#Banned Book Program
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filosofablogger · 2 years ago
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Give 'Em Books!!! 📖
Something good popped out in my newsfeed today and I just had to share it with you.  It is called Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) and it recently launched the Banned Book Program, granting free nationwide access to books restricted in schools or libraries. It functions through GPS-based geo-targeting; by typing in your zip code, you are shown the complete list of titles prohibited in…
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guardian-angle22 · 2 years ago
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― Ellen Hopkins
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thenightisland · 2 years ago
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If you ever worry about being cringe consider that my catholic girls high school instituted a "house cup" with points and everything and sorted us into houses named after like saints and virtuous catholic women and shit a la harry potter in an effort to stay relevant with the Youths (it did not work)
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kingsbridgelibraryteens · 2 years ago
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Why are Books Challenged and Banned?
Wednesday 10/4/23 @ 4:00PM
*This event is online only.* 
Join the staff of the Kingsbridge Library for a slideshow about banned and challenged books that will be part trivia game, part book discussion, and part resource guide. Celebrate your freedom to read with us!
During this virtual program, you will learn about the most frequent reasons that books are challenged, some of the most frequently challenged books and authors, plus books and websites that you can explore to learn more about censorship.
This Banned Books Week program is for teens ages 13-18.
Learn more and register at bit.ly/KBBAN!
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visenyaism · 7 months ago
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do you have any ideas about why so many students are struggling with literacy now? I know that illiteracy and reading comprehension have been issues for years and most americans read at like a 5th grade reading level but I’m curious why it seems to be worse now (pandemic? no child left behind?)
It is everything. There’s not one answer. I could talk about this forever so instead I set a five minute timer on my phone and wrote a list of as many of the many things that are causing this on a systemic level that I could think of:
It’s parents not reading with their kids (a privilege, but some parents have that privilege to be able to do this and don’t.)
It’s youtube from birth and never being bored.
It’s phasing out phonics for sight words (memorizing without understanding sounds or meaning) in elementary schools in the early aughts.
It’s defunding public libraries that do all the community and youth outreach.
It’s NCLB and mandating standardized tests which center reading short passages as opposed to longform texts so students don’t build up the endurance or comprehension skills.
It’s NCLB preventing schools from holding students back if they lack the literacy skills to move onto the next grade because they can’t be left behind so they’re passed on.
It’s the chronic underfunding of ESL and Special Ed programs for students who need extra literacy support.
It’s the cultural devaluing of the humanities in favor of stem and business because those make more money which leads to a lot of students to completely disregard reading and writing.
It’s the learning loss from covid.
It’s covid trauma manifesting in a lot of students as learned helplessness, or an inability to “figure things out” or push through adversity to complete challenging tasks independently, especially reading difficult texts.
It’s covid normalizing cheating and copying.
It’s increasing phone use.
It’s damage to attention span exacerbated by increased phone use that leaves you without an ability to sit and be bored ever without 2-3 forms of constant stimulation.
It’s shortform video becoming the predominant form of social media content as opposed to anything text-based.
It’s starting to also be generative AI.
It’s the book bans.
what did I miss.
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anistarrose · 8 months ago
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Please don't tune out when you get to the non-partisan section of your ballot this November. First off, where state Supreme Court justices are elected, Republicans are trying their darndest to elect candidates who will destroy reproductive freedom, gut voting rights, and do everything in their power to give "contested" elections to Republicans. Contrast Wisconsin electing a justice in 2023 who helped rule two partisan gerrymanders unconstitutional, versus North Carolina electing a conservative majority in 2022, who upheld a racist voter ID law and a partisan gerrymander that liberal justices had previously struck down both of.
Second, local judicial offices will make infinitely more of an impact on your community than a divided state or federal legislature will. District and circuit courts, especially, are where criminalization of homelessness and poverty play out, and where electing a progressive judge with a commitment to criminal justice reform can make an immediate difference in people's lives.
