zlacker

Illinois to Become First State to Ban Book Bans

submitted by Anon84+(OP) on 2023-05-28 22:56:32 | 163 points 143 comments
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replies(11): >>allear+01 >>pyuser+ab >>pessim+kd >>aidenn+7f >>sacnor+ku >>Samoye+LB >>p1neco+OE >>it_cit+wG >>tibbyd+GO >>liamtu+5x1 >>KenArr+sC1
1. allear+01[view] [source] 2023-05-28 23:03:57
>>Anon84+(OP)
This legislation removes state funding from libraries or schools that ban books. I'm concerned that this will have the unintended consequence that conservative groups will still ban books, libraries will lose funding, and perhaps be forced to close. This outcome won't bother conservatives one bit.
replies(4): >>hammoc+P1 >>noneth+Oa >>brewda+Qb >>onetim+ww
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2. hammoc+P1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-28 23:11:20
>>allear+01
Agreed. Wouldn’t school choice make more sense? If parents are given vouchers for example, everyone can support a library that they want to and there is no decrease in school funding
replies(2): >>outsid+8b >>Mister+Nc
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3. noneth+Oa[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:35:13
>>allear+01
By ban books we mean what? Not allowing certain books to be rented in the library?
replies(1): >>watchf+Sa
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4. watchf+Sa[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:35:41
>>noneth+Oa
Yes.
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5. outsid+8b[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:38:41
>>hammoc+P1
Sounds great when you are rich, not so much when you aren't
replies(1): >>Burnin+re
6. pyuser+ab[view] [source] 2023-05-29 00:38:52
>>Anon84+(OP)
Yeah but “banning books” isn’t much of a thing. Even the ALA talks about “challenged books.”

And most of the controversy involves school libraries - although there are some exceptions.

This bill just doesn’t do much. I’m not opposed to it. I guess it might do a little good.

But it’s posturing by politicians.

replies(3): >>readth+nc >>woodru+Xc >>pessim+7e
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7. brewda+Qb[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:45:02
>>allear+01
Ok, but what is the end game? Those parents will either have to homeschool, which they can already do, or you are going to force your kids to attend school with the families you paid a premium to avoid living near.
replies(1): >>jimmyg+4e
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8. readth+nc[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:50:42
>>pyuser+ab
I really doubt they'll let excerpts from those books be read in city council meetings or on the radio ....
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9. Mister+Nc[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:54:21
>>hammoc+P1
School choice only makes sense if schools cannot choose their students and must accommodate all of them.
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10. woodru+Xc[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 00:55:28
>>pyuser+ab
> And most of the controversy involves school libraries - although there are some exceptions.

This is splitting hairs: removing books from school libraries is a de facto ban on those books. Neither the article nor law implies that "book ban" in this context means anything other than "school book ban."

replies(6): >>Burnin+de >>george+ye >>mutant+Lk >>pyuser+Sw >>imgabe+4D >>lelant+GF
11. pessim+kd[view] [source] 2023-05-29 01:01:02
>>Anon84+(OP)
I don't even understand what this would mean for school libraries. I literally understand what it means, because it is toothless - it simply requires libraries to declare that they are against censorship. I don't understand what that declaration means for school libraries. It certainly doesn't require them to shelve donated erotic literature or the works of prominent neo-Nazis.

Questions of school library censorship have always been about age-appropriateness, or blasphemy, or antiquated common but now forbidden ideas. If not buying and not accepting donations of that material isn't a ban, then what could possibly be? If it does count as a ban, every school library now has to carry the complete works of Lyndon LaRouche?

edit: a real ban on bans in my eyes would be a state restriction on local governments passing book bans that apply to public schools and libraries. It wouldn't be aimed at the libraries themselves.

replies(1): >>noneth+Dd
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12. noneth+Dd[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:03:55
>>pessim+kd
Seeing how the word “banned” is used, it means they must offer every book for loan.
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13. jimmyg+4e[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:08:41
>>brewda+Qb
Seems right to me. Homeschool and teach your kids directly, in whatever form that may take, and with all the rebellion, exemplary results, and/or indoctrination it may come with; or, use your available resources to get your kids trained roughly the way you want; or, let your kids be taught with and by whatever system is available with minimal to zero input. Stratification and discrimination between individuals is pretty natural, even if it's morally abhorrent. Mandates ain't gonna change any of it.
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14. pessim+7e[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:09:15
>>pyuser+ab
Pritzker and Giannoulias, so extremely ambitious and well-resourced politicians.
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15. Burnin+de[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:11:28
>>woodru+Xc
According to [1] There are about 130M published books in the world.

So by your definition, does a school library with 13k books ban 99,99% of all books?

[1]

replies(2): >>woodru+Se >>warent+3f
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16. Burnin+re[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:12:58
>>outsid+8b
School vouchers are paid for by the government.
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17. george+ye[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:13:39
>>woodru+Xc
I don't understand how you would think the two are the same.

A ban implies to me the book cannot be sold at all which is hardly splitting hairs.

And did you find it just as egregious when Huckleberry Finn was banned in new york and california schools and public libraries for using the "n" word?

replies(2): >>woodru+5f >>adrfio+6g
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18. woodru+Se[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:16:41
>>Burnin+de
You missed a link.

No. Not stocking a book because it's physically impossible to stock all books in the world is not the same as banning it.

The ALA's statement[1] is clear, and IMO common-sense: proscribing or removing content for doctrinal reasons is the problem.

[1]: https://www.ala.org/advocacy/intfreedom/librarybill

replies(1): >>Burnin+Sg
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19. warent+3f[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:19:01
>>Burnin+de
If you bring a banned book into a library, they will reject it and turn it away on the basis of state extortion for risk of being defunded or other legal issues. That's what we're talking about here.

We're not talking about curation, and it is bizarre mental gymnastics to propose they are remotely similar.

EDIT. BTW even curation-excluded books are accepted by libraries. Libraries operate in networks, and they exchange / send overflow books to each other all the time.

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20. woodru+5f[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:19:24
>>george+ye
> A ban implies to me the book cannot be sold at all which is hardly splitting hairs.

Every American that I know (including myself) understands the phrase "book ban" to refer widely, if not exclusively, to school libraries in the context of American politics. It's been nearly 70 years since we've had otherwise politically notable book bans[1].

> And did you find it just as egregious when Huckleberry Finn was banned in new york and california schools and public libraries for using the "n" word?

Yes.

[1]: https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/banned-books-wee...

replies(2): >>cassac+Mh >>Prickl+Wi
21. aidenn+7f[view] [source] 2023-05-29 01:20:14
>>Anon84+(OP)
So if I donate a pornographic novel to an elementary school in Illinois, besides being an asshole, have I put them in a position of having to circulate it or lose funding?
replies(2): >>woodru+hf >>jojoba+cG
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22. woodru+hf[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:21:36
>>aidenn+7f
No library system is under any particular obligation to stock what you give them, much less accept donations to begin with. It's unclear why they would be, much less why this would be a "gotcha" in this context.
replies(2): >>aidenn+Xg >>refurb+JC
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23. adrfio+6g[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:31:34
>>george+ye
>A ban implies to me the book cannot be sold at all which is hardly splitting hairs.

That's just not true. "Banned book" has meant "book banned from schools and libraries" for a very long time. This is the meaning used by the American Library Association.

https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbook...

It is, for the time being and for most practical purposes, impossible to ban a book from being published in the USA. Other countries have bigger problems but that is not what people discuss in American politics.

>And did you find it just as egregious when Huckleberry Finn was banned in new york and california schools and public libraries for using the "n" word?

This is a very feeble gotcha.

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24. Burnin+Sg[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:39:02
>>woodru+Se
Sorry about the link. Not great for my credibility.

