Civil Liberties
Related: About this forumLGBT censorship of TX library fails
Natl Coalition Against Censorship
(from email)
** LGBT Library Censorship Effort Fails in Texas
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Hood County, Texas became the scene of a fierce battle over childrens books in the county library. The books, My Princess Boy, by Cheryl Kilodavis, and the 2015 ALA Stonewall Book Award winner This Day in June, by Gayle Pitman, came under fire in early June, when the library received 52 reconsideration forms asking for the books removal. Some even suggestednot at all satiricallyburning them.
Their main complaints: that the books promote perversion and the gay lifestyle and brainwash children. The matter went before the Library Advisory Board, which found nothing in the text of the books that was inappropriate for children. The board concluded that they met the librarys policies regarding diversity of opinion and recommended that bothremain in the collection. The librarys director, Courtney Kincaid, agreed, and sent an eloquent letter to those who filed the challenges:
American libraries are the cornerstones of our democracy. Libraries bring information and opportunity to all people, no matter their race, religion, gender, creed, or politics. For children, decisions about what books to read should be made by the people who know them best their parents.
But that wasnt enough to put the matter to bed. Mel Birdwell, the wife of a Tea Party-supported state senator, stepped into the ring and sent an email to like-minded neighbors, calling on them to contact the Commissioners Courtthe governing body of the countyand take a stand on
the indoctrination of LGBT acceptance in our childrens lives. She also named two other titles in the librarys stacks The Family Book, by Todd Parr, and the oft-challenged Heather Has Two Mommies, by Lesléa Newman as books of concern.
This forced the issue onto the July 14 Commissioners Court agenda, which allowed both sides their constitutional right to give their opinion on the matter in a public forum. And give their opinion they did for three hours (https://www.texasobserver.org/fight-over-lgbt-themed-childrens-books-heats-up-hood-county/ .
The challengers, however, were told in the end that they did not have the right to censor the books, whether it be by moving them from the childrens section to the adult section or removing them completely a fact which NCAC hammered home in a letter (http://ncac.org/incident/texas-library-battle-over-lgbt-books/ to the Hood County Judge and four commissioners, and which they were already aware thanks to county attorney Lori Kaspar.
But is the fight over? With the vitriol that weve seen, it likely isnt. Apparently the commissioners suggested that those who dont like the decision can join the Library Advisory Board which, by the way, is tasked with [s]upporting intellectual freedom and the right to access in the public library. Which should mean fighting the good fight against censorship.
Youd think that the fine people of this county would have better things to do with their time than fight to restrict their neighbors right to access information and guide their own childrens upbringing. We hear there are plenty of good books to read at the county library.
Read this story at the NCAC blog http://ncac.org/blog/lgbt-library-censorship-effort-fails-in-texas/
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randys1
(16,286 posts)if they thought they had a chance of reversing "Loving vs Virginia".
These people treat minorities, Gay and Women like shit.
bluestateguy
(44,173 posts)Likewise, if someone wanted David Duke's book censored from the library, I'd be against that too.