When Ron DeSantis launched his candidacy on Twitter, he scoffed at the notion that schools were banning books in Florida. That alone should disqualify him, based on what we have seen, heard and read about the state’s encouragement of banning books that refer to gays or racism. A complaint by a single parent is sufficient to get a book removed from the school library. Most recently, a parent at an elementary school complained about Amanda Gorman’s poem “The Hill We Climb,” which she read at President Biden’s inauguration. The poem is now available to middle school children, but not to those in the elementary school.
The Miami Herald published this editorial about the phenomenon that DeSantis says is non-existent, a hoax.
Perhaps it’s because of how Amanda Gorman alluded to the Jan. 6 attack in her famous poem, finished the night after rioters stormed the U.S. Capitol: “We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation rather than share it.”
Or maybe she wrote too bluntly about race and the legacy of slavery:
“We, the successors of a country and a time where a skinny Black girl descended from slaves and raised by a single mother can dream of becoming president, only to find herself reciting for one.”
Gorman, the youngest inaugural poet in U.S. history, read “The Hill We Climb” at President Joe Biden’s inauguration, watched by about 40 million people. She wrote the poem so “that all young people could see themselves in a historical moment,” she posted on Twitter Tuesday.
But Gorman’s poem is now deemed not age appropriate, one of four library titles Bob Graham Education Center banned, following a parent’s complaint, for elementary school students, the Herald reported. The books are now available only for middle-schoolers at the public school in Miami Lakes, even though some of them were written for younger children.
The school committee that reviewed the material didn’t offer an explanation for its decision. We’re left to wonder: What in the children’s illustrated book “The ABCs of Black History,” written for children ages 5 and up, made it so inappropriate?
Perhaps it was the mention of iconic author James Baldwin’s sexual orientation: “And he was a gay man who believed that when it comes to love, you should ‘go the way your blood beats.” Or the mention of the Little Rock Nine, the “first Black children in all-white schools,” or the Black Panther movement. Or were the colorful drawings of Black female icons like Michelle Obama and Toni Morrison — described as “ queens”— too much?
One thing is clear: Books by Black authors — and about the Black American experience — make up three of the four titles deemed inappropriate for young children at Bob Graham Education Center. The other one, “Cuban Kids,” uses photos to describe the lives of children in Cuba in the early 2000s and how different or similar they are to Americans, according to the author’s homepage. Learning about the lives of their counterparts in a socialist country — including how they got around paper shortages — is sure to turn our kids into communists.
We knew that the movement to “sanitize” school libraries that Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Legislature unleashed would eventually catch up with Miami-Dade. Our melting pot, after all, might not be so different from Escambia County in the Panhandle, whose school board has been sued for removing books about race and LGBTQ topics.
Florida’s laws have emboldened parents and activists like Moms for Liberty to challenge materials dealing with these topics. Most recently, DeSantis signed a bill that empowers one person to file a complaint and ban a book, at least temporarily, while a district reviews it. Parents not satisfied with how a district ruled on the challenge can appeal to the state. That is bound to make schools acquiesce to offended parents.
The result, as Gorman wrote on Twitter after her poem was restricted, is that “most of the forbidden works are by authors who have struggled for generations to get on bookshelves.”
Elementary students were not required to read Gorman’s work or any of the challenged titles. These were options at Bob Graham Education Center’s library. Those options also should be available for the children of all parents, not only those offended by certain content or groups skimming books to find any remote reference to race or LGBTQ issues.
“Love to Langston” was written at a second-grade reading level but no longer is accessible to second-graders at Bob Graham. The illustrated biography of Harlem Renaissancewriter Langston Hughes describes his own elementary school experience, tainted by racism, in the early 1900s:
“In Topeka, Kansas the teacher makes me sit in the corner; in the last row; far away; from the other kids.”
The parent who filed the complaint said “Love to Langston” contained critical race theory, “indirect hate messages,” gender ideology and indoctrination, the Herald reported. It’s unclear how.
