“We have to fight with [the school board] about not wanting porn in the libraries,” said one meeting attendee, Katie Dulaney. “You all have the authority to pull these books out of the schools… You should all resign.”
Parents in favor of a ban claimed the books had “explicit sexual material” and community members quickly lined up at the podium on Tuesday to rage against books on the list.
“You have no problem with descriptive, pedophilic acts, extreme detailed rape of children, and other explicit horrible sexual acts being in the books in the libraries,” she claimed. “One board member went as far as suggesting parents read these disgusting books with our children. I don’t know about you all, but I’m not going to read violent, pedophilic, pornography with my children.”
She then got choked up about a book that allegedly described a child’s experience being assaulted by a pedophile—but was more angry at the book’s existence, rather than the scourge of child abuse it depicted. Confusingly, she later claimed the books in question were “sexually explicit material designed to excite you.”
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