Less books banned/challanged than last year

Rune

Mjölner
It's an exciting time. There are going to be special readings of "banned books" not merely in bookstores (where the banned books will, tellingly, be for sale) but online as well. This year, explains BannedBooksWeek.org, "readers will be able to proclaim the virtues of their favorite banned books by posting videos of themselves reading excerpts to a dedicated YouTube channel." It's all so very brave and subversive!
Already, news outlets are dusting off familiar stories about the scary climate of censorship in the land. Indeed, it's a staple of nearly every major newspaper to at least let the American Library Association air its dire warnings about the growing threat to the freedom to read. Last year, on the eve of Banned Books Week, the ALA's official magazine, American Libraries, ran a story headlined, "Book banning alive and well in the U.S."

http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinio...umn-Banned-Books-Week-is-just-hype/50265238/1
 
wow....will we be able to get Mark Twain's version of Huck Finn or the new and cleaned up version approved by the left.....?

How about the Bible ....thats been banned in schools for years.....
 
wow....will we be able to get Mark Twain's version of Huck Finn or the new and cleaned up version approved by the left.....?

How about the Bible ....thats been banned in schools for years.....

So you are saying you can't read a bible if you are a student??
 
wow....will we be able to get Mark Twain's version of Huck Finn or the new and cleaned up version approved by the left.....?

How about the Bible ....thats been banned in schools for years.....
Huck Finn was never banned. There is a 'PC' edition out, but it does not replace all versions of Huck Finn.
 
If Mark Twain were alive today he would be the front of all attacks by liberals, in todays liberal media.
 
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