Principal Pulls Girl From Graduation When He Sees What She’s Wearing Under Her Gown

Principal Pulls Girl From Graduation When He Sees What She’s Wearing Under Her Gown

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A Nebraska high school ceremony became embroiled in controversy. The principal pulled a girl from the line after he saw what she was wearing under her graduation gown. Now, parents and students are outraged.

In this day and age, every student should be celebrated for graduating high school. There are plenty of obstacles to overcome, simply to make it to that day. Young people are bombarded with distractions and life-ruining situations. Students that work hard, pass their classes, and graduate should enjoy the moment.

But we’re talking about public schools, here. So anything good or momentous has to be ruined by political hacks. That was the case in Nebraska when one student wanted to attend graduation while wearing a sash over her robe.
The sash was important to her and symbolized her future after high school. It was no more offensive than the other sashes that people were wearing. Yet the school still denied her the right to wear it. The student decided, if she can’t wear it over her robe, she’d tuck it under. That way she could show it in pictures.

That was a big mistake, apparently. When she was lining up to receive her diploma, the principal spotted the sash under her robe. He then proceeded to pull her from the line and chide her, like some kind of rebel.
What was this shockingly controversial sash? It was her U.S. Army sash that she received from a recruiter. Yep, now public schools are censoring the Army.

A Nebraska high school has received major backlash on social media after denying a graduating senior’s request to wear her U.S. Army sash during the graduation ceremony.

Megan Pohlmeier was planning on participating in her high school’s graduation ceremony in May. To celebrate the occasion, the teen said she wanted to wear her Army sash, which was given to her by her recruiter at the Grand Island office in Nebraska four days before graduation, she told Fox News…

“It was something I worked really hard to earn. They told me ‘no’ and did not really give me a reason,” she told the Omaha World-Herald.