Overview:

Cobb County Schools Superintendent Chris Ragsdale pulled an additional 4 library books citing materials containing 鈥渓ewd, vulgar, and sexually explicit content", nor will your taxes be used to fund it".

At a board meeting Thursday, Cobb County Schools Superintendent Chris Ragsdale pulled an additional 4 library books citing materials containing 鈥渓ewd, vulgar, and sexually explicit content”, nor will your taxes be used to fund it”.

The additional books taken off the shelves as of Thursday in Cobb County Schools are 鈥13 Reasons Why鈥 by Jay Asher, 鈥淚t Ends With Us鈥 by Colleen Hoover, 鈥淭he Perks of Being a Wallflower鈥 by Stephen Chbosky, and 鈥淟ucky鈥 by Alice Sebold.

This ban comes after several books were removed from shelves in Cobb County Schools in August due to 鈥渉ighly inappropriate, sexually explicit content.鈥 It started when Due West Elementary teacher Katie Rinderle was fired for reading 鈥淢y Shadow is Purple鈥 to her 5th-grade class. Then more books, 鈥淔lamer鈥 by Mike Curato and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl 鈥渂y Jesse Andrews, were also banned after Moms of Liberty contacted Cobb County Schools, citing 鈥減ornographic themed books for students.

According to Pen American, twenty-five books have been banned in Marietta, Georgia, since September, with many of them being written by LGBTQ+ authors and/or including LGBTQ+ characters. In 2022, SB 226 a law was passed in Georgia that allows parents to object to materials on the grounds that they deem harmful to minors. Books could be deemed harmful to minors to the 鈥減rurient, shameful, or morbid鈥 interest of minors, are 鈥減atently offensive鈥 to the community, and lack literary value for minors.

Several public speakers disagreed with the superintendent’s position at the board meeting. Sharon Hudson remarked on the district’s lack of support for media specialists.

 鈥淚ts thought being a media specialist in CCSD is tough right now. The board majority, superintendent and even a candidate for school board are attacking media specialists and claiming their trying to give students pornographic materials. They are not. After being cyberbullied by an out of state hate group linked to sending bomb threats for teachers and schools. The superintendent launched an effort to check every single book  in schools for pornography. What a waste of resources. How insulting鈥︹

Despite the concerns, Ragsdale remained unmoved about the removal of the books.

鈥淎s I have repeatedly stated, 鈥業 do believe the attempt to sexualize children is evil, and we as educators have a professional and moral responsibility to prevent it,鈥 Superintendent Ragsdale said. 鈥淭his is not only a professional but moral obligation. And I will reiterate my position; I will not be moved.鈥 

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