The concrete "book bans" I've heard about have been that Maus is no longer required reading in 8th grade, or that explicit sex pictures are banned from middle school libraries. Neither seem terrible to me.

What are the most egregious bans I might actually be upset by?

replies(1): >>woodru+Uh
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25. aidenn+Xg[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:39:42
>>woodru+hf
If they are under no obligation to stock any particular book, then what is the point of this law?
replies(2): >>woodru+eh >>NoRelT+Oi
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26. woodru+eh[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:43:03
>>aidenn+Xg
Because they are under an obligation to not stock or not stock for doctrinal, partisan, etc. reasons.

In other words: there are plenty of reasons to not stock a book that are not partisan or doctrinal. We don't expect public schools to pay for expensive medieval manuscripts, for example, or to stock books in languages that aren't represented in their district.

replies(1): >>aidenn+Ik
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27. cassac+Mh[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:48:54
>>woodru+5f
I would argue then that every American you know (including you) is a tiny bit wrong? I (and everyone I know) consider a book ban to be something like when 19th century Russia stated that no book could be written in Lithuanian. That’s a proper book ban. It was illegal to even own a book written in that language, and books that did exist were destroyed. Russia did book bans right! To say what’s going on now is a “book ban” that requires legislation is gas lighting at best and a false flag at worst.
replies(2): >>woodru+5i >>gdy+3s
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28. woodru+Uh[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:50:08
>>Burnin+Sg
Please don't take this as a slight: why does your personal emotional reaction matter here? The idea that public libraries should be open sources of information shouldn't require hot-blooded sentiment from you or me. It's an extension of principles that you and I (notionally) agree on.

That being said: I, for one, think that 8th graders should have Maus accessible to them; it's a difficult book substantively and in terms of presentation, but I don't think reading it is going to "damage" any 8th grader. "Required" is besides the point.

replies(1): >>Burnin+ym
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29. woodru+5i[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 01:53:23
>>cassac+Mh
I will be sure, going forwards, to ensure that my terms can simultaneously describe the struggles of 19th century Lithuanians.

Seriously: what's the point of this comment? There will always be a worse example; what matters is that there's a shared meaning in this context.

replies(1): >>cassac+Sk
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30. NoRelT+Oi[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:01:16
>>aidenn+Xg
The point is to take book decisions out of the hands of locals, and into the hands of librarians. In other words, it changes who gets to promote or censor books.
replies(1): >>Prickl+aj
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31. Prickl+Wi[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:02:48
>>woodru+5f
I have never met an American, or anyone of any nationality that understands "book bans" refer exclusively to school libraries.

You are the first.

Book bans are bans on books, at a national or state/local government level.

Bans on books within a school have been a thing for a relatively long time where I am. Usually managed by the local school council for various different reasons.

replies(2): >>woodru+jj >>blowsk+DF
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32. Prickl+aj[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:05:42
>>NoRelT+Oi
Do the librarians not count as locals?

I would think most librarians are people who are relatively local to their library.

replies(1): >>NoRelT+lk
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33. woodru+jj[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:07:03
>>Prickl+Wi
There are two operative phrases that you skipped over: "if not exclusively," and "in American politics."

I'm aware that there are ample other ways to (and entities that) ban books. Their severity is not meaningfully diminished by this conversation, and introducing them is a distraction.

replies(2): >>Prickl+4l >>george+FR
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34. NoRelT+lk[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:17:07
>>Prickl+aj
The distinction between locals in general, and librarians in particular, can be very important, in light of ideological litmus test librarians may have needed to pass on their way through academia:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-universitys-new-loyalty-oat...

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/equalit...

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/restoring-america/equalit... - A recent report from the Goldwater Institute found that 80% of job postings for Arizona’s public universities required applicants to submit a statement detailing their commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion.

replies(1): >>Prickl+ol
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35. aidenn+Ik[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:22:21
>>woodru+eh
Ah, I found the doctrinal/partisan language after following some links.

I don't see how pornographic bans wouldn't qualify as "doctrinal" though they are not particularly partisan.

replies(2): >>woodru+zl >>jcranm+nD
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36. mutant+Lk[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:23:14
>>woodru+Xc
> de facto ban on those book

Are you implying these books are so unpopular that a good chunk of their influence and profitability is very much dependent on left-wing public school librarians subsidizing them by making sure they are included in the catalogues?

We should remember that a school library has limited space, so a decision is being made about what to include no matter what.

If you think ideology/doctrine doesn't already play a role in these decisions, I invite you to check if the library of your local high school has a physical copy of say "When Harry Became Sally", "The Bell Curve", or even "The Blank Slate".

In principle, my libertarian side would have agreed with you that imposing these choices in a centralized way is not a good idea. But those principles are only meaningful in a classical liberal context. Not when scourges of affirmative action, indoctrination, ideological subsidies [1] and pseudo-liberal bureaucratic processes are used to impose ludicrous ideas upon us.

[1]: For examples of that, see https://dc.claremont.org/federal-progressive-subsidy-databas...

replies(2): >>woodru+5m >>Hideou+GE
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37. cassac+Sk[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:24:23
>>woodru+5i
Right, there is not shared meaning, so maybe that’s the point of my post. To me 19th century Lithuanians had a real book ban, as I as an American, think about them.

If a school decided to ban Twinkies from their lunch menu I wouldn’t say we have a food ban crisis that the state of Illinois would need to legislate. A parent could still buy Twinkies at home and enjoy them as often as they wanted.

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38. Prickl+4l[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:27:53
>>woodru+jj
> refer widely, if not exclusively,

usually means

1. is usually exclusive 2. if not exclusive, then is the case in the majority of cases

The proposed case that "Book Bans" refer almost exclusively to school libraries is obviously false if you just take a look at a dictionary. It is evidently not "widely known to mean X" if common definitions do not explicitly state that.

All definitions state that it is an act of banning a book. But do not explicitly state that it is exclusive to some arbitrary bureaucratic level.

Either way, it is strange to just decide that a "Book Ban" must refer almost exclusively to a school.

And yes, this is semantics.

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39. Prickl+ol[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:31:15
>>NoRelT+lk
Ah, that makes sense. I sort of assumed it would be similar in distinction to something like a "Local Doctor". The doctor would still have local biases (sometimes pseudo-scientific) towards specific treatments or methodology.
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40. woodru+zl[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:33:35
>>aidenn+Ik
> I don't see how pornographic bans wouldn't qualify as "doctrinal" though they are not particularly partisan.

You're leading with the assumption that you and I (or anyone else, really) agrees on what "pornography" is, much less that we agree in a non-partisan context.

The context here is that there's been a significant effort in the last ~18 months to reclassify LGBTQ fiction and non-fiction as pornographic and have it removed from school libraries on that ground. Justifications for that vary, from the more staid pearl-clutching ones, to rehashes of old and dangerous stereotypes about gays predating on children. That is absolutely a doctrinal concern, even if the nominal topic ("don't show children porn") is one that appears reasonable and uncontroversial on face value.

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41. woodru+5m[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:38:58
>>mutant+Lk
> Are you implying these books are so unpopular that a good chunk of their influence and profitability is very much dependent on left-wing public school librarians subsidizing them by making sure they are included in the catalogues?

No; please don't editorialize. It's obvious that the goal of these bans is to ensure that children and young adults who otherwise wouldn't have access to these books continue to not have access.

> I invite you to check if the library of your local high school has a physical copy of say "When Harry Became Sally", "The Bell Curve", or even "The Blank Slate"

It has two of the three[1][2]. You need to reevaluate your assumptions here.

