Monday, December 12, 2022

New York Times: Librarians Losing Child Sexualization War Against Parents; Librarians Want Out

The New York Times has printed that librarians are losing the child sexualization war against school parents, even as they win some battles, and librarians want out:
This is the story of what happened when parents in one town in New Jersey tried to remove a handful of books that they said were explicit and sexually inappropriate — and the battle that ensued. 
.... 
Michael Barbaro
So these forces of parental rights and proposed book bans, they’re clearly ascendant. They’re on the march. They won school board races across the country and are feeling, it seems, pretty emboldened.

And Alexandra, that makes me wonder about the strategy of those like Martha who fought so hard to defend these books in a place like Annandale.

I mean, Martha, in the end, had a total victory in her battle to keep those five books on the shelf. But in retrospect, it looks like in the process, she may have, in a sense, lost the bigger war because that victory helped fuel the successful candidacy of someone like Caroline, which will give Caroline pretty big and lasting power over which books are on the shelf.

I mean, just to simplify this question — did winning some of these book ban battles end up costing people like Martha the bigger war over control of school boards?

Alexandra Alter
I mean, that’s a really interesting question that I think a lot of people are asking right now. If the school board had voted differently and they had removed a couple of those books, would it have taken some of the fuel out of the fire? And maybe people wouldn’t have been as motivated to run for school board seats themselves?

That’s entirely possible. It seems like in a lot of districts where members of the Parental Rights Movement are running for school board and winning, it’s because, precisely like you said, they feel like they’ve been ignored and unheard.

Michael Barbaro
Mm-hmm.

Alexandra Alter
And they’ve lost some of these battles over individual books. And now what they’re trying to do is change the entire policy, not just get a few titles off the shelves —

Michael Barbaro
Right.

Alexandra Alter
— but pass new rules about how you can decide what goes in the library in the first place, and taking, you know, a professional librarian like Martha kind out of the equation, or taking some of the control back from the professional educators and librarians, and putting it in the hands of the school board or sometimes the community.

Notice also American Library Association policy adherence makes librarians feel terrible about their jobs:

Alexandra Alter
And in the course of our reporting, we’ve talked to librarians all over the country. And a lot of them say the same thing, that librarians are really exhausted, and scared, and tired. And they don’t feel like this was what they signed up to do.

They’re finding themselves at the center of these ideological battles. And when people used to just complain about books and try to get books removed, now they’re complaining about the librarian and trying to get the librarian fired, or in some cases jailed because they’ve provided those books to children.

So it’s just become a really scary time for a lot of librarians. And Martha, like many other librarians, is pretty fed up with that.

As the school librarian Martha Hickson put it:

Martha Hickson
I turn 63 in two weeks, and retirement is within my grasp. And I’m just trying to crawl my way to that finish line. It’s not the way I want to be and it’s not where I want to be in my career.

I, up until a year ago, really, really loved my work. And it’s harder to love it now.


She's trying to "crawl her way to that finish line."  It's awful what librarians endure to enforce American Library Association policy.

The parent involved made clear exactly what American Library Association policy promotes, namely grooming; school librarians are beginning to tire of defending this sexualization of children by some organization from Chicago, Illinois:

Caroline Licwinko
By providing material that is inappropriate to a minor and breaking down the natural walls that children are supposed to have to keep them safe, that is grooming.

When there’s a library book that is talking about, hopefully, adults at sex parties, or setting up Grindr accounts to meet someone just for sexual reasons, that’s only, that’s not natural. That’s not natural for a 14-year-old to be looking at in school.

And providing this type of information, that is absolutely one of the top ways that people who abuse, sexually abuse, children, that is how they break into a child’s naturally protective sphere.


Here is my published response to that story:

Dan Kleinman
Such books may be removed from the school immediately per US Supreme Court. There's no need for a review committee that's just an American Library Association tool to drag out book removal or make it impossible, as happened here.

Board of Education v. Pico says pervasively vulgar books may be removed from school forthwith. The books in question are pervasively vulgar. That is the basis for the removals, not the ideas they contain that the removal of which Pico would not allow.

United States v. American Library Association says, "There are substantial Government interests at stake here: The interest in protecting young library users from material inappropriate for minors is legitimate, and even compelling, as all Members of the Court appear to agree."

In contrast to SCOTUS twice saying material inappropriate for minors may be removed immediately, American Library Association says no material whatsoever may be removed since that would be age discrimination and that would violate the Library Bill of Rights. If you can't remove a book guiding children to take pictures and post them on Grindr for illegal sex (due to their age), then anything goes.

