Logo

Should any books be banned from school libraries? Why is it important for students to read certain books in school?

08.06.2025 02:56

Should any books be banned from school libraries? Why is it important for students to read certain books in school?

Also, “banning a book from a school library” is not the same as “banning a book.” No one is telling your children that they can’t read it. They’re just telling you that you need to provide it to your children, and let other parents make the same decision for their own kids.

I’m going to include a drawing of two teens engaging in oral sex in my “young adult” book, send it to schools, wait for them to ban it, then make a fuss on social media. People will buy extra copies of my book, just to spite the evil “book banners,” without questioning or caring why the book was banned. Brilliant!

Parents who know why the book was banned: Why are you so adamant about trying to show these things to other people’s children?

What is the best technique for inserting a tampon into one’s anus?

At what point would you realize that by demanding that the book be banned, you just played your part in Tate’s marketing strategy? You did his promoting for him.

Of course.

Pornography is the obvious example here. Rather than arguing about why porn should be banned in school libraries (I’m assuming here we’re talking about schools that cater to children, and not adult learners), the better question would be why some people think that porn should be made available to children.

Is something wrong with my discharge? So, when I masturbate, white discharge comes from my vagina, but it's not stretchy, it's pasty. It doesn't smell and I'm not itchy, so I'm sure it's not a yeast infection. Why is it pasty though?

Should any books be banned from school libraries?

Person who is perfectly free to show their own child whatever book they want to: You are wrong for banning this book from the school library.

“Controversial” authors aren’t “controversial” for nothing. It’s often better for their bottom line.

Blink and your AI security playbook is out of date - Axios

The book I’m talking about, by the way, has been in display right in the front of the “young adult” section at my local Barnes and Noble ever since it started being banned in schools a few years ago. It really is a genius marketing strategy for the book’s author and publisher. Had everyone just ignored the page with the illustration of one teen giving oral sex to another teen, this book would have been just another forgotten book in a sub-genre of books targeted to a specific group of people. By adding something that they knew would get it banned in schools, the author and publisher were able to gaslight a lot of people into suddenly caring about their book and, hopefully, buying more copies of it. They were able to convince people that buying the book was a part of the “culture war” and somehow “sticking it” to those evil red state book banners.

That’s the big brouhaha over certain books lately. When people complain about some books being banned, they rarely mention why those books are being banned. For some books, it’s because they feature graphics of people engaging in sex. (You know… pornography.)

And, once news of its banning made it to social media, don’t you think that some people would buy copies of it, just for spite?

Single photon detected in multiple locations simultaneously, fueling the multiverse debate - Earth.com

Suppose Andrew Tate wrote a book about “how to keep your woman in her place,” and sent a copy, free of charge, to ever public school in the country. Suppose, too, it was full of illustrations of “women being put in their place.” Would you demand that it be banned from your child’s school?

And the people who made those books knew exactly what they were doing. They wanted their books to be banned in school libraries. Why? Because there’s no such thing as bad publicity. The echo chamber social media did their advertising for them, once their books were banned, and they laughed all the way to the bank.

As a capitalist, and a cynic, I say: “Bravo. Well played. You convinced people that you were a victim of ‘the other side,’ and got them to send you money as a result. Honestly, very well played.”

Hello, I have a question about astral projection. I started to get interested in this a little while after my mum passed in april. I thought I may be able to see her and speak with her if I managed to achieve astral projection. Since this interest, every time i sleep on my back I go into sleep paralysis. However, I cant progress into astral projection because it is very scary for me as I feel like I'm suffocating when this happens. I panic and force myself to wake up. This only ever happened about once a year before this. It sometimes lasts a long time. This has happened about 3 times per week since my mum died, as mentioned on a previous post. I no longer try to go into it anymore(due to the suffocating feeling), but it still happens. I read that sleep paralysis is the pathway to astral projection. Why has this started to happen so frequently since simply taking an interest in it? Is this connected to the afterlife? I am concerned about it as I now cannot seem to stop this happening. Could it be my mum trying to communicate? Im asking due to more knowledge around this in this group.

But, again, the focus should really be more on why some people seem to really, really want other people’s kids to be exposed to, especially graphically, adult material.

Anyway, while pornography is the most obvious example of a book that shouldn’t be allowed in school libraries frequented by children, it’s not the only example. There are also books with graphic depictions of real crime scenes, books that promote racism or sexism or hatred in general, books that explain how to create weapons, etc…