(And note: I grew up in a district where students simultaneously have access to one of the largest public library systems in the world, by default. I'm positive I could find all three additionally in that system.)

[1]: https://search.follettsoftware.com/metasearch/ui/113378/sear...

[2]: https://search.follettsoftware.com/metasearch/ui/113378/sear...

replies(1): >>mutant+bq
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42. Burnin+ym[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 02:42:56
>>woodru+Uh
I own Maus myself and am a big fan. I agree about public libraries. Less convinced about school libraries for minors.

My point was that when Maus stopped being part of required reading in one school district, that was reported as a "book ban", which is very misleading.

So now I'm suspicious of other reported "book bans" until I've heard the details.

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43. mutant+bq[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 03:17:39
>>woodru+5m
> No; please don't editorialize. It's obvious that the goal of these bans is to ensure that children and young adults who otherwise wouldn't have access to these books continue to not have access.

I agree that the main goal is to reduce the access of children and young adults to these book, compared to the status quo. I don't think anyone is disputing that, one of the common rationales given being that these books are "inappropriate" for them.

However, framing this as a de facto book ban is definitely "editorializing".

> It has two of the three[1][2]. You need to reevaluate your assumptions here.

Touché. That isn't the typical high school though. It seems like a very good one, with competitive merit-based admission, and eight Nobel Prize-winning alumni. [1] Even then, you can see the biases of the high school librarians if you take a look at the collections page [2]: "LGBTQIA+", "BIPOC Reading List", "Grade 1: Inclusion contributes to a community’s diversity", "Indigenous Math & Science Collection", "Diverse Voices", etc.

Do you disagree that these are topics favored by left-wingers? Do they have collections promoting "Nuclear Energy", "Classics", "Freedom", "Family Values", "Meritocracy", or even "Personal Responsibility"?

> I grew up in a district where students simultaneously have access to one of the largest public library systems.

Good for them. I very much support that. Although there are significant biases in the procurement process for the public libraries, I assume their situation is probably much better than public school libraries.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bronx_High_School...

[2] https://collections.follettsoftware.com/collections/public

replies(3): >>woodru+Ws >>crote+gu >>saghm+rx
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44. gdy+3s[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 03:30:47
>>cassac+Mh
"when 19th century Russia stated that no book could be written in Lithuanian"

That's a lie. Or shall I say "gas lighting at best and a false flag at worst"?

"The Lithuanian press ban (Lithuanian: spaudos draudimas) was a ban on all Lithuanian language publications printed in the Latin alphabet in force from 1865 to 1904 within the Russian Empire, which controlled Lithuania proper at the time. Lithuanian-language publications that used Cyrillic were allowed and even encouraged." [0]

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithuanian_press_ban

replies(2): >>taneli+RF >>cassac+lE2
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45. woodru+Ws[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 03:39:46
>>mutant+bq
> Framing this as a de facto book ban is definitely "editorializing" though.

I don't know what else you'd call the use of state authority to restrict access to books, without painful euphemisms.

And note: the use of "book ban" to describe partisan curtailments of reading materials is not itself partisan[1]. You can find similar uses of the phrase in any partisan or non-partisan news source.

> Do you disagree that these are topics favored by left-wingers? Do they have collections promoting "Nuclear Energy", "Classics", "Freedom", "Family Values", "Meritocracy", or even "Personal Responsibility"?

There was a classics topic in our library. I think it would behoove you to think one step beyond this and observe that topical selections in libraries reflect three pressures:

1. What the audience (i.e., students in this case) actually wants to read;

2. What the librarian thinks will induce reading among the audience;

3. The librarian's own biases.

You're focusing on (3), when the reality is that (1) and (2) matter more. Asking high schoolers to get excited about a library section on "personal responsibility" or "meritocracy" sounds like a bad joke.

[1]: https://www.foxnews.com/us/library-book-bans-united-states-s...

replies(1): >>mutant+6x
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46. crote+gu[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 03:53:32
>>mutant+bq
It is a school's job to provide every student with a comprehensive and well-rounded education, preparing them for their adult life in the best way possible. This includes exposing them to a variety of potential career paths, and providing them with role models.

The only reason they need collections like "LGBTQIA+" and "Diverse Voices" in the first place is because literally the rest of the collection will already be filled with "Classics", "Freedom", and "Family Values". Those are considered the default in society, there is no need to explicitly highlight them when you will already come across them without even trying.

replies(1): >>jscipi+V12
47. sacnor+ku[view] [source] 2023-05-29 03:54:00
>>Anon84+(OP)
"Any book worth banning is a book worth reading." ― Isaac Asimov

PS: Is it me, or does 2023 feel like 1981 all over again in socioeconomic and political conditions?

replies(1): >>jojoba+sB
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48. onetim+ww[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 04:22:30
>>allear+01
You should read what the American Library Association's Library Bill of Rights says. This is very much a double-edged sword I hope you realize.
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49. pyuser+Sw[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 04:27:35
>>woodru+Xc
~This bill doesn’t apply to school libraries.~
replies(1): >>woodru+EC
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50. mutant+6x[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 04:30:11
>>woodru+Ws
> I don't know what else you'd call the use of state authority to restrict access to books, without painful euphemisms.

First of all, this isn't just about state authority. Parental authority also plays a role. In many cases, removing books from circulation happens due to complaints by parents. This is just some form of parental/public input on what taxpayer money is being spent on, and what kind of books are appropriate for children.

Also, in our current situation, state authority is very often used in ways I would consider inappropriate. For example, in a lot of cases, affirmative action is not only allowed, but required by law. So, there aren't really many good reasons to strictly stick to classical liberal principles.

> And note: the use of "book ban" to describe partisan curtailments of reading materials is not itself partisan[1].

Fox News generally sucks beyond measure. Here's National Review's take (though it is a bit different than mine): https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/04/book-curation-is-not-...

> Asking high schoolers to get excited about a library section on "personal responsibility" or "meritocracy" sounds like a bad joke.

Maybe, but probably there are ways to hype up and sensationalize everything. Besides, I could come up with a lot of "exciting" topics which also probably wouldn't be emphasized: "Victims of Communism", "The Green Revolution in India", "Lysenkoism", etc.

Although you didn't say it explicitly, I assume we both can agree that the librarian's own biases do have a significant effect, and what the typical direction of those biases are. You may think this is a good thing, but that's besides the point.

Also, your (2) is also very much subject to personal biases.

replies(2): >>woodru+6y >>Samoye+9B
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51. saghm+rx[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 04:33:29
>>mutant+bq
> However, framing this as a de facto book ban is definitely "editorializing"

If public schools are purposely preventing books that would otherwise be present from being included in their libraries, how is that anything other than a book ban? A ban doesn't have to be across an entire legal jurisdiction to be a ban; if someone got wasted and tried to start a fight at a bar and then was never allowed back in again, you'd still say they were "banned" even if they were able to go to other bars in the city.

replies(1): >>jscipi+m22
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52. woodru+6y[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 04:40:50
>>mutant+6x
> This is just some form of parental/public input on what taxpayer money is being spent on, and what kind of books are appropriate for children.

Parental opinions don't make a book ban into not-a-book-ban. They make it into a book ban fueled by parents. Road to hell, good intentions, etc.

The other point is bizarre: two wrongs don't make a right. Political revanchism because you don't like the other things your government does is not socially healthy (arguably, substantially less healthy than any of the topics that are being banned).

Children and teenagers aren't stupid: what you're proposing is replacing subjects that they're interested in with ones that you're interested in, with your interest being an ideological one. I think it's worth taking a step back and considering whether you'd be a worse librarian than the ones that we have; the ones at hand can at least offer the sound justification that increasingly large numbers of students feel comfortable self-identifying as LGBTQ.

replies(1): >>mutant+BC
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53. Samoye+9B[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:12:11
>>mutant+6x
> This is just some form of parental/public input on what taxpayer money is being spent on, and what kind of books are appropriate for children.

