• Re: "We're Going to Be Conservative." Official Orders Books Removed Fro

    From Bradley K. Sherman@21:1/5 to Leroy N. Soetoro on Sun Aug 28 08:05:15 2022
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, dumb.ass.democrats.america.hating.assholes, or.politics

    In article <lnsAF009694B1A206F089P2473@0.0.0.2>
    "Leroy N. Soetoro" <democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov> wrote:

    https://www.propublica.org/article/were-going-to-be-conservative-official- orders-books-removed-from-schools-targeting-titles-about-transgender-
    people

    In early January, a day before students returned from winter break, Jeremy Glenn, the superintendent of the Granbury Independent School District in North Texas, told a group of librarians he’d summoned to a district
    meeting room that he needed to speak from his heart.

    “I want to talk about our community,” Glenn said, according to a recording
    of the Jan. 10 meeting obtained and verified by NBC News, ProPublica and
    The Texas Tribune. Glenn explained that Granbury, the largest city in a county where 81% of residents voted for then-President Donald Trump in the 2020 presidential election, is “very, very conservative.”

    He noted that members of Granbury’s school board — his bosses — were also very conservative. And to any school employees who might have different political beliefs, Glenn said, “You better hide it,” adding, “Here in this community, we’re going to be conservative.”

    That’s why, he said, he needed to talk to them about some of the books available in the school district’s libraries.

    For months, conservative parents and politicians across Texas had been pressuring districts to remove from school libraries any books that
    contain explicit descriptions of sex, labeling several young adult novels
    as “pornography.” Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, called for criminal investigations into school employees who make such content available to students.

    Many of the titles targeted statewide have featured queer characters and storylines, but those calling for the books’ removal have repeatedly said they are concerned only with sex and vulgarity, not with suppressing the views of LGBTQ students and authors.

    Glenn made a similar argument during his closed-door meeting with
    librarians in Granbury, which is about an hour’s drive southwest of
    Dallas.

    “I don’t want a kid picking up a book, whether it’s about homosexuality or heterosexuality, and reading about how to hook up sexually in our
    libraries,” Glenn said.

    He also made it clear that his concerns specifically included books with LGBTQ themes, even if they do not describe sex. Those comments, according
    to legal experts, raise concerns about possible violations of the First Amendment and federal civil rights laws that protect students from discrimination based on their gender and sexuality.

    “And I’m going to take it a step further with you,” he said, according to
    the recording. “There are two genders. There’s male, and there’s female.
    And I acknowledge that there are men that think they’re women. And there
    are women that think they’re men. And again, I don’t have any issues with what people want to believe, but there’s no place for it in our
    libraries.”

    Minutes later, after someone asked whether titles on racism were
    acceptable, Glenn said books on different cultures “are great.”

    “Specifically, what we’re getting at, let’s call it what it is, and I’m cutting to the chase on a lot of this,” Glenn said. “It’s the transgender, LGBTQ and the sex — sexuality — in books. That’s what the governor has
    said that he will prosecute people for, and that’s what we’re pulling
    out.”

    Over the next two weeks, the school district embarked on one of the
    largest book removals in the country, pulling about 130 titles from
    library shelves for review. Nearly three-quarters of the removed books featured LGBTQ characters or themes, according to a ProPublica and Texas Tribune analysis. Others dealt with racism, sex ed, abortion and women’s rights.

    Two months later, a volunteer review committee voted to permanently ban
    three of the books and return the others to shelves. But that may not be
    the end of the process.

    In his recorded comments to librarians, Glenn described the review of 130 titles as the first step in a broader appraisal of library content, and a
    new policy approved by the school board later in January grants him and
    other administrators broad authority to unilaterally remove additional
    titles they deem inappropriate, with no formal review and no way for the public to easily find out what has been pulled from shelves.

    Legal, education and First Amendment experts contacted by ProPublica, NBC News and the Tribune said the audio of the superintendent, combined with
    the decision to abruptly remove books from circulation, even temporarily, raises constitutional concerns.

    Glenn’s comments also call into question the district’s commitment to fostering a safe and inclusive school environment for LGBTQ students and could be grounds for a complaint to the Department of Education’s Office
    for Civil Rights, which enforces federal anti-discrimination laws, the experts said.

    “This audio is very much evidence of anti-LGBTQ and particularly anti-
    trans discrimination,” said Kate Huddleston, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas, who reviewed the recording at the request of NBC News, ProPublica and the Tribune. “It is very much saying
    the quiet part out loud in a way that provides very significant evidence
    that book removals in the district are occurring because of anti-LGBTQ
    bias.”

