Court sides with school that sent 7th grader home over ‘There Are Only Two Genders’ T-shirt

Left: Liam Morrison is pictured (screengrab via Alliance Defending Freedom); Right: a shirt like the one Morrison wore to school is shown. (Screengrab via CBS news).

A federal appeals court sided with a middle school that repeatedly sent a student home for wearing a shirt that was demeaning to students of some gender identities.

Liam Morrison, a 12-year-old student in Middleborough, Massachusetts, wore a T-shirt reading “There Are Only Two Genders” to seventh grade after his school held a Pride day and hung Pride flags in classrooms. School officials sent Morrison home on the grounds that his shirt targeted nonbinary students.

The following week, two people stood near the school’s bus drop-off area holding signs that read, “there are only two genders” and “keep woke politics out our schools.” Counterprotesters responded the next day with their own signs that read, “trans people belong,” “everyone is welcome here,” and “we support trans rights.”

The incidents drew the attention of local news media and the school reported receiving complaints from many parents about Morrison’s shirt and the controversy surrounding it.

Days later, Morrison returned to school wearing the same shirt, this time with the word “CENSORED” taped over the words “Only Two.” Morrison was again sent home from school.

Morrison, represented by conservative advocacy group Alliance Defending Freedom, sued and argued that school administrators at Nichols Middle School violated his First Amendment rights by refusing to allow him to wear the T-shirt.

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Additionally, the district noted that the school’s decision barring Morrison from wearing the taped shirt was made in a response to its forecast of disruption that would interfere with the rights of other students and with important considerations about the safety of its students.

Morrison appealed and during oral arguments, Deborah Ecker, the attorney representing Middleborough Public Schools, said that the school received several complaints about Morrison’s T-shirt, and that the message on the shirt would cause significant harm to students in the school who identify as transgender or nonbinary.

“It says to someone who is nonbinary that you do not exist, that your validity does not exist. And it attacks the very core characteristic,” Ecker told the court.

Morrison’s attorneys, on the other hand, argued that wearing a T-shirt was “the most passive way” to share his views on the same subject covered during Pride day. Morrison has also shared his views on other political topics via clothing since the “two genders” shirt incident, including T-shirts with messages such as “Don’t Tread on Me” and “First Amendment Rights.” He faced no disciplinary consequences for those clothing choices.

The school’s dress code required that, “Clothing must not state, imply, or depict hate speech or imagery that target[s] groups based on race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, religious affiliation, or any other classification.” It also indicated that any apparel determined by the administration to be “unacceptable to [its] community standards” would not be allowed.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit upheld that ruling Sunday and sided again with the district. Chief U.S. Circuit Judge David J. Barron wrote for the panel which included fellow Barack Obama appointee U.S. Circuit Judge O. Rogeriee Thompson, and Joe Biden appointee U.S. Circuit Judge Lara Montecalvo.

Barron said that while it has held that Tinker’s rights-of-others limitation applies to cases of bullying, when there is “no physical invasion of any kind,” and the expression at hand is “passive and silent,” the law has “some uncertainty.”

The chief judge wrote:

In short, L.M. is right that Tinker establishes that public schools cannot “confine[]” students “to the expression of those sentiments that are officially approved,” as “school officials cannot suppress ‘expressions of feelings with which they do not wish to contend.'”

In a footnote, Barron noted that even Morrison’s lawyers acknowledged that some messaging could be too offensive on T-shirts to be allowed at school, citing an example of a hypothetical T-shit that used a derogatory term for someone with learning disabilities.

“We do not use that language lightly, but the example clarifies that all parties agree that there are messages so overtly and highly demeaning of a personal characteristic that, if displayed on a shirt, can be restricted by a school based solely on its words, even if no specific students are targeted,” the judge wrote.

Barron said that while “in many realms of public life one must bear the risk of being subjected to messages that are demeaning of race, sex, religion, or sexual orientation,” that under the law, schools are not required to be unregulated. The court said that it agrees with the school that Morrison’s “two genders” message would be “no less likely to ‘strike a person at the core of his being’ than it would if it demeaned the religion, race, sex, or sexual orientation of other students.”

The court said that there was no reason to think the school acted unreasonably in concluding that the message on the shirt was demeaning to transgender and gender-nonconforming students, particularly in a middle school setting. It also said that the school had not been “acting on abstract concerns,” but rather, “knew the serious nature of the struggles, including suicidal ideation, that some of those students had experienced related to their treatment based on their gender identities by other students, and the effect those struggles could have on those students’ ability to learn.”

Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel and Vice President of U.S. Litigation David Cortman denounced the First Circuit’s ruling in a statement Monday and said the organization is currently considering whether to appeal.

“Students don’t lose their free speech rights the moment they walk into a school building,” said Cortman. “This case isn’t about T-shirts; it’s about a public school telling a middle-schooler that he isn’t allowed to express a view that differs from their own.”

Cortman further said said that the school “actively promotes its view about gender through posters and ‘Pride’ events, and it encourages students to wear clothing with messages on the same topic—so long as that clothing expresses the school’s preferred views on the subject.”

“Our legal system is built on the truth that the government cannot silence any speaker just because it disapproves of what they say,” Cortman concluded.

Counsel for the school district did not immediately respond to request for comment.

You can read the court’s full ruling here.

Editor’s note: This piece was updated to include comment from counsel.