Kendi says that discrimination against whites (and probably Asians) is a necessary component of anti-racism. This is illiberal and racist.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a liberal Democrat. And if you were more liberal (like me) you would have better critical thinking skills to be able to link these subjects. But since you don't, I'll just tell you. Our kids' school used BOOKS by a known racist to try to indoctrinate then into believing that racism against people who look like them is good. That book, Kendi's Stamped, has no place in schools.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer a government (schools) that doesn't try to convince my kids that racism against them is good which is what our kid's middle school did a few years ago.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I am not afraid for my kids to hear different viewpoints. That is the essence of America.
You seem to prefer a Russian style government.
This topic is about book banning. I'm not sure how the above comment relates. I would venture to guess that it's a confused RWNJ that can't stay on topic.
The only people pushing the "Kendi is a racist" line are racists. It's a silly, reductive argument.
You'd be more credible if you could posit a more intelligent critique of the book.
So you'd be OK with a book that said black people are lazy and prone to committing crime and the school giving lessons reinforcing that theme?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
If that is your take on the book then talk to your kid about it and have them bring up that viewpoint in class and ask to discuss it. I've read books whose viewpoints I disagree with. It didn't harm me.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a liberal Democrat. And if you were more liberal (like me) you would have better critical thinking skills to be able to link these subjects. But since you don't, I'll just tell you. Our kids' school used BOOKS by a known racist to try to indoctrinate then into believing that racism against people who look like them is good. That book, Kendi's Stamped, has no place in schools.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer a government (schools) that doesn't try to convince my kids that racism against them is good which is what our kid's middle school did a few years ago.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I am not afraid for my kids to hear different viewpoints. That is the essence of America.
You seem to prefer a Russian style government.
This topic is about book banning. I'm not sure how the above comment relates. I would venture to guess that it's a confused RWNJ that can't stay on topic.
Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I'm a liberal Democrat. And if you were more liberal (like me) you would have better critical thinking skills to be able to link these subjects. But since you don't, I'll just tell you. Our kids' school used BOOKS by a known racist to try to indoctrinate then into believing that racism against people who look like them is good. That book, Kendi's Stamped, has no place in schools.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer a government (schools) that doesn't try to convince my kids that racism against them is good which is what our kid's middle school did a few years ago.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I am not afraid for my kids to hear different viewpoints. That is the essence of America.
You seem to prefer a Russian style government.
This topic is about book banning. I'm not sure how the above comment relates. I would venture to guess that it's a confused RWNJ that can't stay on topic.
Anonymous wrote:I prefer a government (schools) that doesn't try to convince my kids that racism against them is good which is what our kid's middle school did a few years ago.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I am not afraid for my kids to hear different viewpoints. That is the essence of America.
You seem to prefer a Russian style government.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I am not afraid for my kids to hear different viewpoints. That is the essence of America.
So you'd be OK with a teacher teaching that black people steal, that Jews are stingy, or that Hispanics are lazy?
You seem to prefer a Russian style government.
I prefer a government (schools) that doesn't try to convince my kids that racism against them is good which is what our kid's middle school did a few years ago.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I am not afraid for my kids to hear different viewpoints. That is the essence of America.
You seem to prefer a Russian style government.
Anonymous wrote:The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
Guaranteed that you believe CrT iS oNlY TaUgHt iN lAw ScHoOl.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
Guaranteed that pp is unfamiliar with the concept of reading for fun. She has no problem with books being banned because she doesn’t read.
Who:s to say who has an agenda?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
I want the process to be very long and difficult to remove a book from a library.
And certainly not a few parents with an agenda to push.
The solution to racism isn't more racism but that's exactly what Kendi pushes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
OmG you are afraid of your kids reading Stamped? It is a high school AP book.
Certainly not porn. But it does examine racism. And you are afraid of THAT?
I agree it's a slippery slope but let's say a school decided to teach Mein Kampf from a positive viewpoint. Would you support that? I certainly wouldn't.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:P.S. Our school system also forces kids to read LGBTQ books and has removed opt-outs. As a liberal, I don't care if my kids read these books but, also as a liberal, I understand that many people are far more conservative than I am and I support their right to have the final say in what their kids may or may not learn. It is this lack of understanding that makes many (most?) progressives illiberal.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
Our school forces kids to read books with hetero love stories. Oh no…
Most kids don’t give a crap. Are parents afraid their kids will turn gay? Why not expose kids to different lifestyles? Should they be in a cocoon forever?
+1
I was forced to read Romeo and Juliet which is about teen lovers! Who kill themselves!
And our school forces kids to read books involving people of different races and ethnicities and religions. Is PP saying parents should be able to say opt my kid out of reading anything about black people? Or Jewish people? Should a parent who is offended by a religion different than their own be able to opt kids out of reading a book that involves someone from that religion?
Or perhaps PP is saying we need to do away with a curriculum that has students all reading and discussing the same book. I think that must be it. Is that what you want, PP? Because you can’t just target one group and say any books with characters from this group cannot be a required part of the curriculum. If that’s what you want to do, you have to say no book can be required and then rethink your English curriculum all together And history as well. Parents should be able to opt kids out of reading history books that don’t conform to the parents world view, do you agree with that?