    In a written statement, Glenn said the district was committed to
    supporting students of all backgrounds. And although he said the
    district’s primary focus is educating students, “the values of our
    community will always be reflected in our schools.”

    “In Granbury and across Texas we are seeing parents push back and demand elected officials put safeguards in place to protect their children from materials that serve no academic purpose, but rather push a political narrative,” Glenn said in the statement. “As a result, classrooms and libraries have turned schools into battle grounds for partisan politics.”

    None of Granbury’s school board trustees responded to messages requesting comment. District spokesperson Jeff Meador sent a statement emphasizing
    that all of the books permanently removed from shelves in Granbury are “sexually explicit and not age-appropriate” and noting that district libraries “continue to house a socially and culturally diverse collection
    of books for students to read, including books which analyze and explore LGBTQ+ issues.”

    The three books the committee voted to remove were “This Book Is Gay,” a coming out guide for LGBTQ teens by transgender author Juno Dawson that includes detailed descriptions of sex; “Out of Darkness,” by Ashley Hope Pérez, a young adult novel about a romance between a Mexican American girl and a Black boy that includes a rape scene and other mature content; and
    “We Are the Ants,” by Shaun David Hutchinson, a coming-of-age novel about
    a gay teenager that includes explicit sexual language.

    At least one member of the volunteer review committee was dissatisfied
    that only three books have been permanently removed so far, and she has started calling for a second review of the ones that have been returned.

    “There are people who want to tear down values and force theirs and then
    also force acceptance,” Monica Brown, the committee member, said in a Facebook video following the decision. Brown did not respond to a request
    for comment.

    One of the Granbury ISD employees in attendance at the Jan. 10 meeting
    with librarians said that regardless of which books are pulled from
    shelves or returned, Glenn’s comments left her afraid to display or
    purchase LGBTQ books going forward — a chilling effect that she said could limit the diversity of Granbury library catalogs for years to come. The
    staff member, who was not the source of the audio, spoke on the condition that she not be named, because she feared retaliation from the district.

    “He literally said books on trans issues have no place in a school,” she said. “It was alarming.”

    The superintendent’s comments reflect a broader national debate.
    Conservative state legislatures across the country have been considering bills to restrict the ways educators teach about gender and sexuality in schools. This month, the Florida Legislature passed the Parental Rights in Education bill, dubbed the “Don’t Say Gay” bill by its critics, which restricts or bans discussion of LGBTQ issues in the classroom.

    Conservative activists and politicians pushing these changes nationally
    say the goal is to prevent teachers from having sensitive conversations
    with students unless the parents give their consent. Some have at times conflated sex and sexual orientation, accusing educators of attempting to “groom” young children because the teachers had discussed the existence of transgender people and same-sex relationships. Opponents contend that the measures discriminate against LGBTQ students and educators and violate federal laws meant to prevent discrimination in schools.

    These changes coincide with attempts in several conservative states to
    limit the rights of transgender minors to participate in school sports and
    to access gender-affirming medical care. Last month, Abbott issued a directive — temporarily halted by a Texas judge — ordering the state’s
    child welfare agency to open abuse investigations into any reported
    instances of minors receiving such medical care, including the
    prescription of puberty blockers or hormones.

    As superintendent of a district that’s home to more than 7,400 students, Glenn is responsible for implementing and enforcing policies that ensure
    that children are not discriminated against based on their gender identity
    or sexual orientation.

    After listening to the recording of Glenn’s remarks, Lou Whiting, a
    nonbinary junior at Granbury High School, said they were outraged. Whiting and another student who’s part of the LGBTQ community said classmates at Granbury have harassed them at school, but they’ve avoided reporting the harassment because they worried administrators wouldn’t take their
    complaints seriously.

    Glenn’s comments validated those fears, Whiting said.

    “I don’t feel incredibly safe or welcomed by a large majority of the
    students at my school,” Whiting said. “I’ve been called slurs. I’ve been verbally attacked. I’ve been physically attacked. But it kind of feels
    worse when the attacks are coming from adults, from the people who are supposed to keep us safe.”

    “A Very Conservative Board”
    The meeting with librarians wasn’t the first time Glenn had publicly
    embraced socially conservative values in schools.

    In 2014, when he was superintendent at another district, he and a pair of education professors wrote a book called “Daily Devotionals for Superintendents,” which lamented the legalization of same-sex marriage and the passage of state laws “making it a crime to counsel gay young people about changing their sexual orientation.”

