it's the right decision necessarily; just saying that it's a different fact pattern.)
A better analog would be a regular old letter.
The "furtive fliers" are also a bad analogy, because fliers are intended to be seen by many, even if the authorship is secret.
I understand why the court did not directly address the issue, but both the nature of the depictions and the fact they targeted specific students makes a good case they would be unprotected intimidation outside the K-12 environment.
As a matter of 1A law, I'm not sure what "intimidation" is. I know what harassment is, and I know what true threats are. And this wouldn't have been either, outside the K-12 environment.
From Virginia v. Black:
Some of the imagery in this case might meet that standard.
As I said: I know what a true threat is. And nothing here is remotely a true threat. It wasn't even communicated to the allegedly threatened!
It was communicated, to the actually threatened.
The passive voice can work wonders to get responsibility out of the picture. Or it can even be used to insist on responsibility if you want it to.
Your response is pedantically correct but of course actually undermines your position. It wasn’t communicated to the allegedly threatened by the people supposedly doing the intimidating.
In other words, changing it from the passive to the active voice would just serve to make clear that there wasn’t any responsibility for any intimidation by the people who were punished for the intimidation. They might have been immature, bigots, and asshats, but their intent was never for their 'targets' to even find out about it.
As Eugene detailed, SCOTUS punted in Elonis v. US on whether intent is required for a true threat, or whether negligence suffices. To be sure, the negligence in this case must also include ignoring the likelihood of the posts being made public. But, it's a plausible argument.
Says Nieporent doing a mind-reading act, founded on his deep psychological affinity for gangs of bigoted idiots?
Give it up Nieporent. You are utterly clueless about the phenomenon you are trying to discuss.
I was previously as ignorant as you are; I said similar things, and for the same reasons—apparently, neither one of us experienced damaging bullying personally. In my case, I learned right when I needed to that I had capacity to protect myself. Probably the same applies to you. Why wouldn't it? That is the usual course of adolescent development.
My misplaced self-confidence later got turned around by prolonged first-hand experience with a much more dangerous class of threat. I am not going to discuss that in detail. I can tell you how to find out about it for yourself. Find a special school for Aspergers kids, and ask administrators to give you anonymized general descriptions of experiences which brought their students to them.
The decision may be supportable. But re: "constructed, so to speak, a ticking bomb of vicious targeted abuse" -- such rhetoric dishonestly blurs the distinction between speech and physical violence, when in practice the distinction stays real. Courts should be able to write convincing opinions without resorting to such dubious tactics.
questioner7, do you enjoy pretending deliberately inflicted psychological harm is negligibly damaging? Or do you simply not know what you are talking about?
Your right to run your mouth ends where the other man's psyche begins? Sounds like an exception that swallows the first amendment.
TwelveInch — No more than does the fighting words exception swallow the 1A. Your objection tacitly assumes, mistakenly, that psychological violence—no matter how damaging or long-lasting—should be ignored as a lesser problem than physical violence, no matter how trivial.
All you have shown is that you misunderstand bullying, how it works, and what harm it inflicts. That puts you in plentiful company. Most folks who experienced the customary social jostling of adolescence assume they have been bullied at times, risen above it, and understand the problem. They think that is what everyone experiences, and that is how everyone should react.
As the OP shows, there exists an entirely different kind of social violence—a far more dangerous kind. To conflate that with your more-typical experience is dangerous. It not infrequently turns out to be a deadly danger, either for the targeted victims, for their tormenters, or for innocent bystanders.
Sorry you can't have the bright line you apparently want. But to draw that line where you would put it condemns to wretched victimhood literally millions of innocent targets.
So back in the day, Congress and states outlawed tit for tat harrassment in schools and the workplace. Then severe harrassment that affected the work environment or learning.
And that morphed into a histrionics industry and “micro” aggressions, the opposite of these deep, profound effects. Full professors, heads of departments discussed how they felt light headed and about to faint when, for example, another head threw down the gauntlet and questioned why there were no top female scientists.