It's a premier example of buying people time, and doing profound-short-term good, while we work to eventually change the system. You might not think there will be any such progressive justices running in your district, but you won't know unless you do your research. (More on "research" in a moment.)
The candidates you elect to your non-partisan city council will determine whether those laws criminalizing homelessness get passed, how many blank checks the police get to surveil and oppress, and whether lifesaving harm reduction programs, like needle exchanges and even fentanyl test strips, are legal in your municipality. Your non-partisan school board might need your vote to fend off Moms for Liberty candidates and their ilk, who want to ban every book with a queer person or acknowledgement of racism in it.
Of course, this begs the question — if these candidates are non-partisan, and often hyper-local, then how do I research them? There's so much less information and press about them, so how do I make an informed decision?
I'm not an expert, myself. But I do think/hope I have enough tips to consist of a useful conclusion to this post:
Plan ahead. If you vote in person, figure out what's on your ballot before you show up and get jumpscared by names you don't know. Find out what's on your ballot beforehand, and bring notes with you when you vote. Your city website should have a sample ballot, and if they drop the ball, go to Ballotpedia.
Ballotpedia in general, speaking of which. Candidates often answer Ballotpedia's interviews, and if you're lucky, you'll also get all the dirt on who's donating to their campaign.
Check endorsements. Usually candidates are very vocal about these on their websites. If local/state progressive leaders and a couple unions (not counting police unions lol) are endorsing a candidate, then that's not the end of my personal research process per se, but it usually speeds things up.
Check the back of the ballot. That's where non-partisan races usually bleed over to. This is the other reason why notes are helpful, because they can confirm you're not missing anything.
I've seen some misconceptions in the reblogs, so an addendum to my point about bringing notes on the candidates: I strongly suggest making those notes a physical list that you bring polling place with you. Many states do allow phones at the polling place, but several states explicitly don't — Nevada, Maryland, and Texas all ban phones, and that may not be an exhaustive list. There may also be states that allow individual city clerks to set policies.
You should also pause and think before you take a photo of your ballot, because even some states that don't ban phones still ban ballot photographs. But whether it's a photo, or just having your phone in general — in an environment as high-risk for voter suppression as the current one, you don't want even a little bit of ambiguity about your conduct. Physical notes are your friends.
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ellipsus-writes · 3 months ago
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The words they're afraid of.
(Read on our blog.)
The recently appointed Department of Defense head Pete Hegseth (formerly Fox News pundit, perpetually soused creepy uncle, and current group chat leaker of classified intel) banned images of the Enola Gay from the Pentagon’s website for the offense of “DEI” language. In keeping with the far right’s stated war on anything vaguely resembling diversity, equity and inclusion, even historical photos are up for cancellation. When a literal weapon of mass destruction is censored for being a bit fruity under the Trump administration’s war against inconvenient truths, what exactly is left untouched?
This is clown show stuff, but the stakes are far from funny. While some might be hesitant to compare the current administration to the very worst history has to offer, we can at least all agree that they are dyed-in-the-wool grammar Nazis. Policing language has been the objective of the MAGA culture war long before Project 2025’s debut—the wave of book bans orchestrated by astroturf movements like Moms for Liberty, and Florida’s 2022 Don’t Say Gay bill have already had a profound effect in the arena of free speech and freedom of expression (despite the far right’s long tradition of doublespeak performative free-speech martyrdom to the contrary). Don’t Say Gay ostensibly targeted K-3 education, but LGBT+ content at all levels of education (and beyond) was either quietly censored or entirely preempted in practice. The results were not just a war on so-called ideology, or words alone—but on reality and essential freedoms.
Now, words as innocuous and important as racism, climate change, hate speech, prejudice, mental health, and inequality are targeted as subversive. Entire concepts are being vanished from government institutions, scrubbed not only from descriptions but from metadata, search indexes, and archival frameworks.
If you don’t name a thing, does it exist?
