Gender Queer: Pornographic Images in Our School Libraries and Public Libraries!
CAUTION: FOLLOWING ARE PORNOGRAPHIC AND SEXUALLY EXPLICIT IMAGES I SCANNED FROM PAGES OF THIS BOOK.
I have found this book in the online library catalogs at El Paso ISD (two high schools), Dallas ISD (two middle schools, and one high school), Austin ISD (four high schools), Pflugerville ISD (1 high school), Ferris ISD (1school), and Canutillo ISD (high school). It is impossible to check the online catalogs for every public school ISD in Texas, so I encourage you to check your own school districts for this book and others. Gender Queer was also in the library at a school in Keller ISD, but parents forced its removal. The books are on the shelves and are also available for students to download and read privately. I have also found it in many public library online catalogs including Richardson, Dallas, Keller, McKinney, Garland, Plano, Frisco, Allen, Irving, Austin, Houston, San Antonio, Plugerville, and El Paso (so far).
Update 1/11/22: Dallas ISD has removed Gender Queer from its online search catalog. It may still be in school libraries, however.
I found this book in the adult graphic novel section of our suburban public library where I checked it out with my library card. This begs the question...why is this pornographic graphic novel in the adult section? This book is about a gay/questioning/nonbinary (or whatever) teen. Is the library trying to appeal to pedophiles? Also, they should know that older teens often check out books in the adult section of the public library. Check your public libraries for obscene material, especially in the teen/young adult graphic novel section (where you can find Gender Queer in some libraries). Graphic novels such as Bloom, Check Please!, Juliet Takes a Breath, The Girl From the Sea, Let's Talk About It, Heartstopper, Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up With Me, The Daughters of Ys, My Lesbian Experience With Loneliness, My Brother's Husband, Fence, Spinning, This One Summer, and others feature LGBTQ+ themes. You can Goggle "graphic novels with LGBTQ+ themes" for a good long list of them. Why are Marxists using graphic novels to indoctrinate kids? Kids like them. Parents see the graphic novel cover and think that the novel is fun and innocent. This is how the Marxists fly their indoctrination under the radar.
Following are pages I scanned from the book Gender Queer. These images are very graphic and sexually explicit and pornographic! I didn't want to include the images because they are so disgusting and repulsive, but I think until people actually see what is going on they won't speak up and insist that these books be removed. The Marxists who are indoctrinating our children say that some teens are gay and that they should be able to read literature written for them. They also say that there is nothing wrong with being gay, so kids should be able to read about it. If these books do not reflect the values of a community, they should be removed from all libraries or a rating system (similar to the G, PG, and R ratings of movies and video games) should be assigned to all books by parents so that kids cannot check them out or download them. Parents can then request that certain ratings be blocked from their children. If parents want their kids to read these books, the parents can buy them and give them to their kids. That is their choice. But kids should not be exposed to this without their parents' knowledge or consent, and pornography should be removed from our libraries without question.
Should this book be in our public school libraries or municipal public libraries in our cities?
LAST WARNING: GRAPHIC SEXUALLY EXPLICIT AND PORNOGRAPHIC IMAGES IN THIS GRAPHIC NOVEL! Look at your own risk. These are actual pages that I scanned out of the book Gender Queer that I checked out of our city's public library. Our city is so small that we only have one library branch, so don't think it's only in the big cities!
It is so disgusting that I considered blurring some of the images, but I decided not to. This book is available in middle schools and graphic novel sections of public libraries. KIDS are looking at these images without any blurring. Let that sink in!
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