    In another section of the book, Glenn and his co-authors said those
    pushing for broader acceptance of “alternative lifestyles” and other
    cultural changes are doing so through the indoctrination of children in schools, as “was done by Hitler when he took over Germany.” They warned
    that school superintendents will face pressure to “recognize the demands
    of alternative life-style adults,” adding, “As a superintendent, you will have to be strong and courageous to stand against the onslaught of the
    enemy. Your country and your children’s future are at stake.”

    Glenn, who arrived at Granbury ISD in 2018 following stints leading two
    other Texas districts, said he couldn’t recall if he wrote those specific passages, but he acknowledged co-authoring the book, adding, “It’s fair to say I am aware of its content.”

    In November, voters in Granbury elected a pair of school board members
    who, while campaigning, also raised concerns about the spread of LGBTQ- affirming curricula in schools. Melanie Graft rose to local prominence
    after leading a conservative movement in 2015 to remove a pair of LGBTQ- themed picture books from the children’s section at Granbury’s public library. She ran alongside Courtney Gore, the co-host of a local far-right internet talk show.

    As candidates, the women promised to stop the “indoctrination” of students and rid the district of educational materials they said promote LGBTQ ideology or what they referred to as critical race theory, a university- level academic framework based on the idea that racism is embedded in U.S. legal and other structures.

    In the weeks after Graft’s and Gore’s election victories, Glenn began
    asking district administrators about several books, including “This Book
    Is Gay,” that an unnamed school board member had found on the district’s online card catalog, according to text messages obtained by a parent
    through an open records request and shared with the news organizations.

    The text messages included screenshots of eight titles, all of which deal with LGBTQ topics, with the keyword search terms “gay,” “trans” and
    “gender” highlighted in some of the book descriptions.

    In a December text message, Glenn asked an administrator in charge of overseeing district libraries if any of the books were physically on
    shelves and available to students. Librarians needed to have a sense of urgency in responding to community complaints about books, Glenn wrote, “otherwise this will consume us in the spring.”

    The list comprised titles that were aimed at helping transgender and LGBTQ teens navigate life and that told teen love stories through an LGBTQ lens,
    as well as an LGBTQ-themed fairy tale. Although some of the books included descriptions of sex, others did not.

    Glenn referred to concerns from a board member during his Jan. 10 meeting with librarians.

    “We do have a very conservative board,” Glenn said, according to the recording. “They are elected, and recently more conservative. And so
    that’s what our community is. That’s what our job is.”

    NBC News, ProPublica and the Tribune spoke to three Granbury teachers who were not present at the Jan. 10 meeting but who have listened to the recording and said they were troubled by Glenn’s remarks. The teachers
    said they’ve seen additional library books being pulled from district
    shelves — mostly young adult books containing talk of sex — that haven’t
    been subject to a formal review, raising concerns among staff members that content is being eliminated with no oversight from the public.

    The teachers said they feared retribution and spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing Glenn’s comments advising educators against sharing opinions that don’t align with the conservative views of district leaders.

    “I was disturbed that our superintendent would say those things,” one of
    the teachers said, referring to Glenn’s comments about there being no
    place for transgender and LGBTQ content in school libraries.

    Schools have wide latitude to remove library books that are deemed age- inappropriate or “pervasively vulgar.” But free speech advocates say Republican politicians and school districts have applied an overly broad definition to the phrase in recent months, mislabeling coming-of-age
    stories and sex-ed books as pornography.

    “The most striking feature of the current crop of book challenges is this effort to mischaracterize literature and sexual education resources, which clearly have educational value, and stigmatizing them by claiming that
    they violate obscenity statutes,” said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, director of the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom.

    Under a 40-year-old U.S. Supreme Court legal decision, Island Trees School District v. Pico, a public school system can’t remove a book because
    school board members or administrators disagree with its viewpoints or
    ideas, including its discussion of LGBTQ identities.

    The 1982 case dealt with the removal of books deemed “anti-American” and “anti-Christian” by a school district in Levittown, New York. At the time,
    a school board member testified that he believed it was his duty to make decisions for the school district that reflected the community’s
    conservative values. Those comments were echoed decades later in the
    Granbury superintendent’s directive to librarians.

    “If the evidence shows that the motivation for a book removal is to keep these ideas from getting to children, then the courts are very skeptical,” said North Carolina attorney Neal Ramee, who advises school districts on constitutional issues. “That could potentially lead to a finding of a violation of the First Amendment.”

    Justin Driver, a Yale Law School professor, former clerk for two Supreme Court justices and author of “The Schoolhouse Gate,” which analyzes legal battles over education, said the similarities between the Pico case and
    the Granbury situation are “striking and overwhelming.” As a result, he
    said, Glenn’s statements to librarians “would seem to place the school district in an unenviable litigating position.”