These words are as numerous as they are generic: women, race, Black, immigrants, multicultural, gender, injustice. But what is painfully unserious is also particularly dangerous in its real-world consequences. The process of controlling words is a well-worn authoritarian tendency. Fifty-two universities are now under investigation as part of the President's effort to curb “woke” research and thought crimes. Institutions are being coerced to comply with a nebulous set of ideological demands, or face budgetary annihilation. That means cutting funding for entire departments, slashing financial aid, defunding scientific grants, and pressuring faculty to self-censor.
The possibilities for censorship extend far and wide—interfering, by extension, in everything from reproductive healthcare programs, to libraries and museums. The Trump administration’s proposed budget slashing all federal funding for libraries, including the Institute of Museum and Library Services, will effectively gut an infrastructure that supports over 100,000 libraries and museums across the country—community centers, educational lifelines, internet access points, and archives of marginalized histories (starting with the Smithsonian Institution).
When you erase access, you erase participation. And when you erase participation, you erase people, and the means by which future generations might even learn they existed. A culture that cannot remember is a culture that cannot resist.
The erasure is, yet again, unsurprisingly targeted at minorities and LGBT+ people. The National Parks Service quietly revised the Stonewall Monument’s website to remove references to transgender people—a fundamental part of the original protests. Not an oversight, not a mistake, but a deliberate excision—one point in a wider plan of erasure depicted in stark detail in Project 2025, a blueprint to dismantle civil rights, defund LGBT+-related healthcare, and rewrite history from the ground up.
Dehumanization by deletion—welcome to the reactionary resurgence of doubleplusungood governance. In Trumpland, words are weapons—but not in the way they intend. Their fear of language betrays its power; that’s why they’re trying so hard to police it.
Words hurt them.
Hurt them back.
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- the Ellipsus Team
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everyendeavor · 4 months ago
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Pass it on!
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rcstories · 1 year ago
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Let The People Read
A child reading is a wonderful thing. I love how books have a way of opening up a person’s world. Now that summer is here, many libraries and school districts are promoting their Summer Reading Programs. It’s great to see the growing popularity of neighborhood book exchanges and Little Free Libraries, especially in areas around the country where book banning has become a hot topic issue. Teachers…
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disregardcanon · 5 months ago
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alright, i'm fucking done with the tiktok ban shit. here's what trump has promised to do on day 1 of his 2nd term. january 20th 2025
mass deportation program
2. end birthright citizenship
3. use every trick in the book on border policy to fuck people over
4. pardon january 6th defendants
5. "end" the war in ukraine. (through talks with putin. uh huh)
6. tariffs, tariffs, tariffs, consumers paying tariffs
7. no more electric vehicle expectation
8. drilling for oil. Leavitt promised the administration would “expedite permits for drilling and for fracking all over this country
9. american cars i guess
10. go after trans girls in sports.
11. go after gender affirming care
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boneless-mika · 1 year ago
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I want to fight Swedish hotel costs. I can afford like nothing bc I’m going to a con in July…
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heartavenue · 2 months ago
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જ⁀➴ Things To Script: Politics Edition
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Yes, this is an American aesthetic. Yes it is because I am American.
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Elections are completely fair, not rigged, no scandals, fair.
There are no two of the "lesser evils" all candidates are genuinely good people and they want nothing but the best for the country.
All candidates represent the American people, if the American people find that the elected official is unfit they will be REMOVED (yes this is Trump shade.)
There is separation of church and state.
Americans are more open-minded about candidates from parties other than the Democratic and Republican party
(should I just say script out conservatism in general? I mean this is your reality you can if you want!)
We have no official language and ALL languages, cultures, backgrounds are represented and have the ability to be taught.
DEATH to the electoral college.
Fake news, propaganda, lies, non fact checked information cannot make it's way towards journalism.
News outlets have to report TRUE, unbiased information (I'm looking at you FOX)
No trade wars...
