School district reinstates books to library despite 'pornography' concerns

Stacy Langton, the mother of a student at Fairfax High School in Fairfax County, Virginia, reads aloud sexually explicit content from two books distributed in the school district's libraries at a Fairfax County School Board meeting, Sept. 23, 2021. (Photo: YouTube/Do Better FCPS)

The largest school district in the US has said it is reinstating two books to its high school libraries after a review into concerns raised by a mother that they contain "pornography" with graphic descriptions of sex acts between men and boys.

Two committees that reviewed and assessed Lawn Boy by Jonathan Evison and Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe have unanimously recommended that they remain in public school libraries as "diverse" reading material for students with underrepresented identities, Fairfax County Public Schools in Virginia has announced.

"I'm glad that the book has been reinstated, where I hope it will continue to inspire and comfort young adult readers who have been marginalized economically, racially, or by virtue of their sexual identification, so that these young people might find their rightful place within the large culture," The Washington Post quoted Kobabe as saying in response to the school district's decision.

Stacy Langton, the parent of a student in the Fairfax public schools who confronted the school board about the content being accessible to a juvenile audience, said she will appeal the decision in the school system. She added that her complaint wasn't aimed at the LGBT characters in the book, as her mother was a lesbian, according to the Post.

"It's never about that," she was quoted as saying. "I'm not looking to remove the LGBTQ book collection as a whole."

At a school board meeting in September, Langton had read aloud sexually explicit material and shared graphic images featured in the two books.

"After seeing a September 9 school board meeting in Texas on pornography in the schools, I decided to check the titles at my child's school, Fairfax High School," she said during the meeting.

Langton held up the two books singled out at the Texas school board meeting that are also available in several public high schools in Fairfax County. She said that "both of these books include pedophilia, [and] sex between men and boys."

She added: "Both books describe different acts. One book describes a fourth-grade boy performing oral sex on an adult male. The other book has detailed illustrations of a man having sex with a boy ... The illustrations include fellatio, sex toys, masturbation and violent nudity."

A school board member suggested that teenagers' access to the books is acceptable because they're only available "for high school students." However, the majority of high school students are younger than 18, which is the age of consent in Virginia. The sexual activities graphically described in the books between adults and children are a crime.

Courtesy of The Christian Post

Newsletter Stay up to date with Christian Today
News
Kemi Badenoch: End investigations into Darlington nurses and Jennifer Melle
Kemi Badenoch: End investigations into Darlington nurses and Jennifer Melle

The NHS appears to be resisting the Supreme Court ruling on gender.

Newsboys launch legal action against MercyMe, concert promoters and media
Newsboys launch legal action against MercyMe, concert promoters and media

The Christian band Newsboys and owner Wes Campbell have filed a federal lawsuit in Tennessee alleging defamation and antitrust violations against major figures in CCM, including MercyMe and frontman Bart Millard, claiming a coordinated effort to force them out of the concert market.

Nick Vujicic responds to rumours he is dead by confirming he is alive and well
Nick Vujicic responds to rumours he is dead by confirming he is alive and well

"Although I’d like to go Home, there’s much more work to be done,” the 43 year old said.

'Sad moment' as abortion up to birth becomes the law of the land
'Sad moment' as abortion up to birth becomes the law of the land

The passage of the Crime and Policing Bill means, among other things, that women who abort their babies beyond the legal limit of 24 weeks will face no criminal sanction.