Legal Issues Facing Students and Educators

Matt Wood Matt Wood

“Let’s Go Brandon” in the Classroom: When Political Speech Crosses the Line

When a Michigan middle school banned students from wearing “Let’s Go Brandon” shirts, the dispute quickly turned into a First Amendment test case.


For Tennessee educators, the message is clear: political speech is protected — profanity is not.
This new decision gives schools a defensible line to follow when student slogans blur the boundary between expression and civility.

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Matt Wood Matt Wood

Student Speech and Body Art: Tattoos in Public Schools

Tattoos are protected symbolic speech under the First Amendment, meaning Tennessee schools cannot impose blanket bans. Any restriction must be narrowly tailored and tied to actual disruption or harm. Courts allow limits on vulgar or obscene tattoos, but the proper step is usually requiring coverage, not removal or suspension. Vague policies—like bans on “gang-related” or “offensive” tattoos—risk being struck down. For schools, the key is clarity, documentation, and using the least restrictive measures. Clear, narrow policies protect learning environments while respecting students’ constitutional rights.

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