America does not involve itself in colonialism, imperialism, militarism, etc (mainly because those things do NOT exist.)
Supreme Court Justices do not rule for life.
There is an age limit to the presidency (this is subjective but personally I don't want an 80 year old president)
The minimum wage is increased from $7.25 (can you believe it's still that) to $20 (or whatever you prefer)
Free healthcare across ALL fifty states.
Planned Parenthood is in every state, providing safe abortions, sex ed, contraceptives, etc to everyone who is in need.
Abortions can NEVER be banned.
Free childcare across ALL fifty states.
Our politicians are civil, cordial, respectful, kind, intelligent (another dig on...let's just say a few people)
World peace
All oppressed/colonized people are FREE and live without any colonial influence.
Affordable prescription drugs.
Baby formula is affordable (this isn't really political but no formula should cost FIFTY BUCKS?)
Gay marriage is legal across all states and can NOT be revoked.
No fascism, Nazism, white supremacy, zionism, any bigoted idealogy in general does NOT exist.
Books are not banned/ can't be banned.
No fracking.
Free college.
No discrimination against ANYONE no matter their race, ethnicity, nationality, origin, sexuality, gender identity, etc.
Rape, sexual assault, pedophilia does not exist.
Crime in general doesn't exist.
Free therapy across the country.
The government actually WORKS to make this country better.
ICE does NOT exist.
Federal assistance programs can NOT be cut.
No wealth gap (no top 1% and the struggling 99%)
No homelessness.
No poverty.
Maternity leave is LONGER (isn't it like 2-6 weeks? come on now...)
Court rulings that have been passed can NOT be overturned (think roe v. wade)
No pink tax!
First time homeowners receive a grant from the government to help them with payments.
Credit scores isn't an issue, anyone regardless of their wealth can purchase a new car/home/rent an apartment.
Native Americans are seen as the true indigenous people of the Americas an they are incredibly respected, the land is returned back to them.
Follow up: Columbus Day does not exist.
The KKK doesn't exist...or MAGA or TRUMP!
No anti-vaxxers (get vaccinated, no they don't cause autism and no they aren't chipping you or whatever right wingers think)
They are laws put in place to protect our planet, nature reserves, recycling is MANDATORY, wildlife parks, etc.
History is NOT erased and is actively taught/encouraged in schools.
Guns...do I even need to explain at this point...
Immigrants are WELCOME and there is no stigma, discrimination or stereotypes about them either!
This country is extremely diplomatic we are on good terms with all countries, every meeting with them goes well and can only strengthen our allyship.
DEI EVERYWHERE!
everyone is WOKE, I mean unprecedented woke, profoundly woke EVERYONE GET MORE WOKE NOW!!!
No wars.
There is RESEARCH done on women's health (why don't we know anything about endometriosis fr...)
Mount Rushmore doesn't exist
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Okay that's all I could come up with for now! Buh bye my loves!
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itgetsbetter · 3 months ago
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This group of Maryland high school students said f book bans, we'll write our own
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Despite Maryland’s Freedom to Read act, schools still banned 64 books in the 2023-2024 school year—many by queer authors and centering LGBTQ+ identities. So this group of high school students said f that.
With one of our It Gets Better: Changemakers grants, they launched Navigating the Margins—a writing program that paired young authors with published mentors. What came out of the partnerships was a groundbreaking anthology filled with stories ranging from fantasy and dystopian fiction to school dramas and murder mysteries.
One of the students said, "I see the book at school and I’m filled with such immense pride for all of us who were brave enough and proud enough to show who we really are." <3
If you want to do this or something similar for LGBTQ+ youth in your own community, we can help! Apply for a $10,000 Changemakers grant by May 5th at itgetsbetter.org/changemakers.
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dark-l-angel · 2 months ago
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may I please request batfam x reader where they randomly find out the reader has Omnilingualism? the reader just randomly drops lore then the batfam is like "HUH?" me pleading:
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A/N: Sure luv ❤️ sorry it took a little while.. but here you go 😺
Omnilingualism is the ability to understand all languages.. spoken, written, or otherwise.. instantly and fluently, without having to learn them first.
