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1. woodru+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-05-29 14:58:05
> 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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