Paul Bowers is an education journalist and blogger in South Carolina. He is a graduate of Siuth Carolina’s public schools and his children attend them. He writes here about what happened when the state banned books that made students uncomfortable, which are typically known as “divisive concepts laws.” Heaven forbid that students learn anything that would be considered controversial or divisive!
He wrote:
A most predictable outcome has arisen in South Carolina. After passing a gag order to stop the imaginary threat of “critical race theory” in schools, the state has purged a memoir about American racism from the syllabus in a high school classroom.
An outcome such as this was the obvious purpose of the teacher censorship provisos that Republican lawmakers slipped into the last two years’ state budgets, which forbid public school teachers from teaching that “an individual should feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of psychological distress on account of his race or sex,” along with a long list of other vague speech prohibitions.1
Bristow Marchant, a reporter at The State newspaper, reported on Monday that in the spring of 2022, students in an Advanced Placement Language and Composition class at Chapin High School complained to the Lexington-Richland 5 School Board after being assigned Ta-Nehisi Coates’ 2015 bestseller Between the World and Me.
“I am pretty sure a teacher talking about systemic racism is illegal in South Carolina,” one student wrote.
To be clear, it is not illegal for teachers to talk about systemic racism in South Carolina. But in a season of unhinged school board rants by the Moms for Liberty network, vague condemnations of “critical race theory” by the state education superintendent, micromanagement of classroom materials by the governor himself, and frivolous lawsuits filed by the all-white South Carolina Freedom Caucus alleging anti-white bias in schools, the unofficial state policy is to intimidate teachers into silence regardless of what the law says.
In this case, a school principal caved to pressure and censored the book. The school board caved too. If recent history is any indicator, we can expect The College Board to cave, as they did in Florida when Gov. Ron DeSantis and his allies demanded a whitewashing of the AP African American Studies curriculum. (Coates’ writing was removed there, too.)
Here in South Carolina, the teacher was left standing up for herself, writing to her district superintendent with a spirited defense of the book’s inclusion in a unit on persuasive essays. Her courage is an inspiration. We can’t abandon her to the mob.
Book bans remain massively unpopular in the United States. In a poll conducted last year by the EveryLibrary Institute, just 18% of respondents said they supported banning books on issues of race and “critical race theory.” A small, entitled minority doesn’t get veto power over what the rest of our children learn. This is a message we can take to every school board, library board, and county council where the censors choose to wield their influence.
It can be daunting to stand up to the intimidation tactics of groups like Moms for Liberty, who got their start harassing and threatening their neighbors in Florida school districts. The piles of dark money behind these groups and others like the State Freedom Caucus Network can make them seem larger and more powerful than they really are. But never forget that we outnumber them.

$24.18 via Bookshop, a perfect gift for that special school board member in your life
Ta-Nehisi Coates is a literary giant who doesn’t need someone like me to defend his bona fides, but I’ll say this anyway: The politicians who seek to ban his work are revealing a lot about themselves.
Please open the link to read the rest of Bowers’ post.

Wonderful, Mr. Bowers, and thank you!
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It is amazing that an 18% support for book bans has captured the attention of the media. The Kochs are thrilled with their investment. As my mother used to say, the bans are ‘ a tempest in a teapot.’
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Thanks to SPLC for labeling Moms for Liberty an anti-government organization. I think it has helped to take some of the wind from their sails.
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Moms for Liberty blows so much hot air that they fill their own sails.
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A small minority can make a lot of noise and do a lot of damage.
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xoxoxoxox
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All we have to do is look at books listed on Amazon to discover that just about every book has at least one, one star review.
In fact, when one of my books would get a “divisive review” that criticized the story for something that never happened in the book, I’d go look at books from my favorite authors and they all had one star divisive reviews. That way, I didn’t feel like I was the only target for a troll.
DeSantis is a fascist troll. He is not capable of being anything else. so he empowers all the other fascist trolls with laws like this.
Using “divisive concepts laws” to ban books, means there will be no books left once all the one-star divisive reviews are taken into account, even if there is only one of them for a book. A book could have 10,000, 5-star reviews and one, divisive one star review and end up being banned under the leadership of fascist trollish bully and thug like DeSantis.
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“Fascist Moms Against Freedom of Expression [FMAFIA]” the 1st Amendment is the fitting title for this tribe of trolls.
FMAFIA wants to burn the 1st Amendment and worship the 2nd as if it is their god.
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KKKarens
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yup
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In other news, new Harvard CAPS-Harris Poll survey results for 2024 election:
Trump 45%
Biden 39%
Unsure 15%
This after Trump was found by a jury to have committed sexual assault, after he has been indicted by a grand jury for 37 felonies for mishandling of classified information, as he is being investigated for numerous simultaneous attempts to overthrow the 2020 election.
If Biden stepped aside, Harris polls even worse.
Thoughts?
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What can one say that hasn’t been said. This is hyper-polarization.
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