She refused to ban books, many of them about racism and the experiences of LGBTQ+ people. And for that, Suzette Baker was fired as a library director in a rural county in central Texas.

“I’m kind of persona non grata around here,” said Baker, who had headed the Kingsland, Texas, library system until she refused to take down a prominent display of several books people had sought to ban over the years.

Now, Baker is fighting back. She and two other librarians who were similarly fired have filed workplace discrimination claims with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. And as culture war battles to keep certain books from children and teens put public and school libraries increasingly under pressure, their goal is redemption and, where possible, eventual reinstatement.

  • Here4CatPics@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Don’t mess with Librarians! They are the holders of secret knowledge and will contact each other to find out if you still haven’t returned that book from the 3rd grade!

  • tacosanonymous@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    And then it cost taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars bc of the settlements. They’re wrong and they know they’re wrong. They just don’t care what it costs as long as they can continue lying and riling up their base while simultaneously keeping them ignorant.