Actually I think I would have less problems if the only people who can go to school policy discussions and make these requests are parents whose children are literally in that school system right now. I have repeatedly witnessed people who don’t have children in that school system show up to these things and debate about this. It’s very stupid.

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54. jojoba+sB[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:17:39
>>sacnor+ku
Sure, read this.

https://www.kcrg.com/2023/05/19/this-book-is-gay-iowas-loomi...

55. Samoye+LB[view] [source] 2023-05-29 05:21:56
>>Anon84+(OP)
Couldn’t we leave this up to the affected constituents only? If you don’t have a child in the school you can’t request a book be removed. You can request that your child not have access to a book. If you don’t reside in the library area you can’t request a book be removed, but you can put a restriction that your account cannot check out certain books. Isn’t that enough to respect everyone’s desires here? Why do we even need a law like this?
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56. mutant+BC[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:33:52
>>woodru+6y
> The other point is bizarre: two wrongs don't make a right.

It's not bizarre. It's not just about moral principles, but also practical realities.

> Children and teenagers aren't stupid

TBH, I kinda think they are, and I'm not exempting my teenage self. They are definitely impulsive, impressionable, and prone to fads and groupthink.

Have you heard of the book "Lord of the Flies"? Interestingly, this particular book has also been subject to what you would call a ban, at least in one case in because it's "racist". [1]

> Children and teenagers aren't stupid: what you're proposing is replacing subjects that they're interested in with ones that you're interested in, with your interest being an ideological one.

I don't think any of the topics I came up with are more ideological than the ones I mentioned from the library collections. However, probably what you count as ideological is itself influenced by the ideological glasses one's wearing.

> I think it's worth taking a step back and considering whether you'd be a worse librarian than the ones that we have; the ones at hand can at least offer the sound justification that increasingly large numbers of students feel comfortable self-identifying as LGBTQ.

Me personally? Maybe, but I could make suggestions which are definitely an improvement, but I don't think enough high school librarians would consider doing it. An example would be not purchasing any books by Ibram X. Kendi.

[1]: https://archive.is/XQKCa#selection-3183.0-3183.398

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57. woodru+EC[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:35:33
>>pyuser+Sw
TFA says that it does in the very first sentence.
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58. refurb+JC[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:36:01
>>woodru+hf
So what you're saying is any library can ban a book?
replies(2): >>woodru+ID >>sangno+UD
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59. imgabe+4D[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:39:36
>>woodru+Xc
> removing books from school libraries is a de facto ban on those books.

No, it isn't. There are millions of books that aren't in school libraries. Are they all de facto banned?

Confidently declaring something doesn't make it true. A library deciding not to carry a book is not a book ban.

replies(2): >>rtpg+uD >>woodru+BE
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60. jcranm+nD[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:42:49
>>aidenn+Ik
"Doctrinal" isn't defined in the bill so far as I can see, which means it has its ordinary definition, something along the lines of relating to the message of the text. Pornography bans are justified by obscenity, which has a specific test given by SCOTUS, of which the third prong is that it "lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value," which is effectively tantamount to saying that it has no message that can be disagreed with.

So if you're attempting to ban it because it's obscene, that's okay. But if you're trying to call it pornographic because the lead characters are in a romantic relationship and happen to be of the same sex... well, that's not obscene, and your attempt to call it pornographic is doctrinal disapproval.

replies(1): >>aidenn+pu1
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61. rtpg+uD[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:43:57
>>imgabe+4D
What about when libraries have books but then the state govt demands these books get taken out? How much context are we allowed to include in a judgement of an action?

Never having a book, having it but having it be removed for non-content-related reasons, having it removed for content-related reasons, having the content removal decision come from librarians, or parents, or politicians, the public record of comments about why something is removed, all of these things are obviously important. Flattening it to "yeah lots of books aren't in libraries" is a _bit_ reductive!

Good things are good, bad things are bad. Sometimes it's hard to write laws that work around this, but at the very least moral judgements can be made, with space for nuance.

replies(1): >>mattma+7F
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62. woodru+ID[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:46:51
>>refurb+JC
I don’t understand. Did you think that you could just spam libraries with books before this law? Libraries refusing to stock whatever mystery material is thrown at them is a logistical concern, not a matter of “banning.” Confusing the two borders on legal crank reasoning.
replies(1): >>sangno+aE
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63. sangno+UD[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:49:06
>>refurb+JC
Curation =/= banning. Telling curators (librarians) "You can't have any book on this list even if you want them, or you'll go to jail" is banning books.
replies(1): >>tomp+aG
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64. sangno+aE[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:50:59
>>woodru+ID
> Did you think that you could just spam libraries with books before this law?

Semantic games - especially false equivalences - are part and parcel of the culture wars. "Book bans are fine because librarians have been 'banning' books. Checkmate"

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65. woodru+BE[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:55:39
>>imgabe+4D
This is the fifth or sixth time someone has started a thread with this “gotcha,” and the answer is still no: curation is a logistical concern, not a doctrinal one. Banning is a consequence of doctrine; curation is a consequence of books being expensive to categorize and store.
replies(5): >>mattma+oF >>NoMore+kG >>imgabe+nG >>lelant+QH >>smsm42+oB1
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66. Hideou+GE[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:56:30
>>mutant+Lk
>If you think ideology/doctrine doesn't already play a role in these decisions, I invite you to check if the library of your local high school has a physical copy of say "When Harry Became Sally", "The Bell Curve", or even "The Blank Slate".

Or "The Turner Diaries" or "The Camp of the Saints" if you want some more extreme examples.

67. p1neco+OE[view] [source] 2023-05-29 05:57:21
>>Anon84+(OP)
I don't know if it's literally the same people, but it's pretty amusing watching conservatives be hardcore no compromises first amendment absolutists when it comes to speech they agree with, while simultaneously being willing to define it as narrowly as necessary when it comes to silencing speech they don't agree with.
replies(1): >>TheCap+iF
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68. mattma+7F[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 05:59:56
>>rtpg+uD
It’s still not a banning. Banning would be if you’re no longer allowed to bring a copy to school at all. In my high school (and boy am I dating myself here) The Anarchist’s Cookbook was actually banned.

There’s a big difference between saying “we don’t think Tropic of Cancer is appropriate for high school kids so we’re going to remove it” and “Tropic of Cancer is banned in our schools”.

The “book bans” happening are mostly the former and while I do think they’re mostly stupid, they’re nowhere near what you’d think is happening from headlines. Very little actual banning is occurring.

replies(1): >>rtpg+nM
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69. TheCap+iF[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:01:19
>>p1neco+OE
The central premise is always centered around the teaching to kids. Show me powerful conservatives who want trans/LGBT books banned from Amazon, or pressuring major book publishers, or outright actual bans in which parents aren't allowed to teach their children from these books. It starts and ends at the classroom/children.
replies(3): >>Timon3+FW >>pas+E11 >>mbg721+qE1
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70. mattma+oF[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:02:06
>>woodru+BE
I disagree that the fact that it is removed from a shelf for doctrinal reasons is banning. It’s only banning if it’s actually banned, meaning you can’t have it at all, like Mein Kampf in Germany.

There’s surely a more accurate term than banning or curation here.

replies(2): >>laserd+MP >>woodru+jI1
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71. blowsk+DF[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:05:30
>>Prickl+Wi
I’m British though quite an avid follower of US news. I have listened to podcasts discussing book bans (e.g. Jon Ronson) and much of the discussion was around removing books from school libraries.

