If you're currently an adult, imagine being back in high school. Imagine sitting in your calculus class; your teacher has finished the lecture, and you, along with the rest of the class are impatiently waiting for the second period bell to ring. The door creaks open and the Vice Principal steps in. With tight methodical precision he hands your teacher a note and asks you to come with him. A curt "yes" is all you can utter as you get up to follow him. You stare straight ahead with military obedience as you walk behind the man who holds your future in his hands. He enters his sterile office and you follow, closing the door behind him. "Sit down, " he commands. You obey. "Where were you during your flex block on December, 18, 2003?" You know an interrogation has begun. "I was probably in the library, ummm media center," you blurt out, but you understand perfectly well that the school administration already knows where you were, what you were doing, and probably even how your punishment will play out. The questions continue; all of them are short and reveal as little information as possible. You go on to describe how you spoke with another student in the computer lab at that date. You explain the subject matter that you and he discussed. The school administration has enough information now to prove your guilt. You are handed a form detailing the incident that you had just spoken of. You fill it out and give as much detail as you can, thinking that if you are frank and honest with the administration, you will get some level of respect in return. The pattern of questioning, documenting, and signing, repeats for another few hours. This was the situation I found myself in a few weeks ago at my ex-school, Dundee Crown. In the interrogation, I explained that at one point I had entered the file:// command into a web browser, and this violated an oral agreement I made with the Vice Principal stating that I would not use a computer network while at school ( I had been banned from the network because I'd downloaded an SSH client at the beginning of the year. That was a violation of the network user agreement). I discussed 802.11x networking in response to the school's confiscation of my keychain wifi scanner. Typing a command into a computer when told not to and possessing an unauthorized electronic device are minor infractions of the school rules. However, at the end of the discussion the VP told me that I would be suspended for ten days. Ten days happens to be the maximum suspension in my school district. Even if a student commits a violent crime at school, 10 days suspension with a recommended expulsion will still be the maximum punishment. I am also told that I will have the opportunity to speak before the school board at a hearing dealing with my expulsion. The Vice Principal goes on to say that the main issue is not that I had touched a computer when I had promised not to, or that I had used a wifi detector. In fact no action would be taken against me regarding those incidents. My real crime, according to the Vice Principle, was what I had told the other student. Apparently I can be expelled from school for speaking about certain things. Up to this point, I hope anyone reading this will see the utter absurdity of this whole situation. Public schools have become a holding pen for those too young to work. Security cameras dot the halls, police officers prowl like hungry pigs, and the student handbook bans such things as "unauthorized reading material." Personal and intellectual freedoms are suppressed to an extent that the student body has for the most part given in to either a drug induced apathy, or an artificial happy obedience. Dundee crown has a web filter. I do not appreciate this. When I had been talking with that student in flex block on 12-18-2003, I was trying to find out what sites he could get to using a web proxy. The proxy was one I hosted at my house and I intended to use it as a means of bypassing the school's filter. With all of my school's clear problems, why did I focus on combating censorship of the Internet? Probably because I saw freedom of information as the main source of social progress, because essays from noted libertarians like Herbert Marcuse, Eric Raymond, and Noam Chomsky were some of the material the school had been censoring, and I saw real change potentially locked away in words the school library wouldn't stock. The real question comes down to this. If I make a proxy on my own computer, at my own home, outside of the schools jurisdiction, and if I use my free speech rights to talk about that proxy with another student, can the school, interrogate, suspend, and expel me? Censoring the web in a place of public education is wrong. Expelling students who speak out is unconstitutional. Help! I have served the suspension, and took part in an expulsion hearing where I was not even told what specific violation of school policy I had made. Recently, I transfered to a private school. I am expressing my views on this issue in the hopes that it will bring up a discussion of the role of freedom of information for minors. Please contact me at the1@unixclan.net if you think your ideas will be of aid to me or the students at my school district.