Batfam x Omnilingual reader + onshot bonus "wait- YOU CAN SPEAK EVERY LANGUAGE?!"
Bruce Wayne:
He pretends he isn’t impressed. He really tries. But the moment you casually correct a mistranslation in one of his case files from an obscure dialect in the Amazon, his eye twitches.
Definitely runs tests in the Batcave. "For data" he claims. Lies. He just wants an excuse to hear you switch flawlessly between Ancient Sumerian and Icelandic.
Low-key starts trusting you with delicate negotiations at Wayne Enterprises. "Accidentally" leaves confidential contracts in languages no one in the room understands except you.
Oh, and you catch him brushing up on his French. He'll never admit it, but he’s trying to catch up to you.
You once whispered something scandalous to him in flawless Latin during a gala. His hand on your lower back tightened just slightly. Dangerous man, but you’re worse.
Dick grayson:
Immediately obsessed. No chill whatsoever.
"Say something in Italian!" "Now Portuguese! Oh oh.. Tagalog!"
Thinks it’s the sexiest thing he’s ever heard. Genuinely struggles to focus if you speak in another language, especially something romantic-sounding. (You catch him blushing like a schoolboy, every time.)
Tries to flirt back in another language but completely butchers it. You gently correct him, and it turns into an unintentional couples language lesson.
You catch him Googling "How to propose in 20 languages." Cute idiot.
Teases you with fake words in gibberish, just to see if you catch on. You always do.
Jason Todd :
Oh, this man loves it. Filthy mouth, wicked grin, and a brain full of bad ideas.
Purposely swears in different languages to see if you catch him. You do. Every. Single. Time.
One time you threw back a sharp insult in flawless Russian, and he damn near swooned.
Has you read his favorite banned books in their original languages. "I just wanna hear you say it, babe." No you don’t, Jason. You want to hear them moaned, don’t you?
Will 100% ask you to dirty talk in languages no one else understands in public settings. "What? I like living dangerously."
Bonus: If you tease him in French, it destroys him. He can’t fight it. French + your voice = his personal kryptonite.
Tim Drake :
Immediately runs to his laptop. He needs answers.
"Omnilingualism is a hyper rare meta-ability.. there are fewer than seven confirmed cases worldwide.. wait- does this mean you can read codes in programming languages like they’re actual languages?!"
Makes you his official decryption buddy. His Batcomputer just became 500% more efficient.
Low-key fascinated, high-key turned on.
Asks you to record audio lessons for him in various languages. You catch him listening to them at 2am with a suspiciously dazed smile.
Will absolutely text you random phrases in dead languages at ungodly hours of the night. "For science."
Damian Wayne :
Instantly annoyed that he’s no longer the most linguistically gifted person in the room.
Challenges you constantly. "Recite this ancient Arabic proverb." You do, flawlessly, and throw in the correct accent for good measure.
He respects you deeply but refuses to admit it directly.
Secretly asks you to teach him rare dialects to communicate with his animals better.
The moment you start speaking to Titus in perfect, gentle Arabic, his eyes go wide. You’ve officially earned his permanent admiration.
Bonus: You tease him by complimenting him in languages he doesn’t know yet. He storms off to study them immediately.
Alfred Pennyworth
Unbothered king. He knew from the start.
Smiles softly when you casually slip into old, classical British idioms even Bruce doesn’t understand.
Occasionally tests you with the oddest phrases from obscure Commonwealth colonies. You pass every time.
"I dare say, Miss, you have a talent most remarkable."
Secretly keeps a list of the rarest languages to see if there’s anything you don’t know.
Family game nights? Forget it. You dominate every round of “Guess That Language.”
You become their favorite asset in undercover ops. Fake passports? Check. Local slang? You’re a walking encyclopedia.
