Florida says the purpose of school libraries is to “convey the government’s message”

https://popular.info/p/florida-says-the-purpose-of-school

Thanks again to Ten Bears for the link.   This shows the claim they are against indoctrination in schools is not true, but instead the goal is to indoctrinate kids in a hard right wing fundamentalist Christian ideology.  It is a return to the fake myth of the 1950s society and the removing of everything LGBTQIA and gender identity.  Total authoritarian back to the dark ages regression.  It is a rejection of all the social advancements of the modern age.   Hugs.  Scottie


DEC 5, 2023
 
 

One thing that is seldom mentioned about the removal of books from Florida classroom libraries: much of this activity may be illegal. 

The school board in Escambia County, Florida, for example, is being sued over their decision to remove And Tango Makes Three and other books from public school libraries. And Tango Makes Three is the true story of two male penguins, Roy and Silo, who lived in the Central Park Zoo and raised an adopted chick. The woman who challenged the book, notorious Escambia County English Teacher Vicki Baggett, told Popular Information she was concerned it exposes students to “alternate sexual ideologies.” Baggett said “a second grader would read this book, and that idea would pop into the second grader’s mind… that these are two people of the same sex that love each other.” The school board appeared to have similar concerns. “The fascination is still on those two male penguins,” school board member David Williams said. “So I’ll be voting to remove the book from our libraries.” 


Florida English teacher pushing book bans is openly racist and homophobic, students allege

Florida English teacher pushing book bans is openly racist and homophobic, students allege

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In May, Penguin Random House, five authors, two parents, and the non-profit group PEN America sued the Escambia County school board in federal court, alleging that the school board’s actions violated the United States Constitution. The lawsuit alleges that the school board banned and restricted books “based on their disagreement with the ideas expressed in those books.” In so doing, the school board has “prescribed an orthodoxy of opinion that violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments.”

The lawsuit is ongoing, and Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody (R) has intervened in the case, arguing that it should be dismissed. In an extraordinary filing earlier this year, Moody argued that the First Amendment does not apply to public school libraries and that school boards can remove any book for any reason — even if the motive is discriminatory. 

In Moody’s filing, Florida argues that the purpose of public school libraries is to “convey the government’s message,” and that can be accomplished through “the removal of speech that the government disapproves.” The issue of what books are allowed to be carried by school libraries, Florida states, should be settled at the “ballot box.” According to the state’s filing, public school libraries “are not a forum for free expression.” 

Florida’s argument has serious flaws. Indeed, Florida’s filing acknowledges that no court has ruled, as Florida argues, that public school libraries are a form of government speech. The issues with Florida’s legal position were detailed in an amicus brief in support of the plaintiffs filed by two dozen law professors. 

Florida is arguing for an expansion of the definition of “government speech” to include public school libraries. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito — one of the court’s most conservative members — warned in the 1996 case of Matal v. Tam that the concept of “government speech” is “susceptible to dangerous misuse.” Alito, writing for the Supreme Court, wrote that “we must exercise great caution before extending our government-speech precedents” because it could be used as a pretext to “silence or muffle the expression of disfavored viewpoints.” 

Currently, “the government speech doctrine only applies to state programs in which the government conveys an official message that the public would recognize as such.” Public school libraries do not exist “to carry official messaging” for the government, the law professors note. Therefore, “[a]pplying the government speech doctrine to school libraries would create a dangerous incompatibility with the nature and purpose of those libraries.” 

A federal judge recently rejected a similar argument made by the Arkansas government regarding the removal of books from public libraries. “Defendants are unable to cite any legal precedent to suggest that the state may censor non-obscene materials in a public library because such censorship is a form of government speech,” the judge ruled. 

The law professors highlight that there is a Supreme Court case that directly addresses the government’s role in curating school libraries, the 1982 case of Island Trees School District v. Pico. In Pico, the Supreme Court recognized that school boards have significant flexibility in determining the contents of school libraries. However, the Supreme Court was clear that the scope of the school board’s power over school libraries is limited by the First Amendment. 

Citing previous Supreme Court decisions, the plurality opinion in Pico notes that “students must always remain free to inquire, to study and to evaluate” and the “school library is the principal locus of such freedom.” As a result, it is unconstitutional for school boards to remove books from a school library in a “narrowly partisan or political manner.’” This appears to be exactly what is happening. And Tango Makes Three was removed from Escambia County school libraries because it didn’t conform to the school board’s political opinions about LGBTQ people. 

The plaintiffs in the lawsuit note that the precedent goes beyond Pico: “Every court that has addressed that issue… has rejected the position that libraries — including school libraries — constitute Constitution-free zones in which government officials can freely discriminate based on viewpoint.”