    Yet because the Pico case was a divided opinion, some legal scholars said
    the issue is ripe for another appearance in front of the Supreme Court.

    LGBTQ Students Push Back
    On Jan. 11, a day after Glenn’s meeting with librarians, Kennedy Tackett,
    a 17-year-old senior at Granbury High School, was working in a student-run store on campus when one of her friends approached, looking upset.

    The friend had been volunteering in the school library and noticed several boxes filled with books that had been taken off of shelves.

    “She said, ‘Kennedy, a lot of them look like they’re LGBTQ,’” said
    Tackett, who is bisexual. “And so I immediately texted my parents, and I
    was like, ‘Hey, have y’all heard about this?’”

    In the days that followed, Tackett and her father, a former school board trustee who has criticized the school district’s conservative shift, used public records requests to unearth what the district hadn’t shared
    publicly: the list of more than 130 books that librarians had been
    directed to immediately remove from shelves. (The records also included
    the December text messages about the eight LGBTQ books.)

    Some of the 130 books had no sexual content whatsoever, including “George”
    by Alex Gino, a book meant for children in elementary school that tells
    the story of a transgender child who’s coming to terms with her gender identity.

    Most of the books appeared to come from a larger list of 850 titles
    dealing with racism, sex and LGBTQ themes that had been compiled by state Rep. Matt Krause. The Republican lawmaker said in a letter sent to
    districts across Texas that the books might violate a new state law that restricts the ways teachers can talk about “currently controversial”
    issues, including racism and sexuality. Krause did not respond to a
    request for comment.

    Tackett created an online petition calling on the district to return the books to shelves, quickly drawing more than 600 signatures. A couple of
    weeks later, on Jan. 24, she and several other LGBTQ students showed up at
    a meeting of the Granbury ISD board of trustees and called on the district
    to reverse course.

    Instead, the board voted to amend a district policy that required
    contested books to remain on shelves while a committee reviewed them,
    giving administrators more discretion to remove titles that they deem to
    lack “educational suitability.”

    “The job of the superintendent and the school board is not only to protect the students in this district, but to make them feel like they have a
    place in this community,” Tackett told the board during public comments
    prior to the vote. “But I gotta tell you, from what I’ve seen so far, you
    are failing at your job.”

    The comments, which would later go viral and be broadcast on national news reports, drew a rebuke from Glenn during the meeting. Glenn announced that the district had previously removed five books unrelated to LGBTQ themes
    that were written by Abbi Glines, an author known for including explicit
    sex scenes that push the boundaries of young adult fiction.

    “??Let’s not misrepresent things. We’re not taking Shakespeare or
    Hemingway off the shelves,” Glenn said, at one point referring to those
    who frequently speak out at school board meetings as “radicals” and emphasizing that the district was focused on sexually explicit content. “We’re not going and grabbing every socially, culturally or religiously diverse book and pulling them. That’s absurd. And the people that are
    saying that are gaslighters, and it’s designed to incite division.”

    Those comments gave Whiting, the nonbinary Granbury junior, an idea: Using Granbury’s G logo, Whiting designed a T-shirt with the words “Radical Gaslighter” and created a page where students could buy them. They ended
    up selling nearly 250 to people all over the country, raising more than $2,000 for the American Library Association’s Freedom to Read Foundation.

    By early February, word began to spread through Granbury that someone had recorded Glenn’s comments to librarians. The employee who’d made the recording did not post it publicly or share it with reporters, but soon a copy of it was circulating among a small group of educators and community activists.

    That month, the ACLU of Texas sent a letter to Granbury calling on the district to apologize for the book removals and to release a statement affirming its commitment to “LGBTQ+ and racial inclusivity.” That was
    before Huddleston, the ACLU lawyer, reviewed the recording at the request
    of reporters.

    Huddleston said the recorded comments also raise serious questions about
    what else has been said behind closed doors, not just in Granbury, but
    also in other districts where books are being banned.

    “This is very strong evidence of what is happening in the background,” she said. “But it also raises a host of questions about all the other
    districts in Texas where this is happening and we don’t have audio.”

    Tackett, the Granbury senior, cried after listening to the recording of Glenn’s remarks. She thought of his public comments accusing critics of trying to deceive the public about the district’s motivations for removing and reviewing books. If anyone was gaslighting the community, Tackett
    said, it was him.

    “It’s unsettling,” she said. “You can’t just turn your back on the
    students you’re supposed to be protecting.”

    Take all the nuts promoting LGBTQ+ out back behind the
    schoolhouse and beat their skulls in with bookshelves.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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