Between Chicago, IL, based ALA and US Constitution based SCOTUS, I choose SCOTUS. The books should have been removed per Pico.

The school board will eventually change from ALA anything-goes worshippers to those who respect the law. At that point the books will be removed, and legally so.


Lastly, American Library Association knows it is losing this war to sexualize children.  Notice ALA has not promoted this New York Times story via any of its many media outlets.  ALA makes a habit of staying silent about what it sees as bad news for ALA.  And it's silent about this story and parent Caroline Licwinko getting elected to the school board and the school board successes of Moms For Liberty —because getting on the school boards is the means to erase ALA's harmful policies.  ALA is silent about this.  This is how you know ALA knows it's losing its war to sexualize school children.

This is the way, parents.  Directly expose how school librarians following ALA diktat are sexualizing children, then run for and win positions on school boards.  Demoralized librarians will jump on ALA's sword then run for the exits instead of doing what's right to protect children.  "And I’m just trying to crawl my way to that finish line," said Martha Hickson.

By the way, notice the story mentions a lot how the books are not obscene or standards are applied that apply only in the case of obscenity.  Example:

Alexandra Alter
And also, in order to meet the definition of obscenity or pornography, the works in question are supposed to be totally devoid of any artistic, or educational, or political, or scientific value. 
So most people, when they looked at a novel like “Lawn Boy,” for example, would say there’s a story being told. There is an artistic purpose. There is an explicit sexual scene. But it’s not the bulk of the narrative. And there’s a lot else going on.

But the legal question is just one piece of what’s animating Caroline.

Obscenity is not the issue with respect to school books.  This is why American Library Association promotes claims of obscenity so heavily (and why media parrots such claims), because they already know such claims are a loser for parents.  So, parents, be careful not to be misled by media, as well as by the school librarians, the issue is pervasively vulgar materials in schools, not obscenity that's nearly impossible to prove.  

Some schools write policies having latent obscenity poison pills so the policy looks good to parents but that obscenity standard doesn't apply so is used to sink any parental challenge while you think the policy is protecting children.  Here's a school policy from Texas, for example, where provision 7 is the poison pill killing 5 and 6:



Tenure!  Notice how tenure protects librarians who sexualize children—why is that and what does that mean?  Are there no ethics codes that apply to school librarians?  So take action as soon as possible to remove any groomers:

Martha Hickson
Knowing the practicalities and realities of the world of education, I expect that they will hire a baby librarian, probably as young as they can and as cheap as they can.

That person will then have four years in which they will not be tenured. And tenure has been a great protection in this situation. So for those four years, that individual will be at a great, great disadvantage.

Sources:


Barbaro, Michael, and Alexandra Alter. “When Book Bans Came to Small-Town New Jersey; Clashes Over What Belongs on Bookshelves Have Put School Librarians at the Center of a Widening Fight.” The New York Times, December 7, 2022, sec. Podcasts. https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/07/podcasts/the-daily/book-ban-high-school-libraries.html.

Kleinman, Dan. “Comment to When Book Bans Came to Small-Town New Jersey.” The New York Times, December 8, 2022, sec. Podcasts. https://nyti.ms/3hf6Q6x#permid=121900687.


Related:



American Library Association. “Martha Hickson Receives AASL Intellectual Freedom Award.” Text. News and Press Center, April 15, 2020. https://www.ala.org/news/member-news/2020/04/martha-hickson-receives-aasl-intellectual-freedom-award.

Gregory, Jamie and American Library Association. “Martha Hickson, Students, and School Board Save 5 Challenged Titles.” Intellectual Freedom Blog (blog), February 24, 2022. https://www.oif.ala.org/oif/martha-hickson-students-and-school-board-save-5-challenged-titles/.

Capital Resource Institute. “Voters Against Obscene Books in Public Schools.” Rasmussen Reports, October 3, 2022. https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/partner_surveys/voters_against_obscene_books_in_public_schools.


Kleinman, Dan. “Court Rules Gender Queer Obscene; Parents Forced By Schools to Seek Judicial Relief.” SafeLibraries® (blog), May 22, 2022. https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2022/05/court-rules-gender-queer-obscene.html.

Kleinman, Dan. “Library Bill of Rights Means ‘Nothing’: Berry v. Yosemite Community College District.” SafeLibraries® (blog), August 30, 2019. https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2019/08/library-bill-of-rights-means-nothing.html.


