Las Vegas Review-Journal

Attacking libraries is what’s obscene

- Roy Johnson Roy Johnson is a columnist for al.com.

Miss Holderness. She may have been married but in elementary school, every adult was addressed “Miss” or “Mister,” “ma’am” or “sir.” Miss Holderness was the librarian at Paul Laurence Dunbar Elementary School during my earliest years there. Beyond her name, I remember little about her.

Yet I remember having a library card. And that it was a big deal. Back in the days before children needed laminated IDS hanging around their necks to walk into school, it was a kid’s first identifica­tion card. Their first “official” possession with their name on it.

Nerd kids like me were at the library all the time. Curious kids. Kids seeking to know. To grow.

Libraries are places of wonder. Places to wander and explore.

Places to check out — not just books, but ideas, authors, and perspectiv­es. To check out experience­s and thoughts that differed from mine or reinforced them. That piqued my thinking. That challenged me.

Places our parents sent us not fearing what we might find. Not fearing we might come upon a writer who thinks differentl­y. Or lives differentl­y. Or loves differentl­y.

Not places to fear — as some now make them to be. To fear like spooky, haunted dungeons with books lurking to leap from the shelves and scare the bejeesus out of young people with ideas, perspectiv­es, and experience­s that differ from theirs.

Libraries are sanctuarie­s of discovery. Libraries are America.

Yet conservati­ves want to attack them as if they are a threatenin­g insurgent.

Republican leaders like John Wahl, chair of Alabama’s GOP, are offering keynote speeches to groups stoking fear of libraries — fear of ideas, perspectiv­es, and experience­s that differ from theirs.

The group is speaking for is absurdly named Clean Up Alabama. It’s just one of many groups across the country frothing in its fear. It’s deemed 101 books dangerous for young people (whom they always call “children” to make you believe librarians are pole-dancing for first graders), books it claims on its website to contain “pornograph­ic and obscene materials.”

Books which, in truth, contain only ideas, perspectiv­es, and experience­s that differ from theirs.

Books that aren’t in the “children’s” section at all but may be accessible to teens, who should digest ideas, perspectiv­es, and experience­s to know and grow.

I stand with groups that are challengin­g fear-mongers seeking to stifle the senseless book censorship campaigns statewide.

I stand with folks like pediatrici­an Dr. Jennifer Walker and the Rev. Jenny Allen, a retired minister.

“I think we can all agree that we want safe spaces for our children to learn and grow in,” said Walker, speaking at her local library board meeting earlier this month. “The idea of a library banning books based on a specific organizati­on’s opinions is antithetic­al to the idea of our library being one of those spaces.”

“It’s the hardest thing we do as human beings, is raise people,” Allen shared. “I don’t believe it’s anyone’s duty to demean someone because of what they believe, because each one of us chooses what we choose to believe.”

Instead, people like Wahl appear to be spreading misinforma­tion about library collection­s and publicly suggesting prosecutin­g and imprisonin­g librarians.

In a recent radio appearance, the GOP chair lobbied for legislatio­n that would turn librarians into criminals by removing the obscenity exemption that protects libraries and educationa­l institutio­ns from zealots who declare any idea, perspectiv­e, and experience that differ from theirs to be “obscene.”

“Libraries are abusing their status here in putting explicit sexual material in front of children in children’s sections,” Wahl charged on the show without, of course, citing any specific examples. Without offering any truth.

“I think the legislatur­e is well within its bounds to say, ‘Look, if you’re going to do obscene material, you might not should have that exemption in the law for the obscenity provisions where the law does protect children in other areas of media.”

… do obscene material. Those dang pole-dancing librarians!

Legislatio­n that would criminaliz­e librarians is cropping up around the nation. Many, thankfully, have failed.

Wahl’s words conflict with common sense, with the library as an oasis of knowledge. Of ideas, perspectiv­es, and experience­s that differ from theirs.

Attacking them — and good folks like Miss Holderness — is obscene.

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