They jokingly call you their “Batbabel.” (Yes, even Bruce lets that nickname slip once.)
Jason is convinced you must have alien blood. "Bet you could sweet talk the Martians, too."
You like to randomly mess with them by switching languages mid-conversation. Pure chaos.
And they all fall a little harder every time you do.
Oneshot bonus : Wait- YOU CAN SPEAK EVERY LANGUAGE?!
It started, as many things in Wayne Manor do, in the most stupidly casual way possible.
You were seated at the long dining table, lazily flipping through your phone while Alfred served brunch. Tim was half-asleep beside you, his forehead dangerously close to his waffles. Jason was reading War and Peace in Russian, because of course he was. Damian was arguing with Dick over the proper form for his new kata routine, while Bruce pretended to read the paper but was very obviously just eavesdropping like the rest of them.
Then, Alfred, with his calm British cadence, said something softly under his breath. In French.
"Mon dieu, cette confiture est un désastre…" (this jam is a disaster...)
Without thinking, without even looking up from your phone, you mumbled back, perfect pronunciation and all,
"Pas nécessairement. C’est la confiture d’orange, elle est censée être comme ça." (Not necessarily. It's orange marmalade, it's supposed to be like that.)
Silence.
Dead silence.
Tim lifted his head slowly, eyes bleary but confused.
Jason lowered his book.
Damian squinted at you like you’d just sprouted a second head.
Bruce folded his newspaper with a quiet, deliberate finality.
Dick? Dick’s eyes were sparkling with mischief.
"Since when do you speak French?" he asked, grinning like the cat who caught the canary.
You blinked, confused by the attention. "Huh? Oh, I don’t."
Wrong answer.
"You just did" Tim said flatly, blinking the sleep out of his eyes.
Jason leaned forward on his elbows, sharp smirk spreading. "Care to explain, mon ami?"
Your brain, still not connecting the dots, offered the most unhelpful thing possible: a shrug. "I don’t know. He just said the jam was a disaster. I just... knew."
“Wait.” Damian’s eyes narrowed into slits, laser-focused. "What did Alfred say, exactly?"
You repeated it, casually.
He tried to hide it, but his brows twitched upward. "That’s correct."
Now Jason was grinning like he knew something juicy. "Try Russian."
"What?"
"Say something in Russian," Jason pressed, eyes alight with curiosity.
You hesitated, then shrugged. "Что ты хочешь, чтобы я сказал?" (What do you want me to say?)
Jason’s chair screeched back from the table as he stood, hands in his hair. “NO. No, no, no, what the hell is this?!”
"That was perfect," Tim said, his voice pitching higher, caffeinated brain now fully awake.
"You said you don’t speak these languages?" Bruce asked, a suspicious tilt to his head like he was running seventeen background checks in his mind at once.
You frowned, getting a little defensive now. "I don’t! I never studied Russian, or French, or whatever else. I just... get it, I guess?"
Dick gasped, like someone hit him with a Batarang of Realization. "Wait wait wait.. omnilingualism."
Jason’s mouth dropped open. "No freaking way."
Tim’s eyes went huge behind his glasses. "That’s an actual thing, you know. Hyper rare meta ability. The brain automatically understands and reproduces any language it’s exposed to."
Damian narrowed his eyes, crossing his arms. "Prove it."
"Say something in Ancient Latin," Bruce instructed, his detective mode fully activated.
You tilted your head, focusing, and then fluently responded,
"Memento mori, pater. Etiam noctes detectivi requiem merentur" (Remember death, father. Even detectives of the night deserve rest.)
Pin-drop silence.
Jason cackled so hard he nearly fell out of his chair.
Dick was clapping like you’d won an Olympic gold medal.
Tim, meanwhile, frantically pulled out his phone, already Googling ‘omnilingual reader discovered at brunch’.
Bruce, stoic as ever, gave you a single nod of respect. "We’ll need to run tests."