Monday, December 5, 2022

School Librarians Train to Violate FOIA Law to Keep Parents In the Dark About Sexualizing Children

School librarians are trained to violate Freedom of Information Act [FOIA] laws so as to keep parents in the dark about sexually inappropriate materials in public schools and libraries.  They train to use personal resources to evade open public records laws, then say the records do not exist.  That's dishonest.  It's lying.  It’s illegal.  That we are talking about innocent-acting librarians doesn’t make it suddenly legal.

Should a parent file a FOIA request, they may be informed no documents exist.  Oh there are documents, librarians are just trained to conduct public business in a way they think circumvents FOIA and other laws (such as record retention laws).  

As a result, future FOIA requests should include special language to deal with this lawlessness, and perhaps FOIA laws themselves should be amended to account for this specific subterfuge by an entire government job classification: librarian.  

For example, private text messages were obtained via FOIA that proved an elementary school librarian at the Blackshear Elementary School in Austin, TX, set up a drag queen to "read" to students at his school with a Texas Library Association [TLA] officer of the "Queers and Allies Roundtable," was informed the drag queen had a criminal record, then guided the convicted drag queen to fool the required background check—and the librarian was himself a BSDM fetish performer at night:

Shannon, Tracy. “Unbelievable: Austin, Texas, Elementary School Librarian is a BDSM ‘Leatherman’ by Night; Invited Convicted Male Prostitute Drag Queen to Read to Schoolchildren.” MassResistance, April 26, 2020. https://www.massresistance.org/docs/gen4/20b/Austin-TX-Blackshear-library/index.html.
 
Here is the evidence.  In Texas, an executive board member of TLA (the largest state-based library association) and board member of the American Library Association’s [ALA] Freedom to Read Foundation [FTRF] has provided essentially that very training to Texas librarians in a published podcast of the TLA.  Generally, FOIA laws can be viewed at National Freedom of Information Coalition (NFOIC).  Texas FOIA laws can be viewed at the NFOIC site at https://www.nfoic.org/texas-foia-laws/.

Former school librarian Dorcas Hand, pictured above right, is the TLA executive board member and the FTRF board member who spills the beans.  

She admits librarians are not lawyers and are trained to reach out for help from ALA, TLA, and other librarians and, importantly, to use personal email addresses precisely to prevent parents from getting the records under the state's open public records act.  The TLA website directs them to submit an online Google form with the basics of the problem, then someone having experience in that type of challenge is selected by Dorcas Hand herself.  These are public records and any subsequent communications are as well, but the subterfuge essentially makes them nearly impossible to get.  

Here is a transcript of what Dorcas Hand said, emphasis in original:
20:34 "Once the match is made the volunteer reaches out by email.  Uh, volunteers never use their professional email, and they work hard to have their conversations with, um, people who are looking for help on personal devices and WiFi.  We don't want anybody who's involved in this caught by a FOIA request.  And, and we know that's happening.  So we, we try to be very careful.  Um, and, and those two people make their own arrangements.  Once I've connected them I am not a part of the conversation, unless somebody comes back to me and they need more something.  Um, we never give legal advice.  We are not lawyers.  Um, we might point people in the direction of resources that may suggest how they get legal advice, um, we certainly use all of the ALA resources, and, um, some of those, I mean there's case law that you can look at, specific cases that may relate to what you're talking about, and that can be helpful when you're talking to people, but we don't say this is how you solve this problem, because we don't know, if it's going to court, we don't know all kinds of things, and it's not our job to do any of that.  Um, we have put together an internal wealth of resources to answer questions.  The volunteers share whichever ones they think are most useful.  Um, we did go back once and build a tip sheet to support a specific question because that question seemed to come three or four times...." 22:00
Here is the source of information upon the above is based so you can see/hear this yourselves and in full context: 

Sweeney, Cate, and Dorcus Hand. “Banned Books Week 2022, Part I; Libraries Transform Texas Podcast.” Texas Library Association, September 12, 2022. https://anchor.fm/texas-library-association/episodes/Banned-Books-Week-2022--part-I-e1m8rvv.
Let's celebrate Banned Books Week!  Our featured guest for this podcast is Dorcas Hand, school library advocate and coordinator of the Intellectual Freedom Helpline for the Texas Library Association. Cate Sweeney, vice-chair of TLA's PR and Marketing Committee, hosts this episode. In Part I, we'll hear from Dorcas about three different book challenges she faced as a school librarian; as well as what the Helpline does and how it can help you.
"Libraries Transform Texas Podcast"?  Libraries transform Texasinto what?  Apparently, a lawless place where school librarians actively defy law so as to keep parents in the dark about how they are sexualizing school children with sexually inappropriate material.

