Welcome to the new high-school activism: One side chants, the other gets punished
Source: Blaze Media · Bias: Right
Summary
For weeks, students at hundreds of schools across the country have walked out of class to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions. At Rincon High School in Arizona, leaders of the Latino Student Union organized a walkout to oppose the Trump administration’s immigration policies.The next week, some of those same students demanded the removal of a Turning Point USA club from the Tucson Unified campus. Members of the Latino Student Union petitioned the school board to bar the conservative club from meeting on school property, claiming its presence made them feel “unsafe” and accusing it of a “track history of presenting hate and presenting fear.”As American life grows more polarized, young people face mounting pressure to treat opposing speech not as something to answer, but as something to silence.Arizona was not a one-off.Last fall, students at Royal Oak High School in Michigan walked out over the formation of a Turning Point chapter. One protest organizer complained that the club “spreads conservative views ... and those aren’t things that we promote in our school.”That statement tells you plenty. Students increasingly invoke the language of safety and inclusion not to protect their own right to speak, but to suppress the speech of others.Royal Oak Schools says the district aims to provide “an inclusive, diverse, safe, and student-first environment” in which students will be “embraced, accepted, challenged, and prepared.” Yet schools cannot claim to challenge and prepare students while teaching them that disagreement itself amounts to harm.These incidents may still be relatively few, but they point to a broader problem: the spread of speech intolerance from college campuses into K-12 education.A report released in September by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression found alarming attitudes on college campuses. Among roughly 70,000 students surveyed, 34% said violence to stop someone from speaking can be acceptable, while 72% supported shouting down speakers in rare cases.College pathologies do not stay on college campuses for long.Through social media, ethnic-studies curricula, school speech codes, and the influence older students exert on younger ones, the campus habit of treating dissent as danger has moved into elementary and secondary education.The results have already turned ugly.RELATED: How liberals let America’s colleges collapse into illiberalism Spencer Platt/Getty ImagesAfter a walkout at Hayes High School in Ohio in February, one senior said the protest “went as peaceful as it could have gone with the amount of anger that we have.” In reality, an altercation between several protesters and one dissenter ended with three students charged with disorderly conduct. The confrontation appears to have begun when walkout participants repeatedly blew whistles in the student’s face.In Kansas, student counterprotesters from Olathe Northwest High School were attacked while demonstrating across the street from an anti-ICE protest. Their offense? They merely supported the administration and current immigration enforcement.Thankfully, these incidents remain uncommon. But the trend should concern parents, teachers, and communities. As American life grows more polarized, young people face mounting pressure to treat opposing speech not as something to answer, but as something to silence.Whatever one thinks of school walkouts, defenders of these protests usually justify them as exercises in civic engagement and First Amendment expression. Fine. But civic engagement does not mean demanding a microphone for yourself and a muzzle for everyone else.Students need to learn that free speech cuts both ways. They have every right to voice their convictions. They also have a responsibility to defend the rights of people whose views they dislike, distrust, or even find offensive.If they do not learn that lesson now, student activism will become less about persuasion than coercion. And young Americans will be trained not to practice liberty, but to imitate the tyranny they claim to oppose.
Related Coverage
- Signs of Victory: I-95 Welcomes President Donald Trump Int'l Airport (Right — RedState)
- A Vietnam Nurse Who Came Home, Helped Get Us to 250 (Center Right — RealClearPolitics - Homepage)
- Luka Doncic weighs in on new-look Lakers roster amid heavy criticism (Right — New York Post)
- Pay-to-play cycle behind GOP's corporate tax cuts exposed in new report (Far Left — Raw Story)
- Mamdani mocked by GOP for telling New Yorkers to set thermostats to 78 (Center — The Hill News)
- Americans hit the road in record numbers for 4th of July — in spite of high gas prices (Right — New York Post)
- READ IN FULL: Zohran Mamdani’s America 250 address from George Washington’s desk at New York City Hall (Center Right — Washington Examiner)
- Education Departments sues schools for allegedly letting boy dominate girls’ sports (Far Right — BizPac Review)
Daily Analysis
Read the full Parallax Pulse for March 25, 2026 — an AI-powered analysis of how Left and Right media covered the biggest stories this day.
More Headlines From March 25, 2026
- Air Travel Disruption in the Middle East Continues (Center)
- ‘Nobody Wants This’ Season 3 Begins Production In Los Angeles Ahead of 2026 Release: See the Photos From Set! (Right)
- Chicago killing reignites sanctuary city fight as Angel parent heads to Senate hearing (Right)
- Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt Holds a Press Briefing – 1:00pm ET Livestream (Far Right)
- Republican defends congressional airline perks as cost-savings for Americans (Right)








