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10 Vital Steps to Rid School Libraries of Porn

Child looking at books in school library

Summer break is over and kids are heading back to school. But the place where parents once thought was helping educate their children in reading, writing and arithmetic has become a cesspool of indoctrination and sexualization.

Certainly there are still some great teachers and even good schools in our public school system.

But what we are learning is that many of these teachers, who are there to truly help the children learn, are being forced to teach racist ideology, transgenderism, and a version of history re-written to indoctrinate our children into hating America.

Otherwise they are threatened with losing their jobs.

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Parents are waking up and recognizing our public school system is not necessarily our friend. Many are standing up to protest pornographic material found in school libraries across our nation. What they have found is the school is fighting against the parents to keep the filth in the libraries and hide curriculum that reinforces a “hate America” narrative along with gender transitioning indoctrination material.

So what are parents to do?

  1. Meet their teachers and the principal.
  2. Ask to see the curriculum and books that will be used.
  3. Show up to school board meetings to know what is being said.
  4. Stand up against indocrination.

But there is more…

Parents in at least six states have discovered sexually graphic novels, erotica and transgender indoctrination books in their student’s school libraries. Librarians are having these books recommended to them by the School Library Association which has been giving awards to some of these books and putting them at the top of the recommended list.

Many school boards and principals are insisting this pornographic material is a First Amendment right. For the record–it isn’t.

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What can you do?

Here is a list of 10 important steps on how to find out and what to do if you discover the books are present.

  1. to download the list of books that many parents have found objectionable.
  2. Check to see if any of these books are in your school’s library by . Then insert your city/state and school to begin your search.
  3. Once you find obscene books in the library, ask for a “Request for Removal” form from the principal or school office. Make sure to read the book so you are ready to argue as to why it needs to be removed. They will try to take advantage of the fact you haven’t read the book. Be prepared!
  4. Fill out the form and then contact your state superintendent, the principal of the school where the books were found and each member of the school board. (Note: You cannot send one email to the school board as a group. They are unable to respond to group texts or emails. Send the form and information via a letter, email or phone each one individually.) List the books by name along with the author and demand they be removed immediately.
  5. At this point the request for removal will likely head to a committee that will decide to keep the book or remove it from the shelves. Don’t be surprised when the committee decides to keep the book on the shelf.
  6. If they reject your request, you can contest their decision. It will then head to a special meeting with the school board for your district. Unless you have a conservative board, don’t be surprised if they vote to keep the book on the shelf.
  7. Gather like-minded parents and together regularly attend school board meetings and address the issue publicly.
  8. Contact your legislators in both the state and federal government and send them the links to Rep Conely’s bills encouraging them to introduce similar legislation using similar verbiage so that school libraries across the nation will be protected under similar language. HB4013HB 4014.
  9. Join a group such as Mom’s for Liberty for additional resources on how to fight this battle and join with other parents.
  10. Don’t be discouraged. By joining this fight, you will find other like-minded parents. That group will grow and strengthen. Don’t give up. Try again. Keep submitting books. Every time they override your request and keep the book on the shelves, let your community know which district and what the board decided. Put it out on social media—all of it! The book, the excerpts, the decision. Exposure will become your best friend. Embrace that friend.

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