Another Book Ban Bill Makes Its Way To The Texas Governor’s Desk
from the people's-republic-of-Texas dept
Never give up. That’s the unofficial motto of the Republican party pretty much everywhere in the nation. No matter how many rights you violate, court decisions you lose, and public criticism you receive, always remember, you’re in the for the long haul. It is your (allegedly) God-given right to take away other people’s rights and to impose your personal morals and bigotry on everyone who has the misfortune of being a constituent.
Book ban laws are a dime a dozen these days. Texas legislators are particularly enthusiastic about limiting access to content they don’t like, so they’re not going to let loss after loss derail their plans to impose their will on the entire state.
Speaking of losses, Texas House members just took an L with a bill that would have prevented minors from accessing books deemed “sexually explicit” by the state’s censors without approval of a legal guardian. In this context, “sexually explicit” tends to mean nothing more than a book treats anyone not white and straight as an actual human being. This bill also added $10,000 fines to the mix, threatening to impoverish already underpaid librarians for providing their services as librarians.
That one is dead. Great. But others are still alive, including this one, which the bill’s author admits would end up banning classics like Romeo and Juliet, the hugely popular Lonesome Dove series, and frequent target of book ban/burns, Catcher in the Rye.
Here’s how this book ban bill plans to get around the First Amendment and other impediments to its proposed censorship of content that’s often on required reading lists for school students.
Senate Bill 13 would give school boards, not school librarians, the final say over what materials are allowed in their schools’ libraries by creating a framework for them to remove books based on complaints they receive. The final version of the bill agreed upon by lawmakers from both chambers would allow school boards to oversee book approvals and removals, or delegate the responsibility to local school advisory councils if parents in a district sign a petition allowing their creation. The House version of SB 13 required 20% of parents to sign the petition, but the version agreed upon between chambers requires only 50 parents or 10% of parents in the district, whichever is less.
Any last minute alterations to this Senate bill can probably be traced to a disappointing, disjointed decision handed down by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals last month. The Appeals Court took two swings at the case, which dealt with censorship attempts in Llano County, Texas. The second attempt was no better than the first. In the end, the Fifth Circuit said libraries (and library boards) should have final say in content curation. If they didn’t, they could (rhetorically) be forced to provide readers with access to (using the court’s example) “racist content.”
Of course, no one pushing for book bans in Texas cares about removing racist content. In fact, two of the books they were pushing to have removed were books detailing the history of racism in America. But the final call by the court says curation is up to the libraries themselves, decisions which are not made by librarians, but rather by library boards.
Which is what this bill hopes to do — allow the government to censor content it doesn’t like while pretending it’s all about libraries’ rights to curate content to better serve the public. It’s bullshit, but it’s modeled after bullshit that’s been proven to work in the Fifth Circuit.
Here’s what happened in Llano County after local politicians first tried to force the local library to remove content they didn’t personally care for:
The original library board was disbanded and reformed. The library director (Amber Milum) was prohibited from attending these meetings and forced to ask permission from the new board to purchase any new books.
The Fifth Circuit has given its blessing to local governments stacking the deck to force libraries to engage in viewpoint discrimination. This bill lowers that bar even further, allowing parents to become part of the government by elevating themselves to the position of regulators with only 50 signatures or 10% of parents in the district, whichever is less. So, if a school pushes back against censorship, those making that decision can easily be replaced by parents and others fully aligned with the ruling party’s inherent bigotry.
And there’s more to it than just stacking the deck against personal freedom. The intent of the bill’s crafters is to place many barriers between constituents and content these legislators don’t like. This bill allows the hecklers to achieve a veto with a minimum of heckling and then enjoy the result of their veto for as long as possible, even if they don’t ultimately succeed in getting books permanently removed from library shelves.
