Tennessee Teacher Pushed Out for Supporting Free Speech of Gay and Atheist Students
In May, the Lenoir City High School faculty was threatened with a criminal investigation for publishing a yearbook story titled, “It’s OK To Be Gay.” The student newspaper at the same Knoxville, Tennessee school was barred from publishing a piece by an atheist student explaining her lack of beliefs, which was later released in a local paper. What these two pieces have in common are teacher James Yoakley, who supported the publication of both articles as an English teacher and yearbook adviser.
This year, he was mysteriously transferred to a new job. He explained to Metro Pulse the fallout from the Yearbook incident and why he thinks he’s no longer in his previous position:
YOAKLEY: When the principal suggested I resign, I was fairly sure it wasn’t his idea. I refused but certainly thought about leaving. I spent the summer exploring other opportunities but decided to stay because I knew they wanted me to leave.The transfer to the middle school was, in my opinion, a punishment designed to make me want to leave. It’s funny how much I love teaching there.
Yoakley’s principal told him he was “improperly influencing” students, and the transfer happened just three weeks after he refused to resign. As part of the change, he was removed from his yearbook adviser post, which was worth $5,000. To put that loss in perspective, the median salary for a Knoxville public school teacher is around $45,000, meaning Yoakley was docked around 11 percent of a typical salary for supporting a student’s right to speak freely about his sexual orientation or religious views.
While this sort of abuse is sadly familiar to LGBT Americans, discrimination against atheists is less well known. However, it’s also shockingly widespread. Polling data consistently shows that atheists face enormous hurdles to get access to public office and, recently, Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) blamed the horrific shooting in Aurora, Colorado on non-theistic Americans.
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7 comments on "Tennessee Teacher Pushed Out for Supporting Free Speech of Gay and Atheist Students"
September 12, 2012 2:36pm
Whining Busy Body's! Next thing you know, we'll be giving the same rights to pedophiles, zoophiles, exhibitionists, voyeurism and ever other sorts of anti-god/sex acts out there. I don't mention my private heterosexual activities in public, why should they? To get attention? And about the atheists! If you don't believe in something (e.g. Santa Clause, pixies and the tooth fairy), why waste your hell bent philosophy on us? Some things just need to be left unsaid! Give it break! WE "NORMAL" people don't really want to hear about your closet escapades!
September 12, 2012 6:57pm
Wow what a moron. I look forward to the day when people don't inflict their belief in fairy tales (the cults of Christianity and Islam) on the rest of us. I believe in God but not the archaic nonsense written by ancient authors as a scam to get tithes for their entertainment. Unfortunately the U.S. has turned away from Mathematics and Science investment since the 1980s with the resulting ascendence of China as an inevitable result and the drift backwards to fanaticism in american society as a side consequence - it is a nice consolation though to know that the Chinese will bring a new era, one that is purged of the human weakness that is religion. Hopefully humanity will eventually evolve past dogmatic religion and find a more fact-based belief system in a deity if they wish one. By the way, you don't have to replace belief in one fairy tale with another (Santa Claus etc.) - just don't believe things just for the sake of believing things - follow facts - if you don't know - don't make up some moronic story to explain things. I hope you do know that atheists and agnostics know more about religions than religious people do - pathetic - but check out the latest pew polls. Considering how idiotically Muslims and Christian fundamentalists have been acting recently - I think it is high time something systematic is done to them.
September 11, 2012 1:36pm
Seems as if nothing has changed down there since the Scopes trial
September 11, 2012 12:57pm
Fifty years ago, when I was a high school sophomore, a similar event occurred with the school journalism teacher. She allowed the school paper to publish a letter from several students criticizing the school board for sending an "observer" to a meeting of a group who wanted to ban certain books from the school library. When the teacher refused to prevent the publication of the letter, her contract was not renewed. At least Mr. Yoakley still has a job.
September 11, 2012 11:22am
Yoakley’s principal told him he was “improperly influencing” students,
-but it's ok for teachers to push any agenda that's widely accepted by extremists. It's proper to influence/encourage students to adopt/embrace American exceptionalism, blatant heterosexualistic culture, bigoted religious speech, flag-waving war intervention posters, student writings on faux patriotism, etc., etc.,
You see, influencing is who gets to define what speech is approved by the fascist regimes in place.
September 11, 2012 9:55am
Good on Mr. Yoakley! Don't let the haters and bigots win!
September 11, 2012 9:41am
Come on now. This is Tennessee after all. Cut the bigots some slack. Most of the population is braindead anyway!