Additionally, I searched “fox news book bans” and “nbc book bans” and these were the first links that came up.

https://www.foxnews.com/us/choice-lies-parent-texas-dad-supp...

> Maia Kobabe’s book "Gender Queer" became one of the most banned books in the country in 2022. The book has been at the center of the debate over what books should be banned in schools.

https://www.nbcnews.com/data-graphics/map-book-bans-rise-rcn...

> School districts in 26 states have banned more than 1,000 books in the past nine months

Additionally, the Wikipedia article “ 2021–2022 book banning in the United States” discusses various cases of books being withdrawn from school libraries.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2021%E2%80%932022_book_banning...

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72. lelant+GF[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:06:44
>>woodru+Xc
> This is splitting hairs: removing books from school libraries is a de facto ban on those books.

No, it isn't. You're trivialising actual book bans by referring to public education literature selection as a "ban".

Lots of books aren't in the school library; doesn't mean that they're banned - you can still buy them and read them to your kids, take them out of public libraries, read them on the internet ... all without any legal or unofficial consequences.

replies(1): >>woodru+2E1
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73. taneli+RF[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:10:28
>>gdy+3s
That's a surprising way to frame what the Wikipedia page says. The ban was part of a russification attempt. One of the stated goals, on the page you linked, is "Replace Lithuanian parish schools with Russian grammar schools". Up to that point, Lithuanian had not been written in the Cyrillic alphabet. Polish language was widely used, and its use of Latin alphabet had a huge inspiration on Lithuanian orthography.

To make my point stronger: I would call it a book ban, if English language books were illegal to write in the Latin alphabet, and only allowed in the Cyrillic alphabet. This would be consistent with the situation of Lithuanian language book ban (except it would not replace kindergarten and lower grades with Russian grammar schools).

Calling it a lie seems at the very least ignorant of the actual situation, or worse, willful twisting of history. If the former, I invite you to read https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithuanian_book_smugglers to find out on which day they are celebrated!

replies(1): >>gdy+DL
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74. tomp+aG[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:14:28
>>sangno+UD
What’s the practical difference though?

Someone still decides the book is not gonna be there, mostly for ideological reasons.

I guess if you agree with those reasons, it’s “curation”, if you don’t, it’s “banning”.

replies(2): >>lelant+dJ >>sangno+TX
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75. jojoba+cG[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:14:36
>>aidenn+7f
No, but if a library worker decides to put pornographic books on children's shelves you can't force them to remove it.
replies(1): >>aidenn+Su1
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76. NoMore+kG[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:15:33
>>woodru+BE
I recently looked up one of these books that was on the "banned" list. Someone had scanned it in on archive.org. I just checked, and it was either the #1 banned book on most lists, or made the top 10. Gender Queer by Kobabe.

You can see it for yourself.

https://archive.org/details/gender-queer-a-memoir-by-maia-ko...

This is apparently what it would be censorship to keep out of gradeschool libraries. If you're ok with the book, then I guess there's not much more to talk about. If you're now not ok with the book, then I guess this is the first time you actually saw inside of it.

We're told that there is a difference between doctrine and curation, and maybe in some theoretical world this is true. But in the world we actually live in, doctrine's already being pushed... they're just pretending that they're "merely curating". And they're demanding that the other side not be allowed any oversight on that curation. When they curate, good, when anyone else does it, well... they're the "bad guys".

Personally, I could not care less. If you want this book in schools, it does not affect me. But you should know what book it is we're talking about. Take a look, click the link.

replies(2): >>woodru+CH >>moreli+L11
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77. imgabe+nG[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:16:46
>>woodru+BE
Nonsense. Curation is not purely logistical. It requires some judgment to select which books they believe are good and appropriate for their audience. Otherwise you wouldn’t need a librarian at all, just a random number generator to randomly select however many books will fit in the library out of all the books available.

Obviously they pick some books and not others for some reasons. If you like their reasons you call it curation, if you don’t like their reasons you call it banning.

replies(1): >>woodru+SG
78. it_cit+wG[view] [source] 2023-05-29 06:17:50
>>Anon84+(OP)
I see a lot of flagged comments of people claiming that "degenerate books" were pushed on people.

Is that really a thing? Is it more than isolated incidents? From my information bubble, those claims seem so foreign to me.

Can someone give me multiple examples with: 1) name of the book 2) problematic example in the book 3) the age of people to which the book was accessible

replies(3): >>londgi+1P >>regula+qj1 >>larati+Dr1
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79. woodru+SG[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:22:28
>>imgabe+nG
That reason is called popularity. Librarians discard books that aren’t frequently requested so that they can bring in books that are frequently requested.

Randomly selecting books for rotation would bias by sheer publication volume. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want my local library to be 40% Atkins Diet by volume, regardless of how positive I might feel about it.

replies(1): >>imgabe+CK
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80. woodru+CH[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:30:27
>>NoMore+kG
I would not bat an eye at this in a high school library, no. I checked out books that were substantially more adult in nature than this appears to be.
replies(2): >>lelant+mI >>NoMore+GI
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81. lelant+QH[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:32:47
>>woodru+BE
> This is the fifth or sixth time someone has started a thread with this “gotcha,”

This is not a "gotcha" or loophole of some type. Words have meanings[1]. If your argument relies on changing the meaning of a common word in the dictionary, it's your argument that is wrong, not the damn dictionary!

I mean, where are you going with this?

Are you seriously advocating that school libraries and librarians have free reign to determine which books to hold? Because that's how you get Intelligent Design introduced into schools. It's how you perpetuate stereotypes and bigotry.[2].

We don't want individuals exclusively responsible for determining what ideas may or may not be available to people. By having the ruling authority perform the determination, it becomes a collective determination by the taxpayers.

If the taxpayers are unhappy, they express their unhappiness with their vote.

I want to know, after reading your many emotionally charged arguments for why this must be called a "ban", exactly why you feel that the decision on literature suitability be made by selected individuals, and not by a voted-in government.

[1] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ban

[2] I've been atheist for decades, and I argued multiple times against allowing individuals within schools to determine what goes into the minds of children, because I've seen multiple times that the only end-result of allowing this is that the more passionate (engaged? Ideologues? Insane?) people tend to move into those positions that allow them to propagate their ideology.

replies(1): >>pas+811
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82. lelant+mI[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:39:13
>>woodru+CH
> I would not bat an eye at this in a high school library, no. I checked out books that were substantially more adult in nature than this appears to be.

Maybe you wouldn't, but be honest with yourself - how many parents want their school to hold and keep pornographic material?

If you want to show your kids sexually graphic images, then sure, fine, have at it. You're complaining that you can't show these images to other people's kids, and you're complaining that those parents are a problem?

replies(3): >>woodru+PJ >>Samoye+4i1 >>woodru+rE1
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83. NoMore+GI[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:41:46
>>woodru+CH
You checked out visual depictions of fellatio in your high school library? Given that books not unlike the linked one have been showing up in public school libraries for at least the last 20 years, I can't say I'm surprised.

And moreso, you can't see it from someone else's perspective who might have a problem with this?

Do you have children?

replies(1): >>woodru+GJ
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84. lelant+dJ[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:48:10
>>tomp+aG
> What’s the practical difference though?

The practical difference is that, in one case, the taxpayers collectively decide what's appropriate for their children and what is not. In the other case, a single (or a few) individuals decide what is appropriate for all the taxpayers children.

I don't understand why some people think it's better to ignore the wishes of the voters.

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85. woodru+GJ[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:52:54
>>NoMore+GI
I said “adult,” not visual. The books I was thinking of were published in 1979[1] and 1978[1], respectively.

