"Obama should consider urging the American Library Association to at last be faithful to its own principles be [sic] strongly recommending to Raul Castro that he also include the immediate release of the independent librarians.
Until now, the ALA has refused to do that....
Mr. president-elect, please help these prisoners of conscience where so many, including the ALA, have failed to do so."
Isn't it sad that the ALA repeatedly refuses to come to the assistance of the jailed Cuban librarians? Isn't sad Nat Hentoff has to write opinion articles calling on the president-elect to urge the ALA to follow its own rules? For more background on his current opinion, see his original article on this theme: "Castro: Rule By Fear," by Nat Hentoff, NewsAndOpinion.com, 16 May 2005.
Why does the ALA remain so authoritative when such an obvious double standard exists: it "refuses" to be "faithful to its own principles," while it demands local communities acquiesce to its law-defying, anything-goes policies that expose children to harm? For example, let a community try to remove a book containing bestiality from a public school and the ALA immediately injects itself calling the community racist because the book's author is black.
I hope Mr. Obama does take action as Mr. Hentoff suggests. That may set a standard for communities nationwide to similarly sidestep the ALA's double standards, thereby "protecting young library users from material inappropriate for minors" and from predators drawn to the Internet computers.
Yes they can.
From "This Day in Latin-American History (Castro Seizes Power)," by MikeT, A Boat Against the Current, 1 January 2009:
ReplyDeleteOne last group that has disappointed me profoundly is the American Library Association (ALA). Nat Hentoff, the recently fired Village Voice writer who has persistently flogged the Bush administration for its violations of human rights in the war on terror, wrote a powerful column several years ago in which he described how the ALA denied 10 independent Cuban librarians speaking spots on their program while allowing Cuban government-backed librarians nearly three hours to do so. As a librarian, I find the ALA stance one that will be impossible to justify to posterity—anymore than so many in the West will be able to explain how they let Castro's smoke get into their eyes.