Students at the Bronx Lighthouse College Preparatory Academy wrote a letter objecting to a visit by Republican Presidential candidate Ted Cruz, and the school canceled his visit.

 

Cruz, no doubt, hoped to use the charter school as a photo-op for his New York campaign.

 

The students, however, had other ideas.

 

They wrote:

 

 

A group of students will be leaving during 4th period, as act of civil disobedience in regards to the arrival of Ted Cruz to BLCPA. We have all considered the consequences of our actions and are willing to accept them. We respect you and all the staff at BLCPA as well as the expected guests. But we want you to understand that as passionate students, we have ideas and principles that should be heard and respected. This walk out isn’t a reflection of our discontent with BLCPA but our opportunity to stand up for our community and future. This walk out is taking place because we as students all share a common idea.

 

The presence of Ted Cruz and the ideas he stands for are offensive. His views are against ours and are actively working to harm us, our community, and the people we love. He is misogynistic, homophobic, and racist. He has used vulgar language, gestures, and profanity directed at a scholar and staff members, along with harassing and posing threats to staff and scholars according to the Disciplinary Referral slip. This is not to be taken kiddingly or as a joke. We are students who feel the need and right to not be passive to such disrespect.

 

One commenter said the students were censoring Cruz; others congratulated them. Civil disobedience is an honorable tradition. Cruz has many other opportunities to speak. Bravo to the students for not letting themselves be used to prop up the Cruz campaign. He needs to learn about what he disparagingly called “New York values.”

 

Last December, something similar happened to Rahm Emanuel, when he tried to use Urban Academy charter school as a prop to burnish his reputation after the bad publicity associated with the shooting of Laquan McDonald. Students interrupted him by repeatedly shouting “Sixteen shots.”