It doesn’t matter whether I or anyone else has a problem with it. What matters is whether adolescents have a right to read it, which they do. I exercised that right as a student, and I would like other students to be able to do the same.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sophie%27s_Choice_(novel)

[2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_According_to_Garp

replies(1): >>NoMore+IK
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86. woodru+PJ[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 06:53:53
>>lelant+mI
I think my adjacent comment addresses this adequately.
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87. imgabe+CK[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 07:03:49
>>woodru+SG
I'm sure if they filled the school library with pornography and comic books, that would be really popular with 13-17 year olds, but they don't do that. Obviously there are considerations aside from purely what is popular that go into deciding which books to put in the school library.
replies(1): >>woodru+tG1
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88. NoMore+IK[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 07:05:05
>>woodru+GJ
I'm having trouble telling whether or not you clicked the archive.org link or not. It's a "graphic novel". I don't see what the big deal is calling it a comic book, but oh well.

Click it. See for yourself.

> What matters is whether adolescents have a right to read it, w

They don't have any such right, best that I can understand the legal framework of the western world.

For instance, they don't have the right to have sex with adults. Anyone who claimed that they were being denied such a right, well... do we really need to spell out how those claimants would be treated?

Minors are permitted by responsible adults to read age-appropriate books. We don't say that refusing to put The Anarchist Cookbook up in 4th grade libraries is censorship. At least non-lunatics don't. There are books that they will be allowed to read once legal adults, but that reading earlier might have adverse developmental effects. It's generally agreed that actual pornography is one such category.

replies(2): >>orwin+bS >>woodru+iz1
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89. gdy+DL[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 07:20:49
>>taneli+RF
I don't think it's me who is twisting history here
replies(1): >>taneli+Z11
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90. rtpg+nM[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 07:27:26
>>mattma+7F
Right, that is a distinction.

I do think it's important to think about the fact that school libraries are where kids tend to access a lot of books (there are of course city libraries, but those places are also being targeted). At least my experience was around that. And many libraries will have a request system, so if a kid is like "I want to read this", then libraries are able to often put in a purchase order, and then make that available for other students.

At least based on my own school experiences, I do think that teachers of a certain ... authoritarian bent would be more than happy to make up a stink of books brought in that would be "banned" from the library if a copy circulating were brought to their attention. Power structures in schools are like that. But that's just conjecture.

I think the general point of the "book ban" terminology is that librarians and schools generally had leeway to bring in more or less anything to the library, and that autonomy is being stripped away for very dark reasons. This is the age of the internet, but from my own childhood, if my school and city library suddenly decided to not provide certain kinds of book, I would just not have access to that at all.

All that to say that you're right on the word in some sense, but it feels fitting to me.

replies(1): >>mattma+MD6
91. tibbyd+GO[view] [source] 2023-05-29 07:52:34
>>Anon84+(OP)
There is a big difference between Lolita by Vladimir Naboko and To Kill A Mocking Bird by Harper Lee in a school library.

Fahrenheit 451 is coming true every day in the land of the free - you can't change history by banning books - the world being what it is , tales of slavery and Jim Crow will be eternal outside the South.

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92. londgi+1P[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 07:57:23
>>it_cit+wG
I'm not going to search for multiple examples, I'll leave that up to you. But here is the first result from Google https://nypost.com/2023/02/28/knox-zajac-reads-aloud-from-po... Feel free to Google keywords such as "school board" "read" "book" "kids" for more examples.
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93. laserd+MP[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 08:06:48
>>mattma+oF
Mein Kampf has never been banned from possession in Germany. It just has not been published in the post-WW2 decades because the copyright holder, the Free State of Bavaria, decided to just not publish it and withhold the right to do so from anybody else. One could readily purchase, sell, or trade old copies at an antiquarian bookstore.

It's now in the public domain, so one could even set up a little publishing company and publish it oneself.

And it's an incredibly awful book, measured to all the 'fame' it holds in certain circles.

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94. george+FR[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 08:25:35
>>woodru+jj
You are the one who claimed every American to understand this to be a ban on books in schools. Which is complete nonsense as evidenced just by this thread.

I think there is a reason to point this out. Twisting language to drive, in this case a political point, is called propaganda. Calling it a ban implies something more severe than what is happening. Which is content regulation.

replies(1): >>woodru+TI1
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95. orwin+bS[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 08:31:49
>>NoMore+IK
If your kid never, ever saw a pornographic image (or an erotica one) before 15, you and his friends' parents are really monitoring them closely.

For me it was a playboy at 13, for my friends probably the same, but I'm sure the internet bring the age lower,and pack more actions.

When I think about your link of a graphic novel and the first playboy I read, I'm pretty sure any parent would prefer the graphic novel where a poorly done 2 image strip depicts a fellation, and the text besides is... Less than erotic let's say.

And btw: i read 'when I was 5 I killed myself' from Buten at around the same age (maybe 14), as well as flowers for algernon and 1984, I don't think they are age-appropriate books, but they are worth reading when adolescent, because you experience them harder, and formative.

Buten in particular wrote hard books.

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96. Timon3+FW[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 09:27:03
>>TheCap+iF
One quick example: two Virginia Republicans tried to stop Barnes & Noble from selling two LGBT books to kids.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2022/05/20/gender-q...

replies(1): >>vxNsr+Qx1
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97. sangno+TX[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 09:42:24
>>tomp+aG
> I guess if you agree with those reasons, it’s “curation”, if you don’t, it’s “banning”.

Curation is part of the job for librarians, and it's a specialized skill. I don't have to agree with an ideology to accept what they do is curation - a Librarian in a Taliban library still curates their collection regardless of my endorsement of Sharia. If they are instructed by Kabul to remove specific texts, then it's a ban.

Someone decides what music gets played on radio and what the TV lineup looks like and calling that selection "banning" is reaching IMO . When the legislature is coming up with a blacklist, then it's blatantly "banning" to me

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98. pas+811[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 10:23:47
>>lelant+QH
Context matters. The context is the reactionary attempt to erase gender-is-a-spectrum and similar LGBT concepts from "public" life, in its many forms.

Restrictions come in many forms. It used to be marriage is special, then WC symbols are sacred, now we're back to think-of-the-children and their precious little minds. And one particular form is that some books are now banned from school libraries.

I wholeheartedly support the demand for more correct wording, but unfortunately it doesn't really matter.

replies(1): >>lelant+3p1
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99. pas+E11[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 10:29:26
>>TheCap+iF
we are well past that

https://www.them.us/story/michael-knowles-transgenderism-cpa...

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100. moreli+L11[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 10:30:04
>>NoMore+kG
There's no sense in which that's pornographic. The entire point is that it's not sexually arousing.
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101. taneli+Z11[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 10:32:10
>>gdy+DL
Well, everyone can read the Wikipedia pages and their references, and make their own minds. Our views are so fundamentally different that I see no reason to continue discussion.
replies(1): >>gdy+j71
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102. gdy+j71[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 11:25:08
>>taneli+Z11
Ok, let me elaborate.

'Banning all books on Lithuanian language' and 'banning books in Lithuanian language written in Latin alphabet and encouraging transition to books in Lithuanian language written in Cyrillic alphabet' are different things.

Former would have had a goal of discontinuing written Lithuanian language and the latter had a goal of switching Lithuanian language from Latin to Cyrillic alphabet.

