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48 votes
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Inside the two-year fight to bring charges against school librarians in Granbury, Texas
20 votes -
Queer Liberation Library offers free LGBTQ books in response to wave of US school bans
21 votes -
Book ban fight in Nevada would create LGBTQ section of libraries
9 votes -
Idaho libraries must move materials deemed harmful to children, or face lawsuits, under new law
24 votes -
Why ban books when you can ban book awards?: Suburban Illinois district cancels youth chosen Caudill Awards
30 votes -
Police bodycam shows sheriff hunting for 'obscene' books at library
54 votes -
Ending censorship applies to prison too - US prisons remain the institutions where the most censorship occurs
22 votes -
UnbanCoolies interview with Ashley Hope Peréz, author of Out of Darkness
3 votes -
Book bans in Texas spread as new state law takes effect
14 votes -
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania children's author writes a book titled 'Banned Book', discusses censorship
12 votes -
American Library Association report: Texas led the nation in book ban attempts in 2022
14 votes -
Texas tried to enact more book bans last year than any other US state
13 votes -
More than thirty years after its publication, picture book Daddy's Roommate has once again found itself the target of censorship
13 votes -
Using artificial intelligence to ban books only makes the problem worse
20 votes -
US District Judge blocks Arkansas law allowing librarians to be criminally charged over ‘harmful’ materials
50 votes -
Sex education book 'Welcome to Sex' is a best-seller, but has been pulled off one Australian retailer's shelves after a conservative backlash, including death threats against one of the authors
‘Taking a leaf out of Trumpism’: Yumi Stynes on the ‘misguided’ backlash to sex book The book has been criticised by campaigners including Rachael Wong, the chief executive of Women’s Forum...
The book has been criticised by campaigners including Rachael Wong, the chief executive of Women’s Forum Australia, an organisation critical of pro-trans activism. Speaking to 2GB’s Ben Fordham on Tuesday, Wong called it a “graphic sex guide for children”, adding that she felt “physically ill at the thought of children reading it”. Other conservative media figures have amplified the criticism.
“This book was a response to genuine questions asked by adolescents to [magazine column] ‘Dolly Doctor’ for more than 20 years. [Dr Melissa Kang, one of the co-writers], was exposed to what kids were too ashamed to ask anyone else.”
Critics have taken particular issue with small sections of the book that address inclusive sexual practices beyond penetrative sex, including “fingering”, “oral sex”, “scissoring”, and “anal sex”.
They are also critical of the inclusion of what they term “gender ideology”. Others are accusing the authors of “grooming” children – a term that is increasingly misused.
The backlash has been so intense Big W stopped selling the book in-store after staff members were abused, although the retailer has defended it and it remains available online.
"I've seen people saying to me 'I want to kill you' or 'You should die'," Stynes told SBS News.
72 votes -
Banned in the USA: The growing movement to censor books in schools
14 votes -
US school librarians vilified as the 'arm of Satan' in book-banning wars
8 votes -
George Dawson book about racism effectively banned at George Dawson Middle School
7 votes -
Furries are leading the war against a book-banning Mississippi Mayor
14 votes -
Tennessee school board bans Holocaust graphic novel ‘Maus’ – author Art Spiegelman condemns the move as ‘Orwellian’
28 votes -
US libraries report spike in organised attempts to ban books in schools
18 votes -
‘I think we should throw those books in a fire’: Movement builds on right to target books
17 votes -
Kalamazoo school district decides not to have LGBTQ books in reading program
4 votes -
Literature locked up: How prison book restriction policies constitute the nation’s largest book ban
6 votes -
Harry Potter books removed from St. Edward Catholic School due to 'curses and spells'
7 votes -
Prisons are banning books that teach prisoners how to code
8 votes