Does anyone think this is harmless, kids reading sexually inappropriate material?  Just kids reading about "lived experiences"?  Does anyone think this is "diversity" or "inclusion"?  Or LGBT allyship?  Exposure to sexualized material directly harms children:

Lin, Wen-Hsu, Chia-Hua Liu, and Chin-Chun Yi. “Exposure to Sexually Explicit Media in Early Adolescence Is Related to Risky Sexual Behavior in Emerging Adulthood.” PLoS ONE 15, no. 4 (April 10, 2020): e0230242. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230242.

Ross MD MPH, Carolyn C. “Overexposed and Under-Prepared: The Effects of Early Exposure to Sexual Content; Is the Internet Impacting Sexual Development?” Psychology Today, August 13, 2012. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/real-healing/201208/overexposed-and-under-prepared-the-effects-early-exposure-sexual-content.

Rodenhizer, Kara Anne E., and Katie M. Edwards. “The Impacts of Sexual Media Exposure on Adolescent and Emerging Adults’ Dating and Sexual Violence Attitudes and Behaviors: A Critical Review of the Literature.” Trauma, Violence & Abuse 20, no. 4 (October 2019): 439–52. https://doi.org/10.1177/1524838017717745.


V., Juliette. “6 Subtle Ways Child Predators ‘Groom’ Their Victims.” The Mighty, July 12, 2019. https://themighty.com/2019/07/grooming-signs-child-sexual-abuse/.

Jeglic PhD, Elizabeth L. “How Sexual Abusers Try to Groom Children; 99 Percent of Child Sexual Abuse Involves Grooming.” Psychology Today, April 18, 2022. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/protecting-children-sexual-abuse/202204/how-sexual-abusers-try-groom-children.

So Texas parents may want to spread the word about this and act accordingly.  These school librarians are grooming your children with sexually inappropriate material, they know they are doing that, so they are knowingly and purposefully violating Texas law to get it done by any means, whatever it takes, in a way designed to prevent you from knowing.  Now you know.


By the way, when librarians “report a book challenge, book ban, book removal” to ALA or to state library associations like TLA, that document is a public document, as well as all that follows as a result, even if made from a private device on private time to try to circumvent FOIA.  Such reports are not proprietary to ALA or TLA despite their claims of confidentiality.  They cannot disclaim the law.  They are made by public employees acting on public time addressing public issues subject to FOIA laws that as we have seen above they do not want to reveal to the public.  FOIA laws supersede ALA/TLA diktat.  Be sure your FOIA requests include these challenge/ban/removal reports as well.  Give no quarter to librarians intent on violating the law to maximize the sexualization of children, even if they call themselves @FReadomFighters.  There’s no “FReadom” to sexualize children.  When @FReadomFighters gets people to tweet #FReadom on Fridays to #txlege, they are essentially trying to groom the legislators to allow school librarians to have the freedom to continue to sexualize more children in more schools.  Groomers don't just operate on the children.




The following documents are from the Texas Library Association—they show TLA acting upon the recommendation of Dorcas Hand to guide public employees to evade FOIA laws.











As Texas legislators seek to pass legislation due to circumstances caused by librarians trained to violate Texas law, I'm sure they will be happy to see how Texas librarians operate secretly to violate law so as to better groom more Texas children, including those legislators listed here in this typically pro librarian slanted story ("this book-banning era"):

Thompson, Maggie Q. “Austin Libraries Prepare for a Barrage of Book-Banning Bills; Rating Books, Jailing Librarians, and More.” The Austin Chronicle, December 2, 2022. https://www.austinchronicle.com/news/2022-12-02/austin-libraries-prepare-for-a-barrage-of-book-banning-bills/.

Librarians are breaking the law specifically to sexualize more children.  Children are being directly harmed.  Why would anyone give librarians any credence at all?  They literally gang up on you behind your backs—to target the most vulnerable, our children.  


NOTE ADDED 15 DECEMBER 2022:

Likely as a result of the above reporting, the Texas Library Association has locked its @TXLA Twitter account.  Could there be a bigger admission of guilt?  I've never seen any library association ever lock their account.  Does anyone know if they are being officially investigated?

