Banning books in schools (1 Viewer)

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    Optimus Prime

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    Excellent article I thought deserved its own thread
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    On the surface, it would appear that book censors and censored authors like myself can agree on one thing: Books are powerful.

    Particularly books for children and teens.

    Why else would people like me spend so much time and energy writing them?

    Why else would censors spend so much time and energy trying to keep them out of kids’ hands?

    In a country where the average adult is reading fewer and fewer books, it’s a surprise to find Americans arguing so much about them.

    In this election year, parents and politicians — so many politicians — are jumping into the fray to say how powerful books can be.

    Granted, politicians often make what I do sound like witchcraft, but I take this as a compliment.

    I’ll admit, one of my first thoughts about the current wildfire of attempted censorship was: How quaint.

    Conservatives seemed to be dusting off their playbook from 1958, when the only way our stories could get to kids was through schools and libraries.

    While both are still crucial sanctuaries for readers, they’re hardly the only options. Plenty of booksellers supply titles that are taken off school shelves.

    And words can be very widely shared free of charge on social media and the rest of the internet. If you take my book off a shelf, you keep it away from that shelf, but you hardly keep it away from readers.

    As censorship wars have raged in so many communities, damaging the lives of countless teachers, librarians, parents and children, it’s begun to feel less and less quaint.

    This is not your father’s book censorship…..

    Here’s something I never thought I’d be nostalgic for: sincere censors. When my first novel, “Boy Meets Boy,” was published in 2003, it was immediately the subject of many challenges, some of which kept the book from ever getting on a shelf in the first place.

    At the time, a challenge usually meant one parent trying to get a book pulled from a school or a library, going through a formal process.

    I often reminded myself to try to find some sympathy for these parents; yes, they were wrong, and their desire to control what other people in the community got to read was wrong — but more often than not, the challenge was coming from fear of a changing world, a genuine (if incorrect) belief that being gay would lead kids straight to ruination and hell, and/or the misbegotten notion that if all the books that challenged the (homophobic, racist) status quo went away, then the status quo would remain intact.

    It was, in some ways, as personal to them as it was to those of us on the other side of the challenge.

    And nine times out of 10, the book would remain on the shelf.

    It’s not like that now. What I’ve come to believe, as I’ve talked to authors and librarians and teachers, is that attacks are less and less about the actual books.

    We’re being used as targets in a much larger proxy war.

    The goal of that war isn’t just to curtail intellectual freedom but to eviscerate the public education system in this country.

    Censors are scorching the earth, without care for how many kids get burned.

    Racism and homophobia are still very much present, but it’s also a power grab, a money grab. The goal for many is a for-profit, more authoritarian and much less diverse culture, one in which truth is whatever you’re told it is, your identity is determined by its acceptability and the past is a lie that the future is forced to emulate.

    The politicians who holler and post and draw up their lists of “harmful” books aren’t actually scared of our books.

    They are using our books to scare people.

     
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    This 100% - They want kids to be ignorant of all social issues and be happy little workers who only do what they are told.
    “We have this very fashionable straight jacket all ready for you! Here, try it on, don’t argue!” 🤔
     
    Why aren't these people asked "if someone's sexuality could be influenced by what they see and read then why are gay people gay?"

    Until relatively recently all people saw was hetero relationships
    i remember back in the 80s when i used to be a devil worshipper for listening to certain music..lol
     
    i remember back in the 80s when i used to be a devil worshipper for listening to certain music..lol
     
    In recent years the issue of book bans has become a major story in the US, often driven by socially conservative pressure groups, but nowhere has the impact of bans been felt more acutely than in America’s enormous prison population, activists and campaigners say.

    Books can serve as vital connections to the outside world for incarcerated individuals, yet they are frequently censored in US prisons. Campaigners are advocating for public library catalogs to be accessible on carceral tablets.

    “We are adults in these prisons, and we’re told that we can’t read this, we can’t read that, we can’t read this book, we can’t see that article, and we’re like, ‘For what reason?’” Stevie Wilson, who is currently incarcerated in Pennsylvania, told the Guardian.


    “We need people out there to know that, and we need them to join us in our fight against censorship.”

    Prison Banned Books Week – which has just ended – is one of many initiatives in the past few years that have sought to raise awareness about the rise of literary censorship in the US. While book bans in schools and public libraries are frequently reported on and widely acknowledged, relatively less is known about the extent to which literary censorship affects those imprisoned.

    A Marshall Project report originally published in 2022 found that about half of states said they had book policies and lists of banned publications containing over 50,000 titles. Other states don’t keep lists, meaning books can only enter facilities on a case-by-case basis with inconsistent rules and little oversight.

    Policies vary widely. The Marshall Project found Florida bans more than 20,000 titles and yet Rhode Island prohibits just 68. Nebraska has a list for only one of its nine prisons, while Wyoming has different lists for each facility.

    Reasons vary from nudity to depictions of crime or violence to confusing bans that make little sense. Louisiana banned a 700-page book featuring the art of Leonardo da Vinci; Virginia bans World of Warcraft books and Texas banned a visual Spanish-English dictionary.….

     
    In recent years the issue of book bans has become a major story in the US, often driven by socially conservative pressure groups, but nowhere has the impact of bans been felt more acutely than in America’s enormous prison population, activists and campaigners say.

