‘My Duty as a Parent’: Inside the Fight to Remove Sexualized Content From School Libraries

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times Header

‘I am sickened to think that there are books like this in any classroom of a middle school for any child to read’

Something on television caught the attention of Stacy Langton, a mother of six living in northern Virginia, when she was cooking dinner for her family in mid-September 2021.

“Write a sex scene you wouldn’t show your mom; write an X-rated Disney scenario,” the TV news segment showed prompts given to students of a writing class at a public high school in Hudson, Ohio.

“What the heck is going on!” Langton said to herself.

All her children went to Catholic schools before high school, so she didn’t have much experience with public schools. Her eldest son had just started 11th grade at a public high school in Fairfax County in August 2021. A year earlier, he had started at this same high school but switched to a private school partway through the year to avoid remote learning policies brought about by the pandemic.

Langton had hoped that 2021–22 would be his first normal high school year since the pandemic.

But what she saw on television was hardly normal. Alarmed, she started paying more attention to the public school systems and learned about the so-called porn books parents spoke about at school board meetings in other counties across the United States. From news about a school board meeting in Texas, Langton heard of the book “Lawn Boy” for the first time. Then she learned about “Gender Queer” through online videos of speeches at other school board meetings.

In these videos, parents who read excerpts of these two books said they were concerned about the obscene and pedophilic material readily available to their children in middle and high schools.

Langton wanted to verify these claims herself, so she decided to take action.

She asked her son to bring the school laptop and check the library catalog. “Boom, the books [“Gender Queer” and “Lawn Boy”] came right up,” said Langton. She told her son, “Let’s check these out tomorrow.”

She read the two books cover to cover.

“I was wrecked for a day. I couldn’t stop thinking about it,” Langton told The Epoch Times.

“Gender Queer: A Memoir,” a graphic novel with cartoon-style pictures, tells the story of nonbinary author Maia Kobabe from adolescence to adulthood. The book shows an image of a pedophilic act. “Lawn Boy,” a young adult novel by Jonathan Evison, contains an explicit description of a sexual act between two minors. According to Evison, the scene was about an adult man recalling a sexual encounter when he was in fourth grade with another fourth grader.

Both books were chosen to receive the American Library Association’s Alex Awards, which are given to 10 books annually with “special appeal to young adults ages 12 through 18.”

“You’re just sitting there going: What if your 12-year-old stumbles across this? You can’t unsee it,” she said, referring to the pictures in the cartoon-style graphic novel “Gender Queer: A Memoir.”

By Terri Wu

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

Understanding the freedom of speech difficulty UK ?

Freedom of speech in the UK, shaped by evolving laws, faces legal conflicts—highlighted by Nigel Farage’s recent U.S. Congress testimony.

US Supreme Court Asked to Rule on Whether Private Citizens Can Enforce Voting Rights Act

A lower court ruled earlier this year that only...

Judicial activism has run amok

Judge Charles Breyer blocked Trump's use of California's National Guard, citing the Posse Comitatus Act, sparking debate over presidential authority.

The SCO & BRICS Play Complementary Roles In Gradually Transforming Global Governance

SCO and BRICS will gradually shape global governance, not abruptly, due to diverse members and non-binding decisions slowing consensus.

Transitioning from Regulatory Sclerosis to Arbitrary State Capitalism

The Trump administration is moving from reducing the size and regulatory power of the federal government to the formation of State Capitalism.

Democrats Highlight August Organizing, Say They Want Bipartisan Deal to Avert Shutdown

Rep Hakeem Jeffries said during recess Democrats organized across the country and will seek a bipartisan spending bill as Congress with Sept. 30 deadline.

Judge Reverses Trump Admin’s Harvard Funding Freeze

Federal judge blocked Trump admin’s bid to freeze $2B in Harvard funding, ruling it violated the First Amendment in its anti-Semitism efforts.

Putin, Xi Hot Mic Moment on Organ Transplants Underscores Concerns Over Organ Harvesting in China

On Sept. 3, a hot mic caught China and Russia’s leaders discussing about organ transplants and living to 150 as they walked side by side.

Pfizer CEO Says Trump Should Receive Nobel Prize for Operation Warp Speed

Pfizer’s CEO praised President Trump, saying he deserves a Nobel Peace Prize for Operation Warp Speed that sped COVID-19 vaccine delivery.

Trump to Host Poland’s New President Nawrocki at the White House

President Donald Trump will host Poland’s newly elected president, Karol Nawrocki, at the White House on Sept. 3.

Trump Announces Space Command Moving to Alabama

“I am thrilled to report that the U.S. Space Command headquarters will move to beautiful Huntsville, Alabama,” President Trump said.

Trump Takes Aim at Crime in Chicago After Dozens Shot Over Weekend

President Trump said that he will “soon” take actions to deal with crime in Chicago, weeks after he sent National Guard troops to Washington, D.C.

Trump Says India Offered Zero Tariffs After Decades of ‘One-Sided’ Trade

President Trump said India offered to cut tariffs on U.S. goods to zero, calling it a long-overdue fix for decades of one-sided trade.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central