The Lockland schools board said that racist demonstrators were on their school grounds, and they had no warnings from police.
Fighting words are not protected speech. The test for whether hate speech is protected or not comes from a 1969 court case, Brandenburg v. Ohio, which stemmed from a Ku Klux Klan rally in Cincinnati.
Lockland School Board requested a police investigation after a neo-Nazi group with swastikas was seen on school grounds as ...
The Lockland School Board says it has video of an Evendale officer leading the U-Haul van of neo-Nazis onto the property of ...
Jackie Congedo, CEO of the Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust and Humanity Center in Cincinnati, told the Cleveland Jewish News ...
Residents burned the remnants of what flags they were able to grab. They not only remained on the overpass until the ...
IN 2008, I DEPLOYED TO AFGHANISTAN for the first time on a Provincial Reconstruction Team. Our group included active-duty ...
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