Florida realizes that Pico and related cases present a serious challenge to its position. In its filing in support of the Escambia County School Board, Florida argues that Pico should be ignored because it was a plurality decision. But the fact is that, in the 40 years after Pico was decided, the Supreme Court has never repudiated the case.

From “parental rights” to “authoritarianism”

 

The significance of Florida’s filing was recently covered in the Tallahassee Democrat, which interviewed several experts about the implications of the state’s arguments. 

Ken Paulson, the director of the Free Speech Center at Middle Tennessee State University, noted that proponents of removing books from school libraries frequently say they are fighting for “parental rights.” But “[if] government speech determines what books can be in the library, the government is essentially saying your children can only see the ideas that the government has approved.” That is inconsistent, Paulson argues, with parental rights. “It’s authoritarianism,” Paulson said. 

Deborah Caldwell-Stone, director of the American Library Association’s Office for Intellectual Freedom, said Florida’s position goes against the fundamental principle “that no government entity can engage in viewpoint discrimination.” Caldwell-Stone said, if Florida prevails, it would transform schools from a place dedicated to “preparing individuals… to make decisions about their own lives” to “indoctrination centers for only one viewpoint.”

8 thoughts on “Florida says the purpose of school libraries is to “convey the government’s message”

  1. If anyone has questions about life in authoritarian nation’s they only need to see what is going on in Florida and Texas. Government, corporations, and the church in alliance against society. Their only goal is total dominion.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Not to mention they’ve turned the whole idea of government upside down. Government has only authorities granted by the people, who have the actual authority, and government wields it for the people.
      Grrrr

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hi Ali. I agree. It used to be said that elected officials served the public, not anymore. Today the politicians in office demand the public serve them, and do what they are told to do. Rather than the people getting to select the person who is elected, now elected office holders create gerrymandering districts that select the voter. Hugs. Scottie

        Liked by 1 person

        1. But we don’t have to do that! They haven’t written laws to make us do that, they just talk that way. We still have the authority. I’m thankful for all of us who use it! And Merry Christmas to you, Ron, Randy, and all the furkids! And if I missed someone, Merry Christmas to them, too. Also, Merry Christmas to all who read here. Just in case I don’t get to it later. 😉

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Hi Ali. I think we have to admit they have worked about a 1/3rd of the way towards it. They have gerrymandered some states so badly there are large majorities of republicans when they don’t get the majority of the votes. The legislatures of states simply ignore or change voter initiatives they don’t like, such as here in Florida, the ballot initiative that required felons who served their time to get back the right to vote. Republicans did not like that as it would let a lot of people they did not like vote, so they wrote laws making it impossible for the felons to use the right. In several states, other state constitutional ballot initiatives everything from weed to abortion has been voted as a right by the people but ignored by legislators. In Kansas, the republicans said they were simply going to ignore the vote for abortion rights. And in the federal congress they fail to vote in gun control laws even though 94 percent of the people want them. So we have lost a lot of our democracy already. They just want the rest so they can stop pretending the people have any control at all. Hugs. Scottie

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Well, in KS, they can get away with no repeals of the curbs in place, but they can’t go further, not by law. Kobach may intimidate more businesses, but he’ll find that bites him next election. What I mean is, though, legislatures still have to pass laws to take the authority we (and they!) are talking about; this government message of which they speak is a psych and we don’t have to let them gaslight people. I still may not be verbalizing what I’m trying to say. We have to obey laws, but so do they. I’ll come up with the right words about 11PM tonight, as I’m going off to sleep. Merry Christmas!

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Hi Ali. I understand what you are trying to say, but in states where republicans rule … they control the laws. And the rabid maga fundamentalist Christian republicans do not care what the majority of the people want. For example, look at the last 2 years of book bans and bathroom rules in Florida schools. In every single case, the majority of the local public was against the actions the new maga fundamentalist religious board members were doing, but they were ignored. So yes in elections that are happening again those creeps are getting voted out, but only in elections that are scheduled to happen. Many places have a few more years until the next school board election. In the meantime the damage is already done, the books are gone, the courses that even students were currently taking removed, the programs of inclusion, diversity, and acceptance of others gone. Hate is being allowed to spread and grow. The worst thing about it is most of these maga religious board members have no children in the schools, it is about forcing other people’s children to live by their church doctrines and beliefs. But again the will of the majority is ignored by the minority.
                The maga Christian nationalist racist bigots want minority rule over the majority, over the will of the people. Hugs. Scottie

                Liked by 1 person

    2. Well said Cagjr. It has become an all out attempt to drag the country back to the society of the 1950s and remove all social progress of the modern age. Rather than elected politicians serving the public, these politicians demand minority rule over the majority public. Hugs

      Like

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