This article in The Washington Post by Hanna Natanson and Anymita Kaye provides a national review of states that are trying to stop book censorship and protect librarians and states that not only ban books for sexual and racial content but threaten jail time for librarians who dispense such books. The state-by-state descriptions on the legal status of librarians is valuable. Open the link if you can to see where your state ranks and what actions it is taking to protect or threaten librarians.
Sam Lee, a leader of the Connecticut Library Association, heads to work these days torn between hope and fear.
She’s encouraged because legislators in her state proposed a bill this year making it harder for school boards to ban library books. But she’s fearful because Connecticut, like America, is seeing a sustained surge in book challenges — and she wonders if objectors will see the legislation as a reason to file more complaints.
“I would like to be optimistic,” Lee said. “But having been in my position for the last few years … I don’t know, it really feels like it’s been forever. And I am worried the book banners are just going to be emboldened.”
The bill in Connecticut, pending before an education committee, is one of a raft of measures advancing nationwide that seek to do things like prohibit book bans or forbid the harassment of school and public librarians — the first such wave in the country, said John Chrastka, director of library advocacy group EveryLibrary.
Legislators in 22 mostly blue states have proposed 57 such bills so far this year, and two have become law, according to a Washington Post analysis of state legislative databases and an EveryLibrary legislative tracker.
But the library-friendly measures are being outpaced by bills in mostly red states that aim to restrict which books libraries can offer and threaten librarians with prison or thousands in fines for handing out “obscene” or “harmful” titles. At least 27 states are considering 100 such bills this year, three of which have become law, The Post found. That adds to nearly a dozen similar measures enacted over the last three years across 10 states.
Lawmakers proposing restrictive bills contend they are necessary because school and public libraries contain graphic sexual material that should not be available to children. Some books’ “sole purpose is sexual gratification,” said West Virginia Del. Brandon Steele (R), who introduced a bill that would allow librarians to be prosecuted for giving obscene titles to minors.
“It is strictly about pornography,” Steele said. “On that limited basis, this isn’t going to have the chilling effect people think it’s going to.”
But other lawmakers say bills like Steele’s are ideologically driven censorship dressed up as concern for children. They note that, as book challenges spiked to historic highs over the past two years, the majority of objections targeted books by and about LGBTQ people and people of color…
The protective library laws being pushed around the country run the gamut: From increasing funding to adding school librarians to campuses to forbidding “discrimination” in choosing which books to stock…
Some restrictive library bills give parents more power over book selection, for example requiring schools obtain parental sign-off before providing children sexually explicit content. Another common move is to require that libraries post lists of their books for parental review.
But the majority of the bills work the same way. They eliminate long-established exemptions from prosecution for librarians — sometimes teachers and museum employees, too — over obscene material. Almost every state adopted such carve-outs decades ago to ensure schools, museums and libraries could offer accurate information about topics such as sex education.
Removing the exemption means librarians, teachers and museum staffers could face years of imprisonment or tens of thousands in fines for giving out books deemed sexually explicit, obscene or “harmful” to minors. For example, an Arkansas measure passed last year says school and public librarians can be imprisoned for up to six years or fined $10,000 if they hand out obscene or harmful titles.
The law protects children and doesn’t harm librarians unless they’re doing something awful, bill sponsor Sen. Dan Sullivan (R) said at the time: “If they don’t knowingly violate [the law], they’re free and clear.”
Seventeen states are weighing some version of this measure, The Post found. That comes after at least eight states enacted such laws between 2021 and last year, although two were later vetoed and one was blocked by the courts.
The Post could not find an instance in which a librarian has been charged under these laws. But Peter Bromberg of the Utah Library Association pointed out several recent cases in which police were called to schools or launched investigations over books — in Missouri, Texas and South Carolina…
Tara White was appointed Elkhart Community Schools’ director of literacy in 2015. For the first several years, she never fielded a book challenge — until 2021, when community members objected to 60 titles, she said. When she defended the books, a conservative website claimed she was fighting for porn in school.
Then last year, Indiana passed a law declaring school employees can face criminal prosecution — leading to a possible $10,000 fine or 2½ years of jail time — for handing out sexual material that is “harmful to minors.”
White resigned.
“I loved being a librarian and … helping every student find themselves in a book,” White said. But while certain she wasn’t actually “breaking the law, nobody wants to go through that process.”
Nobody wants to go to jail, she said, for giving children books.

Sure was good George Bailey married his wife in reality. She became a librarian in that parallel reality thing. Whew! She dodged that bullet.
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Feliz Gringo Fiesta Day to all.
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Haaa!
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Better not sneeze! You know about Sancho.
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The Sancho I knew was an Australian Shepard that needed Noem Therapy.
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A few months ago, I was working with my Mexican carpenter friends and lit into a sneezing fit. I have a rather violent sneeze and am apt to go on for a time. Of course they all laughed at that; then one of them said Sancho and they ball laughed even harder. After a time I got Edgar to tell me that there is a saying that if you sneeze Sancho is at home with your wife.
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My son-in-law is Mexican. He said cinco de mayo is hardly acknowledged in Mexico. It was elevated by enterprising bar and pub owners in this country.
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Kids being kids, students in my Spanish classes always wanted to have a Cinco de Mayo party. I told them that if anyone could answer my question about what 5/5 was all about6 right then and there (this was mainly before the interweb was available) we’d have a fiesta. Never had a fiesta. Even the students of Mexican heritage didn’t know.
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Good trivia question: what date is Mexican Independence Day?
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Grito de Dolores was 16 Sept ?
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Hope you didn’t cheat on the interwebs, Roy!
Mexico City’s National Palace as well as the Museum of National History in Chapultepec Park, are full of murals depicting Mexican history. Many depict the struggle for independence; there’s an entire room for Grito de Dolores, if I remember correctly.
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had to cheat for the date, but teaching world history gave me the guess. I have always thought it ironic that an opponent of Miguel Hildalgo actually separated Mexico from Spain as the rebellion Hidalgo set off matured.
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Nothing like a good substantive conversation about the topic at hand…
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Interesting that the Ku Klux Karens have taken up reading, or at least doing searches on book texts to find words like sex and gay.
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No, librarians should not be jailed! Then taxpayers are on the hook to feed them and house them.
Just take ’em out behind the library and shoot ’em. Kristi Noem can do it – she’s not gonna get the VP nod, so she’ll have the time.
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