They would be exercising symbolic speech.
symbolic.
Counterculture movement ring the 1960s in which students used the tactics of civil disobedience to protest injustices.
It can be. It depends on what the speech is about and where it is being made. The speech may be protesting about something and it could be happening at a protest meeting or march. The speech could be about something else and may have no element of protest in it. So a speech can be but isn't always a protest.
To Protest the War students wore armbands and were suspended Students Sued the school district for not allowing them the right of freedom of speech Lower courts ruled in favor of the school district Students took the case to the Supreme court and won
Protest protest protest. Freedom of speech makes noise.
the sutdents were suspended for wearing armbands to protest the war the students sued the school district for the loss of free speech the students lost their case in several lower courts the students won their case in the US Supreme Court
the sutdents were suspended for wearing armbands to protest the war the students sued the school district for the loss of free speech the students lost their case in several lower courts the students won their case in the us supreme court
Talking, protest, and journalism.
nOT REALLY, ACTUALLY
Yes, the 1st amendment gives the freedom of speech which includes protest.
Tinker siblings wore black armbands to protest the Vietnam War in 1965. School authorities suspended the Tinker siblings, leading to a legal case, Tinker v. Des Moines. The case reached the Supreme Court in 1969, which ruled in favor of the Tinkers, establishing students' rights to free speech in schools.
Picket, boycott, speech.