Misrepresenting the latter as the former is a lie.

replies(1): >>cassac+PE2
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103. Samoye+4i1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 13:05:43
>>lelant+mI
Then you tell your librarian that your child may not check this book out specifically. I seriously don’t understand the problem here. Maybe another child will appreciate a depiction of healthy communication in sexual interactions, because highschool teens are definitely having sex, but if you don’t want your child learning boundaries and healthy communication that’s ok too!
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104. regula+qj1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 13:17:06
>>it_cit+wG
It's not possible to provide you examples because there is no such thing as degenerate books.
replies(1): >>soulof+Hj2
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105. lelant+3p1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 13:54:14
>>pas+811
> The context is the reactionary attempt to erase gender-is-a-spectrum and similar LGBT concepts from "public" life, in its many forms.

Maybe. Maybe the "reactionary attempt" would have been non-existent if the advocates weren't using sexually graphic material, as linked in the thread above.

Do you also think that teaching of sex ed should include videos from pornhub?

replies(1): >>pas+BU2
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106. larati+Dr1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 14:10:26
>>it_cit+wG
I don't have or want kids so have never had an opinion on this.

I see “Nick and Charlie" mentioned in an article. A book about two gay boys that get drunk and fool around.

If you just look at the cover it is going to be super triggering to some repressed parent. Especially since many of the fathers are going to have unexpressed homoerotic fantasies themselves.

To me, the whole thing seems like a huge unproductive distraction from actual learning. Imagine if parents gave a shit about the math books to this degree.

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107. aidenn+pu1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 14:26:54
>>jcranm+nD
Oh, so it's the doctrine of the text that matters, not the doctrine that is the reason behind the "censorship." That makes more sense. I mean the Miller Test is a doctrine after all. To clarify something; I think the ALA bill of rights is overall good. It's just the 2nd clause (which is the only part required to be adopted by this law) that I was struggling to find a way to interpret that wouldn't impair librarians' ability to meaningfully curate.

And to be clear: As a rule, I am in favor of librarians making this decision without interference. Librarians have repeatedly put their livelyhoods at stake in order to protect individuals access to information, and protect the privacy of those same individuals.

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108. aidenn+Su1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 14:29:29
>>jojoba+cG
Thanks for engaging my extreme example on its own terms. If that's what this law actually does, I'm kind of okay with that. I trust a random librarian's judgement far more than any law passed by grandstanding politicians in order to stir up anger.
replies(1): >>jojoba+KK2
109. liamtu+5x1[view] [source] 2023-05-29 14:44:21
>>Anon84+(OP)
Quite a few banned comments on this thread about banned books, ironic.
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110. vxNsr+Qx1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 14:49:21
>>Timon3+FW
so again, erotica to kids...
replies(1): >>Timon3+zI1
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111. woodru+iz1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 14:58:05
>>NoMore+IK
> Click it. See for yourself.

I did. Please don’t call people liars.

It’s a graphic novel depicting a sex act, albeit not particularly erotically.

The entire point of my other comments was that I checked out other books in high school, books that are widely considered excellent and have been for decades, that contained far more explicit “inappropriate” content. The only things different here are the facts that it’s (1) drawn, and (2) concerns LGBTQ identity.

> They don't have any such right, best that I can understand the legal framework of the western world.

We live under a negative legal scheme, not a positive one. I’m not aware of any law that says that children cannot read what they’d like to read, either federal or state.

Obscenity in the US has a distinct legal test[1], one that you and I both understand this book (and Sophie’s Choice) would pass easily. It also doesn’t mention children anywhere.

Finally: nobody in this thread wants children to be hurt, or to be exposed to things that will hurt them. But books, especially ones that are presented and explainable within an educational context, do not hurt children. If anything, adults tend to hurt themselves and others more based on books than children do.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller_test

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112. smsm42+oB1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 15:13:05
>>woodru+BE
Of course it's a doctrinal concern. The books are not chosen at random. Some will make it, some not. Somebody is going to make a choice, according to somebody's own (or external - like recommendations) judgement. The question is who has the power to control the choice, and who gets to say "my opinion is common sense, your opinion is dangerous ideological extremism".
replies(1): >>woodru+mD1
113. KenArr+sC1[view] [source] 2023-05-29 15:20:21
>>Anon84+(OP)
Can't wait to read the transcript of the Joe Rogan n-word episode at the library.
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114. woodru+mD1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 15:27:55
>>smsm42+oB1
Removing the 57th copy of The Atkins Diet because nobody has checked it out since 1999 is not a doctrinal concern.
replies(1): >>smsm42+3X2
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115. woodru+2E1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 15:33:16
>>lelant+GF
I'm not trivializing anything; they're different things, with contextual phrases.

Removing these books from school libraries is done with the understanding that the students won't otherwise be able to access them, i.e. they can't get to a bookstore or public library without their parent and their parent will also refuse to keep it at home. That is a de facto ban.

Now: you might happen to think that it's good that these books can't be accessed, which is something that can (and is) being discussed. But I don't think it's worth mincing words over what's happening, especially given that it's a standard (and non-partisan) use of the phrase "book ban" in the US.

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116. mbg721+qE1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 15:36:31
>>TheCap+iF
The US is a highly divided society in which schools and teachers are still given the mandate to act in loco parentis. It's not surprising that there's some conflict there.
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117. woodru+rE1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 15:36:32
>>lelant+mI
I'm not talking about showing anything to anyone. I said that I checked out books that were significantly more "adult" when I was an adolescent, and I appreciated the ability to do so.

We're also not talking about pornography. None of the material here fails the Miller test.

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118. woodru+tG1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 15:50:21
>>imgabe+CK
School libraries are filled with comic books, and they are popular.

Nobody is talking about pornography; not everything that contains sex or violence is pornographic in nature (much less obscene).

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119. woodru+jI1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 16:03:52
>>mattma+oF
We have adjectives for this: a possession ban, a sales ban, a distribution ban, and so forth.
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120. Timon3+zI1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 16:05:37
>>vxNsr+Qx1
It's always "about the children", until it suddenly isn't. It was "about the children" when conservatives were attacking gender-affirming care, until suddenly laws were introduced to ban it for everyone. It was "about the children" when conservatives attacked drag shows, until suddenly laws were introduced to ban it in public for everyone. Why is it going to be different this time?
replies(1): >>vxNsr+z53
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121. woodru+TI1[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 16:07:34
>>george+FR
"Content regulation" is a pretty painful euphemism from "you, librarian, are forbidden from placing this book on your shelves."
replies(1): >>george+Sne
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122. jscipi+V12[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 18:11:34
>>crote+gu
I don’t understand it is the school’s job to provide a well-rounded education for students. Classics, freedom, and family values are bedrocks of civilization, “LGBTQIA+” and “Diverse voices” destroy, undermine, and subvert civilization and ought to be banned from school libraries and curriculum for the benefit of society.
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123. jscipi+m22[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 18:13:40
>>saghm+rx
Because adults are still freely able to access the books, while children need protection from hate-filled ideas like Communism.
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124. soulof+Hj2[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 20:04:46
>>regula+qj1
Marquis de Sade would beg to differ.
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125. cassac+lE2[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 22:21:28
>>gdy+3s
That’s an interesting take... Like, you can write any book you want using the English language, as long as you use Kanji to write it down? You wouldn’t consider that a problem?

But regardless you are only reinforcing the point that it was a real ban. The fact that they were banned and the books they didn’t want banned were encouraged really only continues to make my case.

replies(1): >>gdy+vL3
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126. cassac+PE2[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 22:25:24
>>gdy+j71
The only thing important part is “these books are banned” and “these books are encouraged.” That you don’t care about the specifics says more about you than the ban.
replies(1): >>gdy+WJ3
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127. jojoba+KK2[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-29 23:09:20
>>aidenn+Su1
Well your trust is misplaced.

https://www.kcrg.com/2023/05/19/this-book-is-gay-iowas-loomi...

replies(1): >>aidenn+KD4
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128. pas+BU2[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 00:29:31
>>lelant+3p1
> Do you also think that teaching of sex ed should include videos from pornhub?

