Oklahoma man allowed to sue local school board members for cutting his mic because he spoke about God: 'Mr. Chaffin was removed because he was predicating his comments on a Biblical worldview'



A state judge in Oklahoma has refused to dismiss a lawsuit which alleges that a local school board turned off a public microphone because a man used "a Biblical worldview" to frame his comments.

Back in April, Brice Chaffin spoke at a public school board meeting in Stillwater, Oklahoma, about 65 miles north of Oklahoma City and the home of Oklahoma State University. Though the board had not planned to discuss rules related to bathroom use at schools, many in the audience, including Chaffin, elected to speak about the topic nonetheless.

Many residents wanted to weigh in on the issue since the board had recently updated its anti-discrimination policy to include "gender identity," which meant that students could use the bathroom which corresponds to their "gender [identities]," rather than their biological sexes.

Chaffin began his comments by arguing for the reality of God and the necessity of accepting Jesus. When board members then asked Chaffin to speak about the bathroom topic at hand, Chaffin hinted at his opposition to "gender identity" as a concept and the related bathroom issue by referencing the Bible.

"So, I talked about physical laws," Chaffin said. "We have spiritual laws. We also have natural laws. Natural law, for instance, one natural law is that on the day God created man, He made him in the likeness of God. He created them male and female. So, we have males and females."

Chaffin then began to quote from the first chapter of the New Testament book Romans, a chapter often cited to denounce homosexuality.

At that point, school board members interjected once again and asked Chaffin to stay on topic. When he continued to read from Romans, the board silenced the microphone, and Chaffin's words became inaudible. Security then removed Chaffin from the meeting.

After the meeting, Chaffin, with the help of attorney Maria Seidler, filed a lawsuit against Stillwater Public Schools, members of the Stillwater school board, and Gay Washington, who was acting superintendent at the time.

Jenni White, president of the group Reclaim Oklahoma Parent Empowerment (ROPE), which is also listed as a plaintiff, issued a statement in support of the suit.

"Any member of the taxpaying community has the right to speak at a school board meeting," White wrote. "If you watch the video, it was clear that Mr. Chaffin was removed because he was predicating his comments on a Biblical worldview. According to the First Amendment our speech is protected from interference by the government and a school board is a governmental entity."

"I'd just like the school boards to uphold the Constitution as they're required to pledge upon taking office. Free speech must include religious speech," White added.

Though the judge dismissed the charges against the school board as a whole, the judge upheld the suit against the district and each individual board member. A pretrial hearing has been scheduled for November. Chaffin and Seidler are not seeking monetary damages from the defendants, but a public apology and remittance for attorney's fees.

State legislators have since changed state law to restrict students to using the bathroom which is in accords with their biological sex.

The entire meeting can be viewed below. Chaffin's speech begins at about 1:04:20.


Oklahoma Republicans Fight Back After Rogue School Board Refuses To Enforce Bathroom Use By Sex

It's an issue that has concerned parents and put the nearly 50,000-person college town of Stillwater at the center of the culture war.

Crime Drama ‘Stillwater’ Explores The West’s Identity Crisis – And The Ties That Promise Hope

'Stillwater' begins as an engaging crime thriller, but its emotional investment in Bill Baker's fight to save Allison is what connects us with the story.

Matt Damon Humanized Oil Workers, But Will He Change His Mind About Killing Their Jobs?

Matt Damon's comments were a refreshing departure from the harassment, belittling, and stereotyping usually inflicted by elites on the Trump-supporting, blue-collar men.

VIDEO: Driver trying to get home comes face to face with bikers in BLM march. No one moves out of the way — then things turn ugly.



Cellphone video caught the moment things got ugly between an SUV driver trying to get home and several motorcyclists involved in a Black Lives Matter march.

And it all went down in Stillwater, Minnesota — population about 20,000 and around 30 minutes east of Minneapolis.

What happened?

Video posted Saturday to Twitter begins with the angry driver exiting his vehicle after apparently trying to left turn on Stillwater Avenue — but police told TheBlaze Monday that the trio of bikers in front him were trying to make a left as well.

A fourth biker actually had already turned left and was past the driver's vehicle on the other street:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @KBoomhauer

The bikers may have been expecting the driver to back up or get out the way; they certainly didn't seem to be giving him a passage.

But not this time. The driver began yelling at the bikers that "I live here!" and pointed down the road.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @KBoomhauer

With that a large biker in a dark vest — who stood a few inches taller than the motorist — appeared to challenge the driver and told him, "I don't give a f***." But the driver got up in the biker's face and moved forward on him until the biker shoved the driver.

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @KBoomhauer

Then a bigger shoving match ensued:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @KBoomhauer

And by the time police arrived, the motorist may have appeared to be the aggressor:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @KBoomhauer

Because police took the motorist away:

Image source: Twitter video screenshot via @KBoomhauer

Here's the clip. Content warning: Language:

BLM group has assaulted someone in his own neighborhood trying to get home. Police come and detain the man who was… https://t.co/7xtzt4727y
— Cat Hyde Кот Хайд (I'm just here for my ban)🖤🧡 (@Cat Hyde Кот Хайд (I'm just here for my ban)🖤🧡)1618705184.0

Police told TheBlaze on Monday that they detained the driver briefly, got him and his vehicle home safely after the march went through the intersection, and that there were no charges, citations, or arrests. Police also told TheBlaze that it's commonplace for streets to be blocked during marches.

Oh, there's more

There are two other videos showing the march. In one video, a woman on a megaphone tells the marchers about "an angry motorist who refused to move his car. The police were on the scene, and lo and behold, a miracle of God, they took him away, put him in the back of a squad car, they moved his vehicle out of the street so we can peacefully continue our march!"

And in the other clip, a man on a megaphone hollers at residents, "If you think black lives matter, you can come march with us, you can come join us. If you don't, you can stay up at your house. You can stay up in your driveway looking at us like we're doing something crazy when we're just here trying to fight for our lives."

Earlier: "If you think black lives matter you can come march with us, you can come join us. If you don't you can st… https://t.co/zNv4T8vztE
— Cat Hyde Кот Хайд (I'm just here for my ban)🖤🧡 (@Cat Hyde Кот Хайд (I'm just here for my ban)🖤🧡)1618707404.0