It is curious, however, that “indoctrination” and “hate messages” seem to be flagged mostly when when Black authors write about being Black, or when LGBTQ authors write about being queer. The adults must ask themselves why that’s the case before making them inaccessible to children.

“no book banning in Florida”
dis·in·gen·u·ous. adj. insincere, characterized by pretense that something is other than as it is known to be by the person doing the pretending
e·quiv·o·ca·tion. n. the use of ambiguous language to conceal the truth or to avoid disclosure of the truth
plau·si·ble de·ni′a·bil′i·ty. n. phrase. the ability of officials or leaders to deny knowledge of or responsibility for actions committed by persons acting under their authority
Empowering uneducated, cognitively challenged, knuckle-dragging white nationalist Christian fundamentalist sibling spouses to challenge and remove books from school libraries, classroom libraries, public libraries, and retail outlets and thereby determining what your kids can and cannot read is book banning at one remove, but it is still book banning. Denying it fools no one.
Fascists always do this. That’s why Orwell invented the term doublespeak.
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Disingenuous and equivocation. Such apt words to describe what people who believe in truthful discussion are confronted with these days. Those words represent barriers almost impossible to hurdle without a determined, active effort to call them out and marginalize those who speech is riddled with it. Orwell saw the danger, which is real, especially with our complicit so-called liberal media.
“Oceania was at war with Eastasia. Oceania had always been at war with Eastasia”. Is that true? Just listen to those who equivocate explain how it can be interpreted in a certain that makes it true, and anyway, Biden said inflation went down 10% and it only went down 9% so both sides exaggerate.
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Does Moms for Liberty provide boilerplate language for people to use when they file complaints?
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https://momsforamerica.us/empower-moms/resources-school-board-engagement/
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Thanks. I thought this was the case.
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These folks appear to be extremely well funded.
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They are a Koch funded astro turf group. There was a whole WAPO article about it last summer.
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Parents who disagree with the banning could go to the school and demand to check out the banned books for their children. If they are denied, they might be able to go to the ACLU or similar organization and offer themselves as plaintiffs in a class action lawsuit.
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We need a lot more of this. I wish that I were young enough to lead a national movement to mobilize parents to fight back against the Nazis.
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DeSantis, Mom for Liberty, and others who want to banned “woke” literature of all kinds will be more than happy to ban literature that deals with what Columbus did to the natives when he landed on the islands on his quest to find a route to Asia, the poisoning of 200 natives by the colonists in 1623, the genocide of thousands of natives across this continent, they would ban books about the Trail of Tears, how the Spanish moved up the Rio Grande River from Mexico pillaging, raping the peaceful natives of that area, forcing them to convert to the Catholic religion, etc., etc. All this true historical information would not be available for any student to read and understand what really has happened in the country.
DeSantis and his kind would probably agree with Gen Sheridan in 1869 when he supposedly said that “The only good Indians I ever saw were dead.” He in later years denied he said those words but through his actions and those of others during that time I believe he did say it and believed it.
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Give’m an inch, they’ll take a mile: expect any such events currently in the curriculum to be challenged.
I came across this in a WaPo comment thread, am stealing it: “Moms for Illiteracy.”
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“When Ron DeSantis launched his candidacy on Twitter, he scoffed at the notion that schools were banning books in Florida.”
This, of course, is Page One of the Republican playbook: When called out for lying, deny you lied. Your minions will parrot your lie whenever they are challenged for lying, and pronounce themselves innocent, because you said so.
Republicans are little more now than minions, but without the cuteness. Like minions, they spend all their time looking for opportunities to destroy things.
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Goebbels and Stalin and Roy Cohn taught them well.
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jrstheta– Or the other typical red-state ploy: at stage 1 banning, it’s, “well we’re only doing this, that’s it!” Followed shortly by stage 2, stage 3, etc.