"You mean interviews," Dick corrected, leaning closer with a grin. "Because I, for one, have a thousand questions."
"Congratulations" Jason said dryly, raising his glass of orange juice in your direction. "You’re officially our walking, talking, sexy Google Translate."
You rolled your eyes with a crooked smile. "Glad I can be of service."
"And you will be," Bruce added, already making plans in his head. Oh, you were never getting out of this one.
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Sometimes, as much as I love internet communities and spaces, I really think a lot of people have spent so much time in sanitized, morally pure echo chambers that they lose sight of realism and life outside the internet.
I live in Alabama. My fiancée and I cannot hold hands down the street without fear of homophobic assholes. We have an abortion ban with no exceptions for rape or incest. We are one of the poorest states in the US with some of the lowest scores on metrics related to quality of life, including maternal mortality, healthcare, education, and violence. It’s not a coincidence that we are also one of the most red, one of the most Republican states in the Union. In 2017 the UN said the conditions in Alabama are similar to those in a third-world country.
Trump gave a voice to the most violently racist, sexist, xenophobic groups of people who, unfortunately for most of us in the Southern U.S., run our states and have only grown more powerful since his rise to power. The Deep South powers MAGA, and we all suffer for it.
We have no protections if they don’t come from the federal government.
I know people are suffering internationally and my heart is with them. However, this election is not just about foreign policy - we have millions of Americans right here at home living in danger, living in areas where they have been completely abandoned by their local leaders. We need this win.
No candidate is perfect, but for the first time in my voting lifetime I’m excited to vote. I’m excited for the Kamala Harris/Tim Walz ticket because they are addressing the issues close to home. They’re advocating for education as the ticket to a better life, but without the crippling student debt. They’re advocating for the right to love who you love without fear and with pride. Kamala has always been pro-LGBT+ and so has Tim. Again, if you’re queer in the South, we don’t have support unless it comes from the federal government, and we absolutely will not have support if the Republicans regain the White House.
Kamala speaks in length about re-entry programs to reduce recidivism and help people who have been arrested and imprisoned regain their lives. Tim Walz supported restoring voting rights to felons. In the South, you know who comprise the majority of felons? Members of minorities. It’s one of the major tools of systemic racism and mass disenfranchisement, and arguably the modern face of slavery (there are some fantastic documentaries and books that explain the connection between the post-Reconstruction South and the disproportionate rates of imprisonment for BIPOC). Having candidates who recognize this and want to restore the freedom and rights to people who have come into contact with the criminal justice system? And keep them from having to go to prison in the first place? That’s refreshing. That’s exciting.
I would *love* to live in a country where women’s rights are respected, where LGBT+ rights and protections are a given, where we treat former criminals and individuals experiencing mental health crises with respect and dignity. I would *love* to live in a country where education is free of religious interference and each and every citizen is entitled to a fair start and equal opportunities.
But I don’t live in that country. Millions and millions of Americans find their rights and freedoms up for debate and on the ballot.
Project 2025 poses the largest threat to the future of our democracy as we know it. We are being called to fight for the future of our country.
We have to put on our oxygen masks first before we can help others.
You don’t have moral purity when you wash your hands of the millions of us who are still fighting for own freedoms right here.
The reality is that a presidential candidate is a best fit, and not a perfect fit. But comparatively speaking? Kamala is pretty damn close.
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kingsbridgelibraryteens · 2 years ago
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Why are Books Challenged & Banned?
TODAY!!!
Wednesday 10/4/23 @ 4:00PM
*This teen program is online only.* 
Join the staff of the Kingsbridge Library for a slideshow about banned and challenged books that will be part trivia game, part book discussion, and part resource guide. Celebrate your freedom to read with us!
During this program, you will learn about the most frequent reasons that books are challenged, some of the most frequently challenged books and authors, plus books and websites that you can explore to learn more about censorship.
This Banned Books Week program is for teens ages 13-18.
Register at bit.ly/KBBAN
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