Here's more:


NOTE ADDED 16 DECEMBER 2022:

Assumption: locked its Twitter account to delete tweets showing child grooming by #librarians, so etc. won’t see them. Prediction: When open again, #TXLA will accuse me of defamation saying no such evidence exists. uses this trick.

Saturday, December 3, 2022

ALA Blames Parents for 'Toxic Framing' of Explicit Books

December 3, 2022

Kim Butler
ARDC Intake Division - Chicago
One Prudential Plaza
130 E Randolph Dr, Ste 1500
Chicago, IL 60601-6219

Re: Complaint, Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone
in relation to 
Dan Kleinman No. 2022IN03640

Dear Kim Butler,

I hereby add to my previous response dated November 29 additional information below just discovered about Deborah Caldwell-Stone’s reframing material known to her to be sexually inappropriate for children as diverse and inclusive.  

She made the following statements in public on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah site (and as usual with zero counterbalance because she will never allow herself to be challenged publicly).  In “Why Are So Many Books Being Banned? - Beyond the Scenes | The Daily Show,” by The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, YouTube, 20 September 2022, https://youtu.be/i2iiyU-z5E4, the following statements can be seen/heard that back up the new evidence relevant to her violation of Rule 8.4.

The new evidence is: 

1) She knows her reframing tactic is the key to her Rule 8.4 violation since she herself uses reframing as a sword against parents, several times, to claim parents are reframing books for children as pornography to commit censorship.

3:53.5 “[Parents who attend school board meetings] even use false framing around the the the idea that this is pornography…” 3:58.5

23:30.5 “Parents Defending Education, whatever, um, are creating a false and uh toxic framing around materials that deal with uh gender identity, sexual orientation, and even sex ed.  You know.  And they’re arguing that these books are obscene for minors to read, obscene for the display for minors, or are, you know, whoever writes them or whoever provides them are pandering obscenity to minors.  And that’s absolutely false.  What the Const, you know, the Supreme Court has told us what is protected speech in this case, and sex is a protected top, subject.  Gender identity, sexual orientation, all these things, that, you know, if it has educational value, it has scientific value, artistic value, literature, that’s all protected by the First Amendment.  But they’re trying to shift the needle on this conversation.  They’re trying to reframe this in a way that um gives them the tools they need to censor all of this material.  And, uh, and use the courts, and and use the law to do it.”  24.30.5

2) Since she is claiming parents are reframing books for children as pornography, she is flat out lying to them and about them, and knowingly, per her statements submitted in my ethics complaint.  She knows these books are sexually inappropriate for children.  Her statements are intended to mislead people about sexually inappropriate material for children in schools and how it could be removed forthwith under the law if only librarians trained by her were not lying.  (This logical conclusion was based on assistance by co-author and child development professional Valentina Janjus.)

3) She speaks about obscenity but that is not the issue in Board of Education v. Pico that’s relevant to school libraries.  She’s flat out lying about law by implying books may never be removed from schools since they aren’t obscene under California v. Miller, SCOTUS 1975, a case that doesn’t even apply to school library books.  In reality, pervasively vulgar books may be removed immediately from schools under Board of Education v. Pico, SCOTUS 1982.

4) She brags about being a “recovering attorney,” so her claim she was not acting as an attorney for her employer is patently false as here she is on television and streaming services making essentially the exact arguments she made in the webinar that is the subject of this RPC 8.4 violation.

51:39 “And, you know, I’m a recovering attorney so uh it’s almost incumbent on me to throw up To Kill a Mockingbird although it’s kind of cliched, ha ha ha.” 51:49

5)  Lastly, she makes no mention that the real issue is parents oppose books suffused with pervasive vulgarity like per Harris (https://web.archive.org/web/20110416110441/http://www.harrisinteractive.com/NewsRoom/HarrisPolls/tabid/447/ctl/ReadCustom%20Default/mid/1508/ArticleId/754/Default.aspx) and Rasmussen (https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/partner_surveys/voters_against_obscene_books_in_public_schools) polls, not “gender identity, sexual orientation, and even sex ed” books per her deceptive reframing.  

Overall, she is basically saying no books are ever inappropriate for school libraries when that is legally false and books like “Gender Queer” are being removed under Board of Education v. Pico so often that American Library Association created Unite Against Book Bans just to counteract that specific book being removed.  

