PGC – Two Oklahoma Volleyball Coaches are claiming in a court of law that they have a constitutional right to censure college students in their athletic program for having certain political views that fall outside the orthodoxy of the acceptable.
Two American people who grew up in this land, lived off its fat, prospered from its power and security, have somehow come to conclude in that experience a right by one adult to tell another adult what political views they are permited to have to be a member of their society, AND that person also happens to be a public funded person, a near-government-paid employee of sorts, maybe even a full-fledged government employee.
That speaks volumes about the state of American liberty as a lived ideal that a major public American institution, the University of Oklahoma, has two American citizens on its collection of coaches that view the American constitution as something beneath them in the name of stopping whatever evil they imagine they’re stopping.
The two coaches in question allegedly benched a college student athlete for having the wrong political views, and, rather than denying the claim, doubled down in court documents that claim they have a right to treat a college student athlete in this way.
The student athlete is Kylee McLaughlin. Her lawsuit targets coaches Lindsey and Kyle Walton, as welll as the University’s Board of Regents.
Coaches at U. Oklahoma Claim They Can Discipline Players for Their Politics
From legalinsurrection.com
2021-08-09 12:00:59
Mike LaChance
Excerpt:
Two women’s volleyball coaches at the University of Oklahoma argue in a legal motion that they have the right to discipline players for their political beliefs.
Player Kylee McLaughlin sued coaches Lindsey and Kyle Walton along with the OU Board of Regents earlier this year, alleging “she had been excluded from the team […] over her politically conservative views.”
The OU Daily reported that McLaughlin, the OU team captain and first team All-Big 12 selection in 2018 and 2019, had made comments that “at least one” of her teammates considered “racist” following a team viewing of the Netflix documentary “13th.”

