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by Jiro
1242 days ago
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There's actually a very simple argument: The existing system has been used as a workaround by activists to defacto teach things that shouldn't be taught to students. Keeping the books out of the library is the best practical method of stopping this, because directly controlling the contents of the curriculum is hard to enforce. That argument may or may not be true in this particular case, but it's not some impossible thing that can't ever have a good reason behind it. Edit: Also, don't confuse school libraries with public libraries. Schools make content-based decisions about what's appropriate for students all the time. |
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What's the actual meaningful distinction here? Both are publicly funded, that students/kid can choose to go to and browse books in (but rarely do). It's not like kids are banned from public libraries.