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High school shuts down its library because of book-banning state law (lgbtqnation.com)
17 points by hn_acker 29 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 13 comments



Wow. This is extremely saddening. And who loses in the end? The kids. Which means we all do.


On the other hand, maybe they’ve been hurting children for years now and they’ve finally been forced to check.

It’s sad they don’t have an inventory list they could quickly check without shutting down the library for a year.


So will the Bible be removed ? I really doubt it.

Most people probably know, it contains passages about incest, rape, sex and same-sex activity.


What a misleading title. It gives the impression that it was permanently shut down, when the truth is otherwise:

"... a spokesperson for Green Hill High School confirmed that the school has closed its library ahead of the 2024–2025 school year to sort through its entire collection of books to ensure that they are in compliance with H.B. 843, which went into effect on July 1."


I mean, shutting down the library for an entire year still seems like a fairly unfortunate outcome.

What if someone accidentally sees a forbidden book before it's removed from the shelf??? Better close the whole library until it's been totally audited, just in case.


> I mean, shutting down the library for an entire year still seems like a fairly unfortunate outcome.

The school library probably won't be closed for an entire school year. It's just closed indefinitely. The school could open the library early by progressively adding back batches of confirmed "safe" books. (None of what I said changes the fact that the updated Age-Appropriate Materials Act still violates the First Amendment.)


Have two library cards.

One says "Library Card" in Helvetica on a professional background and gives you full access to the library. To get it, your parents have to sign a release.

The other has pictures of cute cartoon animals and "Library Card" in comic sans balloon lettering followed by the word "YAY!" in an explosion bubble. You get this one unless your parents sign the release.

:)


Despite being a voracious reader all my life, I'm surprised I never noticed until now that there is no literary equivalent of the ESRB. Perhaps someone should work on that.


There is already one in place. It's called.. librarians. They do a lot more than just stand around a look pretty. There are degrees you can earn which includes things like how to manage tracking books and operate exchanges, managing catalog systems, training in computer use and learning, and... judging appropriate book content for readers. Librarians are much more than just someone who will help you with a book, if you ask.


While that's true, I think GP's idea isn't necessarily a bad one. You could argue the same thing about game store clerks negating the need for ESRB ratings.


We have the ability to mathematically determine the readability of books based on the words in them: https://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2013/09/24/guide-to-re...

As far as what rating a book has as to who should be allowed to read it, what do you think? If you are a voracious reader, would you be happy having certain book topics restricted based on your age? Or maybe what your parents thought was right? Maybe they didn't want you know about certain topics. Be careful what you wish for.


> would you be happy having certain book topics restricted based on your age?

When I was a child, I can recall reading 2 books that contained (rather different) graphic accounts of characters coming to significant harm. I absolutely wish they had been better restricted.


While in the mainstream trigger warnings are hated by the righties and content warnings are hated by the lefties, once you get away from the culture war everybody loves content categorization. For example, before you read any piece of fanfiction you're greeted with a long list of tags describing it's content, particularly the content some readers might find distressing. It's a tool for readers, not a government conspiracy.




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