This type of false statement is a part of a pattern for Deborah Caldwell-Stone, a habit, if you will.  It’s her habit to say there’s no there there to serious crimes that affect people negatively as a result of American Library Association policy.  As a result of American Library Association policy recommendations not to filter out pornography from library computers despite the law and despite United States v. American Library Association, SCOTUS 2003, many librarians have been sexually harassed by porn-viewing male patrons.  By the way, US v. ALA found, “There are substantial Government interests at stake here: The interest in protecting young library users from material inappropriate for minors is legitimate, and even compelling, as all Members of the Court appear to agree.”  But Deborah Caldwell-Stone doesn’t mention that either.

Some librarians have obtained large amounts of money by settling out of court as a result of sexual harassment suits arising from the application of American Library Association policy created by her Office for Intellectual Freedom.  Deborah Caldwell-Stone, however, said librarians have never been sexually harassed and likely never will be because all the suits settled out of court and, besides, proving it in court is so hard to do.  See her say this here: https://youtu.be/JwXeTfvzQHk?t=316

That was nine years ago.  Librarians continue to be sexualized by porn viewers as a result, just as today, children continue to be sexualized by books selected by school librarians trained by the same attorney.  This attorney has a long term pattern of lying to communities and harming them, and she’s doing it again, in a manner that affects the nation and her children as a whole, all occasioned by her continuing violation of Illinois RPC 8.4.  

Will the ARDC finally put an end to this?

Please incorporate this into my previous response as if it was originally submitted then and there.

Thank you.

Respectfully,

/Dan Kleinman/

Dan Kleinman
SafeLibraries® brand library educational services
641 Shunpike Rd #123
Chatham, NJ 07928

- - - 30 - - -



NOTE ADDED 3 DECEMBER 2022:

Updated to add, "This logical conclusion was based on assistance by co-author and child development professional Valentina Janjus."

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Attorney Ethics Complaint Response to Deborah Caldwell-Stone of ALA

November 29, 2022

Kim Butler
ARDC Intake Division - Chicago
One Prudential Plaza
130 E Randolph Dr, Ste 1500
Chicago, IL 60601-6219

Re: Complaint, Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone
in relation to 
Dan Kleinman No. 2022IN03640

Dear Kim Butler,

A shocking response from Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone.  She is under investigation for a serious attorney ethics violation by the official body investigating such matters, the ARDC, and her response is to make a tersely worded “categorical” denial (“I categorically deny …”) based on more misrepresentation of facts and the law, only this time directly to the ethics body during its investigation, as if ethics does not apply to her, maybe because she is the lead lawyer at the American Library Association and the Director of the Office for Intellectual Freedom and also the Director of the Freedom to Read Foundation.  Goodwill for librarians is massive; perhaps she knows no one would ever hold her to account.  A simply shocking response to continue to act the way she does, as if there were no consequences because everyone loves librarians.

First, set aside that the largest paragraph of her response was to attack me personally.  I’m not the issue.  Her professional ethics are at issue.  Any determination will be made solely on her actions, not on whether I’m from SafeLibraries and I’m allegedly “a long-time critic of the American Library Association’s position on intellectual freedom and the right to read.”  You bet I am.  Here she is openly stating she knows material is sexually inappropriate for children but it is to be “reframed” as diversity and inclusion in the very complaint I have initially filed.  She’s training and has trained librarians to hold that position.  And they do.  School children are being sexualized nationwide with graphic child pornography that has been “reframed” as diverse and inclusive, and as a direct result  of Illinois attorney Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone is training librarians.  

Later we will see how she trains librarians that parents may only affect the book reading choices of their own children, meanwhile nationwide librarians are pushing on children the anything-goes views of an unethical lawyer from Chicago, IL.  It’s a chilling and harmful double standard, all occasioned by a fundamental disregard of the Rules of Professional Ethics—and non lawyer librarians, namely everyone else in the American Library Association, are not even aware what this lawyer is doing, so it continues unabated.

Children do not have a right to read graphic child pornography, nor it is intellectual freedom for children to learn in graphic detail how to use sexual lubes to engage in anal sex, then wash their hands afterwards, or how to take selfies then get on phone sex apps to meet up with numerous men close to them to be molested by them.  Does this sound inappropriate to raise to an ethics tribunal that she is the tip of the spear on this nationwide issue, thus has violated RPC 8.4?  

Well this is the exact type of content, only with multiple graphic pictures from all angles, including internal, that Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone seeks to “reframe” as diversity and inclusion for children.  That’s why I’m telling you this.  The material is so graphic that media will not broadcast it, social media sites will freeze accounts of those who post such pictures until the pictures are removed, and school boards will blithely violate open government laws to silence parents complaining about such materials by displaying graphics or reading the words aloud.  As such, I am happy to be “a long-time critic of the American Library Association’s position on intellectual freedom and the right to read” because the organization is sexualizing children nationwide, and Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone is the leader of the divisions doing the most damage to children—and all based on deception that violates Rule 8.4.  

