this post was submitted on 10 Sep 2023
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While some states are banning books left and right, California is set to enact a law that would penalise schools that ban any book reflecting the state’s diversity, including those that explore LGBTQ+ identities and race.

The legislation, Assembly Bill 1078 (AB 1078), would prevent school boards from “refusing to approve or prohibiting the use of any textbook, instructional material or other curriculum or any book or other resource in a school library” on the basis that it includes topics related to LGBTQ+, Black, Latino, Asian and Indigenous people or other marginalised groups.

School districts failing to comply with the bill would face a “fiscal penalty” that would see a decrease in state funds through changes in California’s school funding formulas.

It extends California’s already existing education code, which requires schools to include the experiences of LGBTQ+ people and other groups in its curriculum.

AB 1078 passed its final major legislative hurdle on Thursday (7 September) when the state Senate passed it 30-9. It then moved to governor Gavin Newsom’s desk.

Newsom celebrated the bill’s passage in a statement on X, once known as Twitter, saying it proves California is the “true freedom state”.

“California is the true freedom state: a place where families – not political fanatics – have the freedom to decide what’s right for them,” Newsom wrote.

“With the passage of this legislation that bans book bans and ensures all students have textbooks, our state’s Family Agenda is now even stronger.

“All students deserve the freedom to read and learn about the truth, the world and themselves.”

Assembly member Corey Jackson, the bill’s author, also celebrated the state for taking a “stand against book banning” in schools and ensuring students have “access to educational materials that accurately represent the rich cultural and racial diversity of our society”.

The legislation came after a showdown over LGBTQ+ inclusive materials earlier this year in Temecula.

The Temecula Valley School Board rejected a social studies curriculum with supplemental materials that referenced the late LGBTQ+ civil rights leader Harvey Milk. Two board members made the baseless accusation that Milk was a “paedophile”.

In June, Newsom condemned the school board members’ “offensive statement”.

Just a short while later, Newsom threatened to send textbooks to the schools and fine the district if the board didn’t approve the curriculum. The school board eventually adopted it.

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[–] Weslee 13 points 1 year ago

Wow, some actually sane politicians in USA? Didn't expect that today but it's welcome news non the less

[–] Foreverlad 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

This news annoys me. I'm a dyed-in-the-hemp liberal in Florida who hates what's been happening in my home state. Book banning infuriates me. At the same time, i get frustrated when anyone signs an anti-ban bill.

I'd love to live in Ca, but at the same time, seeing more and more legislation from California only adds fuel to the fire when conservatives (or whatever Republicans claim to be) use that particular state as an argument against big government.

Obviously there's a massive difference between laws that, in effect, enshrine rights vs laws that prohibit said rights. All the same, the more paperwork governments file, the less defense liberals have when contending with the naive, or the click-bait headlines used to argue for the freedom the less-informed believe they're fighting for.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 year ago

Conservative takes on California and elsewhere aren't based on anything real and are almost never in good faith, so who cares what they say.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

Conservatives politicians lie. And conservative voters either believe or pretend to believe them.

We shouldn't shy away from doing good things because of what conservatives might say. Because they'll just say what they were going to say anyway.