Come to think of it maybe parents should just take over their kids education all together and home school.
Why? Do you think it's bad too?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.
Name the school.
This didn’t happen. You are lying.
Anonymous wrote:I want to agree with you. But our kids' school librarian (a far-leftist) convinced the principal to do a school-wide read of Kendi's Stamped and give lessons on Kendi's brand of anti-racism. If you don't know Kendi, he is a horrible racist who says that racial discrimination is a necessary component of anti-racism. The librarian and principal said they would make the entire school anti-racist in this mold. This is insane, illiberal, and racist. So my blank check for schools and librarians was cased that year. I'm now keeping an eye on everyone who teaches my kids. And I support that right for everyone. I suppose the door is open for abuse but that's more on the school administration's inability to deal with removal requests. The alternative you provide leaves the door open for lunatics with an agenda to go unchecked.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, what do you want the process to be? Do you want 4 or 5 people to have to file the same complaint against the same book?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you don't want anyone to be able to question a book ina school library. Got it. And I don't have a problem with any of the books you mentioned. There are some authors that promote racism like Kendi and Jewell, so their books probably don't belong in schools either but I have less of an issue with those.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what do you think the process should be?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ah, thank you. So the removal is temporary until reviewed by the school district. Sounds good. The way to prevent this would be for the school district to review all books before putting them in the shelves.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That sounds false. Can you quote the statute?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know of anyplace in the US where someone other then the superintendent can unilaterally remove a book from school circulation. Was that the case here?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you vote a single example of a parent walking into a school and unilaterally taking books out of a library? If not, your simply spouting nonsense. And I don't know about anyone else here, but I'm a Democrat. As such, I don't watch much Fox News.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean the way leftists misrepresent the curation of school library collections as "book bans?"Anonymous wrote:
Wow, that’s a terribly bad faith presentation. https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/possible-teach-in-at-oakland-schools-would-present-palestinian-perspective-to-students/
Here’s the lesson plan linked via the above article. It appears to teach what Senator Wiener claims about as much as the Florida book bans are about porn. https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1yHuTs87SSfWaM6qeM6y3RXgEOzjiKF_c75fLMN-2fZk/mobilebasic#h.pg1gql1c1zfc
I’m so sick of people misrepresenting arguments and pretending to take the high road.
Curation should be done librarians for the benefit of the schoolchildren - not Fox News addled nincompoops who've never read a book on their own.
Many more examples linked in here:
Hundreds of books are usually banned by just ONE person in a community
https://action.everylibrary.org/books_are_often_banned_by_just_one_person_in_a_community
Stop embarrassing yourself. States like Florida have written laws that say any person can object to a book and have it removed from schools.
It sounds false because it's utterly preposterous, yet it's true. And easily found.
HB 1069. Specifically:
Any material that is subject to an objection on the basis of sub-sub-subparagraph b.(I) or sub-sub-subparagraph b.(II) must be removed within 5 school days of receipt of the objection and remain unavailable to students of that school until the objection is resolved.
Spoiler alert - they aren't exactly going lickety split to resolve these objections. And yes, any objection. By anyone. Using their website and filling out a form, which is the other part of the bill.
DP. Temporary until they get around to reviewing it. And they can put that effort off as long as they want. Particularly when they are inundated with thousands of requests, often by just a handful of people.
Please do tell me what is objectionable about poetry by Maya Angelou (her poetry was a staple in my high school forensics competitions in the '90), or books by Judy Blume, or biographies of Harriett Tubman, Malala Yousafzai, various civil rights leaders, etc. How about Anne Frank?
I'm the PP. I do NOT think that the process should give way to a very small handful of people (in some states, hundreds of complaints have been filed by only 2 or 3 people, who clearly have far too much time on their hands) who are then allowed to essentially hold books hostage for an indeterminate amount of time.
And, again, please instruct me as to the issues with the topics/authors I mentioned in my previous post. I'd guarantee that books about Malala or Ruby Bridges have nothing to do with porn. And Judy Blume has been in school libraries for decades. As have Toni Morrison and Maya Angelou.
That isn't what I said. Reading comprehension matters. But the process in some places right now is such that, if I file a complaint against something like "The Little Engine that Could" in X county, that title is automatically pulled from all shelves in X County Public Schools until some entity associated with the school system gets around to performing a full review of the book. That review could be tomorrow, or it could be months from now...or longer. Who knows.
One person has the power to file a complaint against absolutely any book in a school library, and that book is pulled automatically for an indeterminate amount of time, no questions asked. You...don't see a problem with that? Or are you OK with it, provided titles you prefer aren't targeted?
PP. I don't know, but I find it abhorrent that one person can have that much influence. It sets a bad precedent since, as I said, that one person could file a complaint against literally anything at all.
I'm in the "trust your local librarian" camp, sorry. I don't think they're all in the job to corrupt children. My best friend is an elementary school librarian, and I know several others, and the idea that they are corrupting young minds with filth seems quite the stretch to me.