Girls Who Code founder speaks out after school district bans her books

by wturneron 9/26/22, 4:42 PMwith 5 comments
by khaki54on 9/26/22, 5:35 PM

Didn't the school district already come out and say her book series wasn't banned?

https://twitter.com/mrgrimm/status/1574443526401576960?t=rM6...

Impressive how they managed to write an article, get comment, stir up handmaids tale outrage without basic fact check.

by SamReidHugheson 9/26/22, 5:34 PM

The school district did not ban her books.

https://www.gamesindustry.biz/school-district-denies-banning...

by gamblor956on 9/26/22, 5:58 PM

Reading the GamesIndustryBiz article, her book was technically banned when the district banned "diversity resources" (meaning generally any book by a minority which mentions the minority experience in any way), and then they made an exception for books already in use. Her book was already in use, so existing copies can continue to be use, but new copies and new editions of her book are banned.

So both sides are correct on this...

by tinalumfoilon 9/26/22, 6:02 PM

This whole debacle reminds me of (a long time ago at this point), a story where a university tried to reprimand a janitor for reading a book they didn't like on his break. It does make me wonder how many have been reprimanded for reading the wrong book but think it was worth the energy to fight it.

https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna25680655

EDIT: I did some research and this letter the school gave the janitor, which I feel the need to share just because of how insane and clearly illegal it is https://d28htnjz2elwuj.cloudfront.net/pdfs/4b26b68ef98eb6b6d...

by dc-programmeron 9/26/22, 5:29 PM

Anything that can be construed as a challenge to traditional conceptions of the American patriarch will come under attack by the right moving forward