TOMBALL, Texas – Tomball High School administrators attempted to force students to remove a picture posted to Twitter with students showing support for both Black Lives Matter and Donald Trump, and at least one student is opting for detention in defiance.

Jodeci Williams posed for a picture in the school cafeteria last Friday for the school’s America Day – dressed in all black and fist raised to support Black Lives Matter. In the background, several students wore shirts that spelled out “Trump,” KPRC reports.

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The image, posted to Twitter by classmate Toni Trail, was intended to “show, like, what is going on and the different views that are going on in our school,” Williams said. “We posted it to Twitter and it blew up.”

“We got way more attention than we thought we were going to get for it, honestly,” she told KHOU.

The picture was re-tweeted well over 800 times, prompting parents of some students in the picture to contact school officials. The district’s “Technology Accessible Use” policy prohibits students from posting pictures of other students to social media without their permission, and parents of the students supporting Trump complained that their children were targeted with harassment because of the image they did not consent to, according to the news site.

“Students have periodically posted photos supporting various groups and have not been asked to remove photos from social media,” the district wrote in a prepared statement. “In this instance, a group of students reported to campus administrators that a photo of them was posted to social media without their permission, which is against Tomball ISD’s Technology Acceptable Use Policy.

“This is an acceptable use policy issue and a student code of conduct issue,” the statement read.

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School administrators asked Trail, Williams and other students to remove the post, apparently unconcerned about the hundreds of others who re-tweeted the image.

Williams said administrators gave them a choice: delete the tweet, or face in-school suspension.

“They basically said that I needed to un-retweet the tweet from my page,” Williams said.

Student Trajon White told KHOU administrators gave him the same choice.

“I just feel like you’re forcing us to do something,” White said. “You’re telling us if we don’t do it, then this is going to happen. You’re giving us an ultimatum.”

Most students complied with the demand, but Williams and Trail are opting for the suspension.

“I did not (remove the post), because I didn’t feel like it was fair that he only asked me and Jodeci to un-retweet when there were a hundred kids at school who re-tweeted it,” Trail told KPRC.

“I feel like taking it down, they win,” Williams told KHOU.

The girls’ parents are supporting their defiance.

“I do think it’s worth it,” Williams’ mother, Nicole Gochanour, said of the suspension. “I think young people need to stand up and say this is what we believe in.”

“Our kids feel they’re being singled out once again just because of who they are and the symbol that they made, which wasn’t political, it was a social statement based on what they believe is fair,” Trial’s father, Hosea Harris, said.