In general it seems completely okay to include the discussion of porn in sex ed, and thus to show actual porn in sex ed.

It might make sense show it separately to boys and girls, mostly because boys are behind in development (on average), so the discussion of it should be different, but also because of the expected questions, etc.

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129. smsm42+3X2[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 00:50:12
>>woodru+mD1
Do you genuinely don't see the difference between 56 copies and zero copies, or just low effort trolling?
replies(1): >>woodru+k03
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130. woodru+k03[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 01:22:56
>>smsm42+3X2
The point was that curation is trivially not doctrinal. Doctrinal censorship might masquerade as curation, but curation itself is a normal part of running a useful library.

There are many reasons to have no copies of a book, with the simplest being that nobody has requested it yet. Framing that as “banning” is ridiculous, since it falsely implies a doctrinal intent where only ignorance or concern for stated demands exists.

replies(1): >>smsm42+lc3
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131. vxNsr+z53[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 02:19:19
>>Timon3+zI1
Please point to the laws that target adults?

I’d prefer if you could point to the actual text in the law, not some sensationalized headline.

replies(1): >>Timon3+Ty3
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132. smsm42+lc3[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 03:42:47
>>woodru+k03
> The point was that curation is trivially not doctrinal.

What you said is not curation, it's just managing the stock. Having 57 copies or 56 copies does not substantially alter availavbility. If somebody removed all copies of Atkins books, because "nobody needs them anymore" - then yes, this would be a doctrinal decision. Admittedly, since diets (for some reason) aren't part of culture wars (yet?), not a very controversial or scandalous one, but if some Atkins die-hards occupied a political position, or, in the contrary, Atkins were declared racist for some reason, it could become one.

> There are many reasons to have no copies of a book, with the simplest being that nobody has requested it yet

But how I can "request" a book that isn't in the library? Most libraries I've used do not have this function, not at least any that I could locate as a regular patron. On the contrary, I am reasonably sure most of the books featured on my local library's home page, aren't there because some patron came to them and asked for this specific book, which previously wasn't part of the collection and wouldn't be unless specifically requested (in fact, again, I know no way of doing this). Looking at their published collection developing policy I see (among others):

Provide a diverse and inclusive collection that contains content by and about a wide array of people and cultures

Consider the appropriateness to scope of the collection as it is developed

Content created by and representative of marginalized and underrepresented groups

Attention of critics, reviewers, awards and public

Suitability for intended audience

Literary or stylistic quality

Tell me these are non-doctrinal criteria. Of course they are - one's high quality suitable inclusive book is another's offensive bigoted trash. Again, it's about who has the power to make such decisions. Of course, the librarians, seeing themselves as The Experts (TM) would claim exclusive right to make such decisions on behalf of people paying for their library. But are they entitled to that, absent any control and supervision?

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133. Timon3+Ty3[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 08:05:59
>>vxNsr+z53
One example is this Texas house bill: https://capitol.texas.gov/BillLookup/History.aspx?LegSess=88...

Axios puts it nicely: it "states that a health professional who provides gender-affirming care to a trans person under 26 — or even refers a patient to another provider — could be sentenced to jail and lose their medical license."

Is this sufficient, or do you need more?

replies(1): >>vxNsr+Vt5
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134. gdy+WJ3[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 09:52:38
>>cassac+PE2
It looks like I do care about specifics and you care only about 'important part'.
replies(1): >>george+ioe
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135. gdy+vL3[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 10:07:22
>>cassac+lE2
"Like, you can write any book you want using the English language, as long as you use Kanji to write it down? You wouldn’t consider that a problem?"

Right now Kazakhstan is transitioning from Cyrillic to Latin alphabet. This year children will be taught only Latin letters and they won't be able to read the texts in Kazakh language written in Cyrillic in the last 80 years.

Do you consider this a problem?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazakh_alphabets#Latin_script

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136. aidenn+KD4[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 16:01:18
>>jojoba+KK2
I'm not sure what your point is (or if you read my comment correctly). I definitely think that letting librarians make the decision is better than a law that bans all books with depictions of sex from all grades. I have read this specific book and I would have been on the side of allowing it in high-schools, but not junior highs. However, I can see how a reasonable person would disagree with me, and the most prurient parts of chapter 9 are no more titillating than my junior high sex-education class, which I recall as being less titillating than looking at pictures of topless women in National Geographic, and that was definitely available in the library.
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137. vxNsr+Vt5[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-30 19:48:35
>>Timon3+Ty3
So, two things:

1) that bill was introduced in march and went nowhere... so not really anything at all, tons of lawmakers push pie-in-the-sky legistation bec they're nuts but aside from hitting the committee, it goes nowhere bec it's nuts.

2) This appears to limit it to under 26, and while yes, theoretically that is an adult, it's not all adults and is really meant to prevent people who don't have fully developed brains from making life altering decisions. Its the same reason most doctors will refuse to perform hysterectomies on women under the age of 30. kids and young adults make really dumb decisions that they often regret for the rest of their lives... why not protect them from that, especially at a time when there is a clear social contagion.

replies(1): >>Timon3+L67
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138. mattma+MD6[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-31 03:21:52
>>rtpg+nM
I’m guessing books aren’t really popular among the kids these days anyway. It’s really just a political fight now.

The people complaining about banning are being either intentionally alarmist (if they understand what’s going on) or knee-jerk reactionary. It’s the exact same as when the religious people are mad the state mandates we teach evolution.

School districts and states have to select what kids learn, since we have finite time and resources to reach them, in the same way that libraries have to choose which books occupy finite shelf space.

I don’t agree with a lot of the decisions, but people are acting like it’s some right wing fascism every time they remove Henry Miller a library.

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139. Timon3+L67[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-31 08:34:35
>>vxNsr+Vt5
Look at where we are right now: I showed you that conservative politicians introduced legislation to ban transitioning for some adults. Where before the point was "it's just in schools and with kids", now it's suddenly "why not protect them from social contagion". Can't you at least keep your principles for 3-4 comments before dropping them?
replies(1): >>vxNsr+Ii8
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140. vxNsr+Ii8[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-31 16:50:49
>>Timon3+L67
Protect children from social contagion. But again. It not a passed law. It’s simply something an eccentric no name lawmaker in Texas proposed. It doesn’t appear to have made it out of committee… should we judge the entire Democratic Party based on the crazy proposals of the socialists who are under their umbrella?

There was a dem lawmaker who wanted to add an amendment to some bill in Montana that removed language about pedophilia… should we assume that all democrats are propedophilia now?

replies(1): >>Timon3+SI8
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141. Timon3+SI8[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-05-31 18:39:51
>>vxNsr+Ii8
> Protect children from social contagion.

And there you go again - "children", except it's "children and adults"! In what other context are people treated as children while 25?

And I asked whether this was enough or not, because (naturally) this is not the only example. Here is a current bill from Florida which "prohibits health insurance policy & health maintenance contract from providing coverage for gender clinical interventions": https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2023/1421/ByVersion

This is in addition to the stronger and more inflammatory language that conservatives are using these days, including the reaction to any corporate interaction with transgender individuals (Budlight etc.)

And one last point I want to get back to:

> social contagion

You believe this to be a social contagion. This is not what current scientific studies indicate, and it is definitely not broadly accepted. You putting it this way says a lot about you.

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142. george+Sne[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-06-02 11:50:31
>>woodru+TI1
At least the students or their parents can buy it if they so choose because it's not banned from being sold.
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143. george+ioe[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-06-02 11:53:28
>>gdy+WJ3
I.e they only care about their viewpoint and no one else's
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