The first amendment of the citizen gives the citizen five main freedoms. Freedom of speech is one of the rights. If people do not have freedom of speech, there is no way to express themselves and there is no way to show personality during faith. This amendment became a problem in the lawsuit in the Supreme Court of Tinker v. Des Moines District School District in December 1969. In Tinker versus Des Moines, five students were suspended from wearing government cuffs to protest government policies in Vietnam.
When you are wearing a school, the right for students to express freedom is limited. Article 1 of the amendment prohibits the enactment of laws against the freedom of the people. The US Supreme Court of Tinker vs. Des Moines Independent Community School District said, "It is hard to say that students or teachers are free from freedom of speech from constitutional rights or expressions at school gates" (procon.org ). 90% of the students said they did not want to wear uniforms. Robin Silverman, a child and adolescent development expert, told the NBC News. Today, students, especially girls, tend to compare each other's uniforms. Students do not like to wear the same things everyday. Ordinary students change from day to day, grow, and wear the same, so they will make them think that every life must provide the same every day (unr.edu)
Tinker vs. Des Moines Independent Community School District, 393 US 503 (1969) is a landmark decision of the US Supreme Court to determine the constitutional rights of students of public schools in the United States. The court today also uses the Tinker test to determine whether school disciplinary action violates student First Amendment rights. John F. Tinker (15 years old) living in Des Moines, Iowa, his brothers and sisters, Mary Vestinker (13 years old), Hope Tinker (11 years old), Paul Tinker (8 years old), their friends Christopher Eckhart (16) protested the Vietnam War and decided to wear a black armband on their schools (John and Christopher's High School, Mary Bess's Junior High School, Hope and Paul's Primary School) to support the Christmas Armistice Did. Senator Robert Kennedy