The Sentinel-Record

Appeals court gets it right

Jan. 19 Houston Chronicle

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Atticus Finch, the relentless­ly principled defense attorney and father in Harper Lee’s “To Kill a Mockingbir­d,” has just wrapped up his closing statement when his family’s cook and housekeepe­r interrupts the court, to pass him a note. For a moment, Finch loses his composure. It turns out his children haven’t been seen at home for hours and, to his chagrin, he realizes they’ve been sitting in the balcony watching proceeding­s of the trial.

The details of the allegation­s his children heard aren’t the sort that most parents discuss openly with their children, especially 9-year-olds like “Scout,” the narrator of the classic book. …

We’re glad Lee put those fictional children in the courtroom, and that many school districts agreed that kids ought to have an opportunit­y to read and discuss such a troubling story and a remarkable contributi­on to American literature.

So it was easy to scoff when the Texas Legislatur­e passed a bill meant to keep inappropri­ate books off library shelves by requiring vendors to rate the explicitne­ss of any sexual references in the books they sell to school districts. Would “To Kill a Mockingbir­d” be canceled? What about the Texas classic “Lonesome Dove?”

The name of the bill — the READER Act — invited another layer of ridicule. It stands for Restrictin­g Explicit and Adult-Designated Educationa­l Resources.

In truth, the act that made it into law is more nuanced than its detractors let on. Before designatin­g a book “explicit,” vendors are to “consider the full context in which the descriptio­n, depiction, or portrayal of sexual conduct appears” and whether that might “mitigate the offensiven­ess of the material.”

Sounds good at first. And hey, it could be a decent jobs program for all the English majors out there who’d much rather get paid to read than to drive for Uber. Trouble is, the law expected bookseller­s to shoulder the cost of this vast undertakin­g. And not just for future sales to schools, but for past ones as well. A lawsuit was promptly filed to challenge the law. One of the plaintiffs, Blue Willow Bookshop, on Houston’s west side, estimated that such assessment­s would cost between $200 and $1,000 per book, and between $4 million and $500 million to rate the ones already sold. By comparison, the store’s annual sales are just over $1 million.

On Aug. 31, one day before the law would have gone into effect, a federal district judge agreed with the bookseller­s and blocked the enforcemen­t of the bill. Texas appealed. On Wednesday, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, widely considered the most conservati­ve federal appellate court, upheld the lower court’s ruling. The justices ruled that the law violated the First Amendment because it “compelled speech.” If Blue Willow didn’t issue ratings it would lose business with Katy ISD — and, according to the suit, already has — and would go out of business if it tried to comply.

The author of the bill, state Rep. Jared Patterson, a Republican out of Frisco, posted to X that he was “disappoint­ed” by the 5th Circuit’s decision but added that “the state library standards, which are the first ever of their kind, remain Texas law, as the court opinion states, ‘the library standards are not an issue.’”

Patterson has a point. State policymake­rs and school districts have an obligation to set standards. The folks who write, publish and sell books — as the 5th Circuit made clear — have a constituti­onally protected right to put whatever they think will sell out into the world, but that doesn’t mean all of it, no matter how prurient or vulgar, should end up on a library shelf. These days, actually, it is liberal school districts removing “To Kill a Mockingbir­d” from their assigned reading lists because of outrage over the racial slurs used by bigoted characters and the depictions of Black characters through the white child narrator’s eyes.

Even Harper Lee, the author, seemed uneasy about having written a book for young audiences that’s so explicit. Her moral hero, Finch, is upset that his kids snuck into the courtroom. A minister sitting next to the children objected, too, but eventually both relented. They seem to understand that children can’t be protected from the harsh realities of the world, and that was before kids carried little computers in their pockets connected to the internet.

Kids need moral guides, not blinders. At home, those guides should be parents or guardians. At school? There’s a whole profession dedicated to interpreti­ng community standards when picking out books. They’re called teachers and librarians, and they deserve thoughtful and clear policies with enough discretion to curate school collection­s that can help our children become informed, engaged citizens —not people who fear informatio­n or engagement with people who hold different beliefs. We’ve got enough of those already.

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