• Re: Racist Author Jodi Picoult denounces book bans after Florida school

    From Boss Hogg@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 29 23:14:38 2023
    XPost: alt.politics.republicans, fl.politics, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 25 Jan 2022, Tritek <tritek3@gmail.com> posted some news:ssprvk$ls9s$101@news.freedyn.de:

    Only racists and terrorists would buy her books.

    According to a new report from the American Library Association, attempted
    book banning and restrictions at school and public libraries set a record
    in 2022, with more than 1,200 challenges — nearly double the total from
    2021.

    Florida passed a new law last year to review reading materials made
    available in classrooms, and the state's Martin County recently announced
    the removal of 92 books from its schools.

    Twenty of those books were written by bestselling author Jodi Picoult. She
    sat down with ABC News’ Gio Benitez and Kayna Whitworth on “GMA3” to
    discuss what happened to her books in Martin County and what she believes
    is driving book bans nationwide.

    GIO BENITEZ: You say that you've had your books banned before, but never
    20 all at once.

    JODI PICOULT: Nope.

    BENITEZ: Why do you think your books are getting banned, especially there
    in Florida?

    PICOULT: That is an excellent question. But unfortunately, in Martin
    County, Florida, and in many places in Florida, one parent can decide to
    pull a book from a shelf without even giving a reason for that. And the
    one parent who wanted to ban all 20 of my books said on her form that she
    had not read the book, she admitted to that. And she said that some of
    them were adult romance, which is really interesting because I don't write adult romance. And, in fact, half of the books she pulled do not even have
    a single kiss in them. But they do have topics like gun rights and women's reproductive health rights and gay rights and things that make—

    BENITEZ: Because all of your books are very topical. It's like what's
    happening in the moment.

    PICOULT: Yeah, so they're books that are to encourage kids to think for themselves. They're at a high school library. It's worth saying that. This
    is not an elementary school library. And the modus operandi is to get the
    books pulled off the shelves, because the process for review is very
    muddy. And so the books stay off the shelves, away from kids, until they actually manage to figure out a way to review them. There are some
    libraries in Florida, actually, school libraries, where they have not had
    any books in elementary school libraries since Christmas.

    KAYNA WHITWORTH: And you said you've had even two more pulled off the
    shelves.

    PICOULT: Yeah, just this weekend.

    WHITWORTH: This weekend. And when you're talking about adult romance, you
    say that's not what I'm writing. Even your book, “The Storyteller,” it's a novel about the Holocaust.

    PICOULT: That is correct. Yeah, that was the one that really shocked me in Martin County because it's a book about fascism and the rise of fascism
    and how ordinary people can play into that. And it felt very ironic to
    have a book about the Holocaust banned. You know, it's a story for people
    whose stories can't be told. And that's the reason that we need books like
    this on the shelf.

    BENITEZ: So I want to show this moment from last week. This was at a
    Martin County school board meeting. And this is a 100-year-old World War
    II widow, and she spoke out against these book bans. OK. The moment went
    viral. So let's go ahead and take a look at that.

    100-year-old WWII widow: "One of the freedoms that the Nazis crushed was
    the freedom to read the books they banned. They stopped the free press,
    banned and burned books. The freedom to read, which is protected by the
    First Amendment, is our essential right and duty of our democracy."

    BENITEZ: It is just chilling to hear that. Jodi, what is your reaction
    when you hear that?

    PICOULT: That I wish she didn't have to fight this battle, that we
    shouldn't have to relive history all over again, that it's OK for a parent
    to decide whether or not a book is appropriate for their own child, but
    it's not appropriate for that same parent to make the decision for your
    child.

    WHITWORTH: Right. You call that a colossal problem.

    PICOULT: It is a colossal problem.

    WHITWORTH: Individual parenting and individual family decisions that need
    to be made here.

    PICOULT: Exactly.

    WHITWORTH: Especially at a time when we're setting record for book bans.
    So keep this in mind. There's a new report from the American Library Association. Attempted book banning and restrictions at school and public libraries actually set a record in 2022, with more than 1,200 challenges.
    So to put that in perspective for you, it's nearly double the total from
    2021. So what do you think is driving this nationwide idea?

    PICOULT: I think it is a small, very vocal group of people who are
    speaking out. The vast majority of folks in this country know that we
    should not be banning books, that we should not be restricting what kids
    are reading. You know, especially at a high school level. I think that unfortunately, the minority is much louder than the majority. And so we
    all really need to take a stand. You can't listen to the politicians when
    they say, “These aren't bans, it's a hoax.” I'm an author. Twenty of my
    books were pulled off the shelf in one particular school district. That is
    not a hoax. That is a ban. And it's really important that right now we all speak out against this because we've seen historically what happens when
    we do not.

    WHITWORTH: And as Gio said, you know, your books are always grounded in
    topical information. But also from my experience in reading your books,
    they're grounded in research.

    PICOULT: Yes.

    WHITWORTH: And so it is a fantastic learning tool.

    BENITEZ: Just stop writing all those romance novels.

    PICOULT: Trust me, I'm OK.

    WHITWORTH: Well, thank you so much for joining us. And her latest book, by
    the way, “Mad Honey,” is available now. Bestselling author Jodi Picoult,
    thank you so much for joining us.

    PICOULT: Thank you for having me. I really appreciate it. Thank you.

    BENITEZ: Thank you.

    <https://abcnews.go.com/US/author-jodi-picoult-denounces-book-bans-after- florida/story?id=98151365>

    Her books are worth asswipe.

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