So did I report in my publications about what actions she has taken and what counteractions I have taken?  She complains about my doing this in her response.  You bet I did, and I’ll keep doing it until she stops.  But it all has absolutely zero to do with whether or not she has violated the Rules of Professional Conduct.  So let’s hope my past efforts as citizen reporter to report on her activities is not part of the calculus of whether her actions amount to violations of attorney ethics expectations.  There are hundreds of thousands of attorneys.  Certainly the Illinois bar doesn’t need one actively sexualizing children in violation of her ethical obligations; certainly the ethics tribunal will not ignore this simply because of her employment with the American Library Association.

Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone claims that I “amplified that [prior ethics complaint] on his blog and social media, in what I believe is an effort to attack my reputation and the reputation of my employer.  He has also done so with this complaint.”  That’s projection.  That’s called attacking the messenger.  I’m a reporter.  I’m reporting.  I’m not attacking her reputation by reporting on her reframing graphic child pornography as diverse and inclusive.  I’m simply reporting that’s what she has done, and I backed it up with an exact quote, a video of her saying that exact quote, and the full webinar in question, all sourced to her employer’s social sites, so that full context was available to my readers to enable them to make up their own minds.  That’s what reporters do.  If anyone is attacking her reputation, it is herself passing off sexually inappropriate material for children as diverse and inclusive and doing it as the Director of the Office for Intellectual Freedom, as if children have the intellectual freedom to read material she admits knowing is sexually inappropriate for them.  

In the end, my publication of my ethics complaints has absolutely nothing to do with whether or not she committed a Rule 8.4 violation, especially as the ethical violation occurred before I even became aware of the issue that led to my complaint.  Basically, she’s arguing that since I publish my reporting on what she is doing, she’s not guilty of anything I mention about her therein.  So much for First Amendment free speech and press freedoms from the Freedom to Read Foundation’s Director.

Let’s look at the facts she has completely misrepresented so as to claim innocence from ethical violations.  The facts are what she said in the training that is the subject of this complaint.  What she said in the response to the complaint about that training are not the facts.  She has intentionally reworded in her response what she said in the training to imply there’s no there there.  

In the training she said what’s needed when crafting legislation, a task usually performed by lawyers, is “sustained … messaging that reframes this issue … that takes it away from the idea that these are inappropriate for minors, or sexually inappropriate for minors, and promotes them as diverse material and programming that are about inclusion…”  In her response she says, “the books discussed during the webinar — books written for children and young adults that include LGBTQIA+ characters or address the lives and experiences of LGBTQIA+ persons — are appropriate for minors and are the works that are inclusive of marginalized groups and reflect the diversity of society.”  You can see the difference right there and how she has misrepresented what she said in the webinar that is the subject of this ethics complaint.  In the webinar she acknowledged some books are sexually inappropriate for children, while to the ethics tribunal she says the books are appropriate for children since the lived experience of lesbian, gay, and bisexual people “are appropriate for minors.”  That may or may not be the case, but that is not what she said in the webinar that is the subject of this ethics complaint.  She is attempting to mislead the ARDC.

What she said in the webinar and what is a violation of her ethical obligations is that she knows “these are inappropriate for minors, or sexually inappropriate for minors,” but they should be reframed as diversity and inclusion, then “sustained messaging” will be needed to get that implemented into legislation.  Her knowledge of the sexually inappropriate nature of the books for children, combined with her “reframing” the issue into something it isn’t is the crux of her ethics violation and of my ethics complaint.  Certainly the Illinois bar doesn’t believe someone knowingly trading off sexually inappropriate material as suddenly appropriate because of diversity and inclusion isn’t violating its ethical code.  That’s what I raised in the ethics complaint.  

And her response doesn’t address that at all.  It merely says lived experiences are important for children.  No, anal rape and hooking up with adults for sex is not appropriate for children, even if this is the “lived experience” of a few victims of such crimes—and she knows this, even calling this “sexually inappropriate for minors”—before she “reframes” it as diversity.  There’s your ethical violation, and in her response she completely ignores that and misleads about the importance of “lived experiences” for children.  As to the facts, she is intentionally misleading the ethics tribunal during its investigation of her ethical violations.

