No guns, oh, and no free speech on public transit


The Texas woman who was kicked off the Forth Worth, Texas public transportation system “T” bus this past Saturday - was she concealing a weapon, endangering passengers with violent behavior, or selling drugs? No, she was reading her Bible to her children, enroute to church.

Public Transportation is rife with problems. Last April in St. Paul, Minnesota, the city saw a 16 year old shot and killed while a passenger on the Metro Transit bus. In November, a 71 year old man was brutally beaten with a baseball bat in Gresham, Oregon by a 15 year old gang member at the MAX public transit station. Just two weeks ago in Baltimore, a 14 year old boy was shot and wounded on a Maryland Transit bus. And here’s just two paragraphs from the Baltimore Sun article to give you a taste of the real problems facing public transportation in major cities:

On Dec. 4, a 26-year-old woman was severely injured in a daytime attack in Hampden, beaten and kicked by a group of middle-school students on the No. 27 bus. Nine juveniles were arrested.

The next week, two passengers on a No. 64 bus in Brooklyn were attacked by a group of five men. On Dec. 18 two juveniles were arrested after a girl was stabbed in the arm on a No. 51 bus near Mondawmin Mall.

So don’t give me this flap about a lady reading the Bible on the bus. Is there nothing more interesting happening in Fort Worth, and the terribly bored bus drivers must resort to throwing off Bible reading mothers?

According to MyFox Dallas-Fort Worth, the woman kicked off the bus, Christine Lutz, sees this as a clear case of religious persecution. Lutz told FOX 4 that she was sitting in the back of the bus, not being disruptive, and reading to her children from the Bible. She said she was stunned when the bus driver asked her to stop reading her Bible. Lutz responded, “No, I’m reading the Bible, I’m teaching the kids, I’m going to continue.” Before she knew it, the bus had pulled over, and she and her kids were escorted into a supervisor’s van and driven the remainder of the way to church.

Now, as a homeschooling mom, I’m quite familiar with teaching on the go. In the van on the way to Cub Scouts, along the grocery aisles, in the waiting room at the doctor’s office, in line at the Post Office. I’m always teaching, reading the kids a story, answering questions. When dealing with children, animation is often required. I’ve surely annoyed some people along the way. However, the person waiting in line behind me to get his package shipped has no constitutional right to not be annoyed by my teaching. And I have a right to free speech. So does the obnoxious person shipping that package talking at full volume on his cell phone. So does the mother reading the Bible to her children on the public transit system.

Officials at the Fort Worth T (Trinity Railway Express) claim that their treatment of Lutz had nothing to do with the content of what she was reading, but that she was simply too loud. They point to signs on the bus warning against playing radios and loud behavior. “If she were reading Moby Dick or reciting the Pledge of Allegiance or reading anything else, the same thing would have occurred,” said bus representative Joan Hunter. Really, Joan, does everyone sit in complete silence on the Fort Worth T? Perhaps I’ll try riding the T and read Winnie the Pooh to my children and see if I get thrown off.

Given that not a single passenger had complained, this story is pretty weak. Given the real, bona fide problems facing mass transit systems in large cities, like thieves, gangs, and drug dealers, it’s clear to this blogger that the bus driver was in fact engaging in a form of religious persecution. Or maybe just an extremely low annoyance tolerance level. This woman deserves the public apology she is seeking.

5 Responses

  1. Kathleen January 2nd, 2008 at 10:49 am

    How ridiculous! I’m sure we are facing bigger problems in the world than those wacky disruptive Bible reading mothers :-)

  2. Jane January 2nd, 2008 at 12:46 pm

    I agree with you and Kathleen- there are bigger fish to fry than this poor woman! Craziness!

  3. Dana January 3rd, 2008 at 1:36 am

    Hmm…I’ve been on some TX buses, although not in that area. Most people do sit rather quietly, but there are generally those who carry on conversations as if they thought everyone wanted to know their private lives. Most people just assume an air of indifference, with an occasional glance but pretending as if the loud speakers weren’t there.

    And if she were being too loud, wouldn’t she be asked to please read more quietly? Not just to stop? Unless there is a zero talking rule, I don’t see how this could be handled in this way.

  4. ladysown January 3rd, 2008 at 4:35 am

    I always keep in mind that there are always two sides to a the story. So I always wonder….what’s being left out. Not sure if this lady was reading in a loud obnoxious manner OR if she gave the driver lots of attitude. But I have to wonder…. a lady, reading the bible to her children, on the way to church…. aren’t there bigger things to deal with? Particularly on a transit bus fraught with problems?

    At least she got a ride the rest of the way to church, so that was cool. He didn’t just drop her at the side of the road.

  5. Jen January 3rd, 2008 at 10:12 am

    Kathleen & Jane, seems like much ado about nothing…it’s really hard for me to believe that reading “anything” outloud would have gotten her ejected from the bus.

    Dana, the T claims that the driver asked Lutz to quiet down. However, Lutz says in an interview that absolutely was never the request - the driver simply said “stop reading.” If that is the case, the T is in big trouble. Is it really credible to believe that if I were reading Winnie the Pooh to my kids, as I mentioned, that I would be thrown off? I really doubt it. The driver was offended by Bible reading. Fine. I’m offended by billboards, magazine covers, the conversation next to me about last night’s drunken orgy. Remove a guy from the bus for cursing and the ACLU folks are all over it. Remove the gal for Bible reading and the same folks say, “Good, she’s a nut!” Apparently there is selective freedom of speech.

    ladysown, I agree, there are two sides to a story. I think what’s being left out is that the driver has zero tolerance for Bible reading. Have you ever ridden a public transit bus? There are some colorful characters, loud obnoxious rap music that one can hear through the headphones of other passengers, foul language, and much more. And just quiet folks minding their own business as well. For the driver to single out this lady, with NO COMPLAINTS from other passengers…unless she was screaming out Bible verses full volume, there’s no excuse for what happened.

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