Accurate or not is not the point. For government action, things must be severe. So that calls into existence descriptions that are severe.
Based on that, I have no desire for another area. This should not be yet another growth industry for the “one third” suers. Isn’t disability for stress or lower back pain enough? Where does it stop?
Before it destroys the First Amendment is where. The insidious claim “severe only!”, and within a few years it’s anything but.
There is no such thing as "psychological violence."
All you have shown is that you misunderstand bullying, how it works, and what harm it inflicts. Everyone has experienced bullying, but a few people overreact to it on the grounds that they have been so pampered that they think they should never experience any adversity in life.
It incredibly incredibly infrequently, to the point of it being infinitesimal, turns out to be a deadly danger.
'Everyone has experienced bullying, but a few people overreact to it on the grounds that they have been so pampered that they think they should never experience any adversity in life.'
Apparently you can 'overreact' to bullying and it's your own fault? People have been driven to suicide by bullying, people have been left with permanent psychological scars, it's weird to see it being dismissed and downplayed in this day and age.
Nieporent has no notion what happens to gay kids in certain schools, or how a certain subset of Aspergers kids get treated almost everywhere. This nation is replete with special schools, paid for by local school districts, which took on that obligation to rid themselves of a duty to defend bullying targets effectively. Sometimes the school administrators who made those decisions did so out their own personal Nieporent-like prejudice against bullying victims. Nearly every kid in those schools has a personal story so horrifying it would convert even Nieporent, if he ever heard them.
Whose else's fault could it be if you overreact to something? It's essentially tautological that it's your fault if you do.
As for this day and age, you mean the age of the snowflake?
Let’s see if I understand your position. A makes vile statements to B about C. B tells D about said comments. D tells C that an unknown party has made vile comments about him. A has now caused C psychological harm.
Is that correct?
Jmaie, you do not understand my position. My position includes the notion that facts of cases must inform responses.
Yup, no generally applicable rules, just make up a answer based on how you feel about the parties at the bar.
"deliberately inflicted psychological harm"?
For the record, I think this decision is right because of how out of control the behavior got and how reasonably foreseeable it was that this information would spread, but...
If I talk to somebody about what an idiot I think you are, and mock you... I am not deliberately inflicting psychological harm.
Of course you are. Why else would you do that if not to hurt the person emotionally, if not psychologically? There’s no other reason, even if you think the person needs to be taken down a peg or two, or to have some home truths laid on them, you’re still trying to damage them. If you pick on someone vulnerable and do it often enough, and encourage others to do it, you’re basically making their life hell, deliberately.
Edit - oops - misread that as you saying it to their face, sorry. Backbiting is about inflicting a whole different type of damage.
how out of control the behavior got and how reasonably foreseeable it was that this information would spread,
Exactly.
Having government police speech is a much greater evil than the speech itself.
Right. As Mark Steyn put it: "The cure is worse than the disease."
I don't think Mark Steyn invented that phrase.
No, it was Dave Barry.
Bong HiTs 4 Racists?
Did expelling the students solve the problem or only turn it into somebody else's problem? Former students have as much ability as current students to say bad things outside of school.
John F. Carr — It solves the most important part of the problem. After expulsion, victims cannot reasonably conclude the school system itself, including its administrators, deliberately shelter and protect perpetrators.
That is a great step forward. It inculcates belief that society has a tolerable place to offer them, who as bullying victims may have seen only evidence to the contrary.
Neglect to mete out severe punishment to conduct like that described in the OP will be taken as additional evidence to the contrary. Years-long experience like that furnishes cause for suicidal despair.
Expulsion is effectively a life sentence.
” It solves the most important part of the problem.” Only if you assert, that having disproportionate revenge is the most important part of the solution.
curious if this case conflicts with the bong for jesus case ( at the ca9 level ) or the SC decision in the bong for jesus case.
Hmmm. So if a black kid posts an Instagram singing along to "Where the hood at", he gets expelled? A white kid? What if a black kid asks why only one ethnically European person has ever run the 100 meters in less than 10 seconds?