School boards will have 90 days after complaints on each book are filed to reach a decision on whether to add, keep or remove material from school bookshelves. The proposed advisory councils are only required to meet twice per school year…
Libraries and schools have to comply within 90 days. If they wish to challenge the decision made by the “advisory councils,” they will just have to wait until the next time the council convenes, which could be as long as six months after the school boards’ responses to challenges are required. Keeping content off shelves for a year is as simple as mandating it in the first session and tabling any discussion of this decision during the next session. Rinse and repeat. It makes permanent bans just as easy to accomplish as temporary removals. All council members have to do is remember to kick the can down the road during the next meeting.
Will the governor sign this bill? Given that it’s unlikely to be successfully challenged in this appellate circuit, I can’t see how he won’t. This is a censor’s dream, aided and abetted by legislative enablers and a court that can’t seem to find the willpower to act as a check against government overreach if it’s overreach performed by their preferred side of the partisan divide.
Filed Under: 1st amendment, book ban, cnesorship, free speech, libraries, school boards, texas
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Comments on “Another Book Ban Bill Makes Its Way To The Texas Governor’s Desk”
If only the bill required theses parents to fully read the books and ask them to succeed a written test, before being able to petitioning, no books would be ban.
As a texian, I can assure you that Greg Abbott will never miss a chance to pass a law creating, and/or burn unlimited amount of taxpayer moneys in defending, blatantly unconstitutional or merely inconceivably cruel regulations to service the rabid low information voter and the Republican Party.
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Anna’s Archive anyone?
Because AA is not in.thr united states they don’t have to follow American laws
Trumps 100 percent tariff on films shot outside the country is also going to backfire
I could seem studios circumventing that by licensing these offshore pirate sites to screen their films.
Sites like moviebox and the pirate bay cannot be made to pay the tariffs as none of their servers are in America
If their servers are not in America they are not subject to tariffs
That will hurt movie theaters and video stores when the studios licwnse offshore sites like moviebox and the pirate bay
I would
American laws are not enforceable in China, Sweden, Singapore and other countries where these sites are located
The owners of these sites cannot made to pay the tariffs
Re:
Would you kindly go step on a rake about 500 times and see if that reverses whatever brain damage is causing you to post this crap?
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Re: Re:
And just how are they going to enforce those tariffs on offshore iptv sites?
The offshore proprietors cannot be prosecuted in the United States for violating the tarriffs
Re: Re: Re:
You are an idiot and you deserve to get flagged by the spamfilter until your posts no longer go through.
Re:
Never mind the standard idiocy here, you also clearly have no fucking clue how tariffs work.
So, hey, where are all the “free speech warriors” who whined about “viewpoint discrimination” on Twitter and Facebook and shit? Where are the signatories of the Harper letter? Because I don’t see any of them decrying this bullshit, and given how they talk about how they’re guardians of “free speech” and “viewpoint diversity”, they should be the first people lining up to say “no” to this.
Re:
It’s almost as if they were only interested in their own freedoms and no one else’s…
Re:
Busy complaining about banh mi at Oberlin
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Most librarians are women
If any of them were my wife and got that fine I would break in to their computers and erase it then that would be the end of it
Then use one of numerous secure wiping tool erase the evidence from my computer
I mention any specific tools as at least one of them has their name sullied by one malware maker
No evidence means no CASE
Re: Why don’t you settle down before you hurt yourself.
Ima just stop you for a second.
Before any of these things that will never happen; you’d have to get laid by a consenting adult.
Re:
Most redheaded people have red hair or orange hair, depending on how the light catches it. Or it’s a different color if they dye it. Or maybe it gets grayer with old age.
If any redheaded person were my cousin’s best friend’s insurance agent, I would bench over a ton or talk to people at parties.
Then I’d eat my weight in carbs and solve world hunger.
After that, I’d use Microsoft Paint to make a graphics GUI interface for users that hacks crypto SQL modem particles.
And the feds would cry because I beat them at their own game, which is Parcheesi.
Everytime I hear the word Texas all I can think of is:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHash5takWU
Typo Timmy
Hey Tim, since you brought up issues about typos…
We are in what now?