Gender Queer
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I listened to a NYT podcast discussion with Emily Drabinski, who is the president of the American library Association, and a librarian professor. America's top librarian, is how she's billed in the discussion. One of her first points is that parents shouldn't be so sure about what their kids should or shouldn't read. Basically, her perspective is that anybody with conviction about what is or is not right for children, should not have that conviction.
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I listened to a NYT podcast discussion with Emily Drabinski, who is the president of the American library Association, and a librarian professor. America's top librarian, is how she's billed in the discussion. One of her first points is that parents shouldn't be so sure about what their kids should or shouldn't read. Basically, her perspective is that anybody with conviction about what is or is not right for children, should not have that conviction.
@Horace said in Gender Queer:
I listened to a NYT podcast discussion with Emily Drabinski, who is the president of the American library Association, and a librarian professor. America's top librarian, is how she's billed in the discussion. One of her first points is that parents shouldn't be so sure about what their kids should or shouldn't read. Basically, her perspective is that anybody with conviction about what is or is not right for children, should not have that conviction.
Isn’t she the one that has caused 4-5 states to pull out of the association and is an avowed communist?
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@Horace said in Gender Queer:
I listened to a NYT podcast discussion with Emily Drabinski, who is the president of the American library Association, and a librarian professor. America's top librarian, is how she's billed in the discussion. One of her first points is that parents shouldn't be so sure about what their kids should or shouldn't read. Basically, her perspective is that anybody with conviction about what is or is not right for children, should not have that conviction.
Isn’t she the one that has caused 4-5 states to pull out of the association and is an avowed communist?
@LuFins-Dad said in Gender Queer:
@Horace said in Gender Queer:
I listened to a NYT podcast discussion with Emily Drabinski, who is the president of the American library Association, and a librarian professor. America's top librarian, is how she's billed in the discussion. One of her first points is that parents shouldn't be so sure about what their kids should or shouldn't read. Basically, her perspective is that anybody with conviction about what is or is not right for children, should not have that conviction.
Isn’t she the one that has caused 4-5 states to pull out of the association and is an avowed communist?
She's a proud Marxist lesbian.
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@jon-nyc said in Gender Queer:
Cool that’s my fetish.
You get off on having women explain for hours why they don't want to have sex with you, and then explain that it's all your fault?
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18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
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I’m sure that in another 2-3 years he will realize that things could have been done differently…
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Kennedy quotes...
Link to video -
18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
@George-K said in Gender Queer:
18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
You'd think they'd
bannot require Go Set A Watchman before To Kill A Mockingbird. -
@George-K said in Gender Queer:
18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
You'd think they'd
bannot require Go Set A Watchman before To Kill A Mockingbird.@89th said in Gender Queer:
@George-K said in Gender Queer:
18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
You'd think they'd
bannot require Go Set A Watchman before To Kill A Mockingbird.The sad thing is, many of them actually think Mockingbird was banned, and it was banned because evil racist white rural school boards hate civil rights.
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@89th said in Gender Queer:
@George-K said in Gender Queer:
18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
You'd think they'd
bannot require Go Set A Watchman before To Kill A Mockingbird.The sad thing is, many of them actually think Mockingbird was banned, and it was banned because evil racist white rural school boards hate civil rights.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Gender Queer:
@89th said in Gender Queer:
@George-K said in Gender Queer:
18 months ago...
To Kill a Mockingbird was "banned?"
Why yes. Yes it was.
The iconic novel "To Kill A Mockingbird" is among five books on race that have been temporarily removed from the required reading list in the Burbank Unified School District after complaints from parents.
Among many issues, several of the books include the "N" word.
Carmenita Helligar raised a red flag when her daughter, the only Black student in her class, was confronted and berated by another student after studying one book.
"The boy said, 'I now know how to count you. And he started saying, 'One, 'N-word,' two 'N-word,' three 'N-word,' just to make her feel bad," said Helligar, who is a member of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee.
The district says the five books are still available in schools, but they are not on the list of core books that all students must read.
So, not "banned" but removed from required reading because they were offensive.
"Lube" "Ass" etc are not, apparently, offensive.
You'd think they'd
bannot require Go Set A Watchman before To Kill A Mockingbird.The sad thing is, many of them actually think Mockingbird was banned, and it was banned because evil racist white rural school boards hate civil rights.
You sir, are correct.