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<blockquote data-quote="Kathy813" data-source="post: 309400" data-attributes="member: 1967"><p>Dazed and Confused~ I had the same reaction to the schools turning kids into difficult children comment. </p><p></p><p>I am always interested in reading how different states handle education issues. Georgia is nothing like California . . . parents have the right to limit acceptable reading materials that can be checked out in both school libraries and public libraries. </p><p></p><p>What really upsets me is that despite the right to control their own child's reading materials, zealots here still try to ban books for everyone else's children.</p><p></p><p>I had posted about a lady that tried to ban Harry Potter books from my county's schools a couple of years ago. She admitted that the reason she was trying to ban them was because they conflicted with her religious beliefs. Even though she was able to limit her own childrens' access, she went through the local school committee (parents and teachers), the county level committee (parents, teachers, county school officials, and community leaders) and finally the court system in her efforts to get the books banned. She was turned down at every level and threatened to take it to the Georgia supreme court. I haven't heard about her in a while so I guess she has given up her crusade against Harry Potter.</p><p></p><p>~Kathy</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kathy813, post: 309400, member: 1967"] Dazed and Confused~ I had the same reaction to the schools turning kids into difficult children comment. I am always interested in reading how different states handle education issues. Georgia is nothing like California . . . parents have the right to limit acceptable reading materials that can be checked out in both school libraries and public libraries. What really upsets me is that despite the right to control their own child's reading materials, zealots here still try to ban books for everyone else's children. I had posted about a lady that tried to ban Harry Potter books from my county's schools a couple of years ago. She admitted that the reason she was trying to ban them was because they conflicted with her religious beliefs. Even though she was able to limit her own childrens' access, she went through the local school committee (parents and teachers), the county level committee (parents, teachers, county school officials, and community leaders) and finally the court system in her efforts to get the books banned. She was turned down at every level and threatened to take it to the Georgia supreme court. I haven't heard about her in a while so I guess she has given up her crusade against Harry Potter. ~Kathy [/QUOTE]
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