    Books can serve as vital connections to the outside world for incarcerated individuals, yet they are frequently censored in US prisons. Campaigners are advocating for public library catalogs to be accessible on carceral tablets.

    “We are adults in these prisons, and we’re told that we can’t read this, we can’t read that, we can’t read this book, we can’t see that article, and we’re like, ‘For what reason?’” Stevie Wilson, who is currently incarcerated in Pennsylvania, told the Guardian.


    “We need people out there to know that, and we need them to join us in our fight against censorship.”

    Prison Banned Books Week – which has just ended – is one of many initiatives in the past few years that have sought to raise awareness about the rise of literary censorship in the US. While book bans in schools and public libraries are frequently reported on and widely acknowledged, relatively less is known about the extent to which literary censorship affects those imprisoned.

    A Marshall Project report originally published in 2022 found that about half of states said they had book policies and lists of banned publications containing over 50,000 titles. Other states don’t keep lists, meaning books can only enter facilities on a case-by-case basis with inconsistent rules and little oversight.

    Policies vary widely. The Marshall Project found Florida bans more than 20,000 titles and yet Rhode Island prohibits just 68. Nebraska has a list for only one of its nine prisons, while Wyoming has different lists for each facility.

    Reasons vary from nudity to depictions of crime or violence to confusing bans that make little sense. Louisiana banned a 700-page book featuring the art of Leonardo da Vinci; Virginia bans World of Warcraft books and Texas banned a visual Spanish-English dictionary.….

    Well, I can’t say that I am surprised. The purpose of the retribution system including prisons is not to rehabilitate but to punish, period.

    Noting the differences between states simply underscores, for me, the concept that states need to be eliminated as separate political units or at the very least their power needs to be drastically reduced.
     
    Well, I can’t say that I am surprised. The purpose of the retribution system including prisons is not to rehabilitate but to punish, period.

    Noting the differences between states simply underscores, for me, the concept that states need to be eliminated as separate political units or at the very least their power needs to be drastically reduced.
    Florida leading the way as always
     
    Advocates of school book bans have shifted their sights toward Utah's little free libraries after a Democratic lawmaker planned to add banned books to the volunteer-run curbside collections in her district.

    Driving the news: State Rep. Sahara Hayes (D-Salt Lake City) recently announced on Instagram that she planned to celebrate national Banned Books Week by placing titles that are banned in a Utah school inside little free libraries.

    • That led to accusations that she was distributing "explicit content" to children in violation of Utah laws.
    • Some of the activists have previously filed police reports accusing schools of distributing pornography because they carried books by acclaimed authors like Toni Morrison, Margaret Atwood and Sherman Alexie.
    Zoom out: Brooke Stephens — a leader with Utah Parents United who called for Hayes' prosecution and has previously mobilized parents to report librarians to police — argued last week that owners of Little Free Libraries should face prosecution if they make "obscene" material available.

    The other side: Book ban opponents say threats to prosecute people for simply having or putting books in reach of children likely will have a chilling effect on authors, parents and owners of little free libraries.

    What they're saying: "If you're someone who runs a little free library, you have to make the choice: 'Am I going to put these things in there and take the chance' [of a pornography charge]," Peter Bromberg, a policy advocate for the Utah Library Association, told Axios............


     
    The "Christian" political right movement in America is such a fraud.

    True Christians should be repulsed - I know that some are, but far too many are not.


    i sit here and read about Palestine/Palestinians or Lebanon/Lebanese or Iran/Iranians and how we ( in the West ) cant understand why the citizens of each simply cant "speak up" against Hamas, Hezbolllah or Iranian regimes, respectively.

    Obviously there is a "fear factor" ( physical harm ) but there is a psychological/emotional one too. This "Christian" issue operates in the EXACT same way. HERE. in the US.

    Far too many simply bury their heads.

    I know its corny- but i keep coming back to Jyn Erso in Rogue One when asked about if she could stand to see Imperial Flag fly over Galaxy:

    "its not a problem if you dont look up"

    Ugh.
     
    Advocates of school book bans have shifted their sights toward Utah's little free libraries after a Democratic lawmaker planned to add banned books to the volunteer-run curbside collections in her district.

    Driving the news: State Rep. Sahara Hayes (D-Salt Lake City) recently announced on Instagram that she planned to celebrate national Banned Books Week by placing titles that are banned in a Utah school inside little free libraries.

    • That led to accusations that she was distributing "explicit content" to children in violation of Utah laws.
    • Some of the activists have previously filed police reports accusing schools of distributing pornography because they carried books by acclaimed authors like Toni Morrison, Margaret Atwood and Sherman Alexie.
    Zoom out: Brooke Stephens — a leader with Utah Parents United who called for Hayes' prosecution and has previously mobilized parents to report librarians to police — argued last week that owners of Little Free Libraries should face prosecution if they make "obscene" material available.

    The other side: Book ban opponents say threats to prosecute people for simply having or putting books in reach of children likely will have a chilling effect on authors, parents and owners of little free libraries.

    What they're saying: "If you're someone who runs a little free library, you have to make the choice: 'Am I going to put these things in there and take the chance' [of a pornography charge]," Peter Bromberg, a policy advocate for the Utah Library Association, told Axios............


    Most interesting is who is deciding the definition of pornography. I’m not really informed on which specific books have been banned, but my impression they in part have to do with anything other than vanilla heterosexual relationships and the broad category of Woke that has nothing to do with explicit sexuality.
     

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