“Moms for Liberty” is at it again.
Here we see their co-founder cheering on a member for quoting Hitler in a newsletter.
“I stand with that mom!”
*audience cheers* pic.twitter.com/289eFp1yQD
— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) July 8, 2023
Apparently the Moms for Liberty find a distinction between Americans and Jews pic.twitter.com/wmMz3xNVrF
— Liam Nissan™ (@theliamnissan) July 12, 2023
Moms for Liberty isn’t new—they just rebranded, almost 60 years later. pic.twitter.com/JniQCNWap7
— RazzLi (@razzli_) July 4, 2023
Saying Jews are not Americans is based.
They literally are not Americans. They have their own country, which they are loyal to.
I don’t think these moms actually meant what was being implied, but they said it.
Jews are now attacking them for being against child gay sex.
A Moms for Liberty chapter in Florida scored a victory this week when it got five books removed from a school district after highlighting their graphic depictions of sex, violence, pedophilia, bestiality and other subject matter inappropriate for school children.
The Leon County schools superintendent confirmed Tuesday that “Dead End” by Jason Meyer, “Push” by Sapphire, “Doomed” by Chuck Palahniuk, “Lucky” by Alice Sebold and “Me, Earl and the Dying Girl” by Jesse Andrews had all been pulled from the shelves of two high schools.
Ah, come on.
Chuck’s okay.
Those titles and others were identified by parents and the Leon County Moms for Liberty chapter as corrosive to children and deserving of ejection.
“The books that we are talking about are dark, depressive, utterly hopeless and damaging,” said Priscilla West, chair of the local Moms for Liberty chapter, at a Tuesday board meeting.
“The board rightly recognized that graphic narrative accounts of violent rape, incest, pedophilia, bestiality should be removed immediately.”
Superintendent Rocky Hanna said this week the yanked volumes were in clear violation of new Florida laws that restrict the types of materials students can access.
“There is no gray,” Hanna said of the removed items. “There is no shade of gray. These are black-and-white, cut-and-dried, need-to-be-removed.”
West rejected portrayals of her group as overzealous “prudes” at Tuesday’s meeting, arguing parents innately want to shield their children from harmful materials.
“Parents want children on a path to healthy and productive lives,” she said. “We do not want destructive behaviors normalized in books in our children’s eyes.”
Moms for Liberty linked to specific passages in each of the works on its Facebook page. A passage from “Lucky” describes a young girl being penetrated in an unnatural way, urinated on and called a “bitch.”
But did she deserve it?
We need the context here.
The organization listed six pages of inappropriate passages from “Shine,” including a scene where a young girl describes her brother’s penis and repeated descriptions of methamphetamine use.
Another flagged excerpt outlines a man’s preference for girls “the younger the better.” “Every winter he came into town for the Christmas pageant,” the text reads. “Because seeing little kids in angel robes gave him a b—r.”
Moms for Liberty also called for the removal of “Push,” which includes graphic descriptions of sex between a father and his daughter.
Yeah, it’s wild what’s in these books.
I remember getting traumatized in 9th grade when I was assigned “Less Than Zero.”
That said: we are talking about high school here. Maybe these removals are valid, but I would personally be much more focused on what is going on in the elementary schools with the gay sex instruction manuals.
When you’re considering these books, remember that in Germany, they all of a sudden elected Adolf Hitler for literally no reason.
“When we ban books like “Push”, we are in danger of falling into the sinkhole of hate and prejudice and ignorance and of losing what little love we have left for each other.” – Sapphire, author of “Push”, read by a local volunteer to speak out against book banning. pic.twitter.com/hjPK1aNTji
— Red Wine and Blue (@RedWineBlueUSA) March 31, 2023
You have to wonder why Texas and Florida allowed this in the first place.
That’s the case with most of these issues that are viewed as “wins” by conservatives – why was it happening at all?
Where were you when these issues first began?
The law is clear. The definitions are clear. It prohibits sexually explicit materials like these.
All of these books are currently in Texas schools. But, not for long. pic.twitter.com/sUIko6iwEm
— Christin Bentley, SREC SD-1 (@thedaughter17) June 15, 2023