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DeSantis is following in Traitor Trump’s fascist footsteps when it comes to BIG LIES.
When DeSantis says “there is no book banning in Florida” the media will report it as news and that big lie will be believed by millions across the country, mostly fascist loving MAGA zombies.
The more fascist DeSantis repeats that lie, the more people will think it is the truth. It worked for Trump. It will work for DeSantis.
Still, the majority of voters will see right through that lie, ensuring another record turnout to vote in 2024 with the majority not voting for DeSantisism.
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My wife teaches 2nd reading in FL. She had to throw out all the reading class books on her shelves accumulated over 28 years. They had not been vetted is what she was told. She’s getting $500 to buy from an approved list of books for next August. She wasn’t even allowed to give the books to her students. They had to be put in the dumpster. How is that not a book ban?
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How incredibly tragic.
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That is a book ban.
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That is stomach-turning.
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Wasteful and disgusting!
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Pls see my comment at 10:56 below; I meant it regarding FL grade 2 teacher’s situation.
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So I guess Maya Angelou’s “On the Pulse of Morning” is next. Good grief!
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If the Repugnicasn nominate Trump, they will have brought their inevitable loss in 2024 upon themselves. Love him or hate him, you have to admit that DeSantis is hundreds of times smarter, and hundreds of times better educated, than Trump is. I was just listening to an interview with DeSantis. He used the word “redound.” Can you imagine the Orange Idiot, with his mangled toddlerspeak, using the word “redound”? Having any notion what that word means? Being able to wrap his tiny brain around the concept of redounding?
REPORTER: Do you think that DeSantis’s juvenile offenders education program will redound to his credit with the voters of Iowa?
DON THE CON: I don’t know. I can say, though, that you want to talk offenders we had the best offenders. Nobody had offenders like my administration. Not even close. And, of course, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was a great redounder. I met him once. A lot of people don’t know that. Black guy. The blacks. They love Trump.
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Sheesh. Just browsed Amazon re: “The ABC’s of Black History,” one of the 3 moved to middle school– though designed for ages 6-8yo. 2,422 ratings: 92% gave it 5 stars; 6% gave it 4. I’ve looked at a lot of such reviews for younger children’s books, and if there are any cranks out there, they chime in on Amazon. None here. There are a number of full-color illustrations shown at the site; none seem scary (to me).
There are just a few Amazon reviews so far for “Cuban Kids” [the other ‘dinged’ book moved to midschool despite being aimed at elemschool readers]. 2 loved it, 2 hated it for portraying a positive look at today’s Cuba. (Obviously political ratings)
“Love to Langston” wasn’t mentioned among the books in the Miami Herald article, but apparently another of those targeted to elemschool, moved to midschool. Only 23 Amazon ratings; 84% [19] 5 stars; no low ratings.
What gives in FL????
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In Florida the governor’s thought police and few right wing parents are in charge. They are pulling books if there is one parent complaint.
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A smart administrator would have arranged that parents could select from the books that they were discarding. Evidently the books hadn’t generated complaints in the prior 28 years.
Better World Books might have welcomed recent titles.
$500 won’t go too far to purchase books nowadays.
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$500 won’t go too far to purchase books nowadays.
Nope.
Across Flor-uh-duh, classroom libraries that teachers have assembled over decades are being completely gutted. Poof. Gone.
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Not even huge precedent-setting cases like Roe v. Wade have stood the test of time. So no way would the common-sense approach to books found in Island Trees v. Pico be applied in 2023.
Am thinking of demanding that the D’Aulaires Book of Greek Myths and Edith Hamilton’s Mythology be banned. Surely we don’t want students to know that Heracles and Perseus came from Zeus’ dalliances. —Or the back-story of Pasiphae & a bull to create the Minotaur. Shameful!
https://www.oyez.org/cases/1981/80-2043
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The Bible is even more licentious than the Greek myths.
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