She argues, “Mr. Kleinman offers no substantive support for his claims of dishonesty, fraud, or misrepresentation other than his disagreement with my opinion that the books discussed during the webinar … are appropriate for minors and … are inclusive … and reflect … diversity…”  Not true.  The substantive evidence is what she herself said during the webinar in question.  Her efforts to mislead the ARDC as to what she said, as discussed above, does not equate to my allegedly not offering substantive support.  Her own words are the violation and are the substantive support, not her misleading opinion in her response as discussed above, and not whether I have a “disagreement with her opinion” about reframing sexually inappropriate materials for minors as diverse and inclusive.  Everyone I know is shocked when they read her words.  School boards are filled with parents opposing graphic child pornography she has reframed as diversity, sometimes hundreds of parents at a time, such as in Dearborn, Michigan.  Everyone has a difference of opinion with her, if that’s how she wants to frame it.  So arguing “difference of opinion” as my alleged substantive argument when that is not the issue here and indeed is irrelevant is just part of the ethical problem with this unethical attorney.

As a practical example of the harm this attorney is doing, look at “Book Censorship Debate: Controversy Over ‘Gender Queer: A Memoir,’” by Blair Paddock, WTTW News (a PBS station), November 22, 2021, https://news.wttw.com/2021/11/22/book-censorship-debate-controversy-over-gender-queer-memoir.  Deborah Caldwell-Stone is interviewed with no counterbalance whatsoever.  Notice she leaves out the part where she knows the material to be sexually inappropriate for children.  Instead, she follows her own advice given in her own training underlying this ethics complaint to reframe such material as something else that is irrelevant to the issue she knows to be the problem.  It’s fundamentally deceptive.  And I’m not basing my response to her response on what she said on WTTW News, rather I’m just showing that she’s practicing what she preaching, to reframe such material in a deceptive manner, as raised in my ethics complaint.

On WTTW News, Deborah Caldwell-Stone reframed the knowingly sexually inappropriate material issue as censorship, the protection of civil liberties, the right to read anything one likes, then stated school librarians should be trusted.  The ones she trained to reframe the issue of sexually inappropriate material should be trusted. 

When specifically asked about which parts of a book illustrating graphic child pornography, namely “Gender Queer, A Memoir,” are inappropriate, she basically said none, because the book is about “sexual activity,” and many books deal with that.  She says students may have sexual issues and gender identity issues.  She says a parent may guide her own child’s reading but may not choose for the community—only librarians trained by an unethical attorney may do that.  She then says there’s a campaign to remove LGBTQ-themed and transgender material from schools.  She says demands to remove the books have a stigmatizing effect on children and removing such books makes children feel unwelcome in a community.  She then says libraries are inclusive institutions bound by the First Amendment and students have First Amendment rights—there’s that word “inclusion” again she used in her training.  Removing these materials is a “denial of their agency and their lives.”  She says organized groups are targeting the books for removal.

Do you see what she did not address?  She did not address that she knows the books are sexually inappropriate for children.  She has completely reframed the issue from being books sexually inappropriate for children to something completely different.  This is the essential deception of what she is training, while employed for her employer.  She’s practicing what she’s preaching, and all in violation of Rule 8.4.  This is an Illinois lawyer training librarians nationwide to make excuses for what everyone knows is sexually inappropriate material for children, even herself, and schools nationwide are spreading graphic child pornography to children.  If this is not an ethics violation for an attorney doing this, I don’t know what it.  But there’s more.

This is not an ethics complaint for me to promote my view, as she will claim or has claimed.  My view is irrelevant.  Her ethics violations have nothing to do with me.  This ethics complaint is about her lack of ethics or unprofessional conduct.  I am providing this detailed explanation to exemplify her carrying out her training that lies at the base of this ethics complaint.  She’s on public broadcasting stations reframing the issue of sexually inappropriate material for children as an issue of inclusion and First Amendment rights.  She is misleading people.  And we know from her admitting the material is sexually inappropriate that she is knowingly misleading people.

Mind you, her reframing of the issue also allows her to flat out lie to the public, anyone following her training does the same, and one way is specifically about the First Amendment.  She’s an Illinois lawyer and she effectively lying to the public.  She said school books about sexual activity are protected under the First Amendment.  That’s true.  But that’s not the issue.  By reframing the issue that way, that books are about sexual activity instead of simply being sexually inappropriate for children, the basic deception that leads to this RPC 8.4 violation, she ignores Board of Education, v. Pico, United States Supreme Court, 1982.  That case found pervasively vulgar books may be removed from schools forthwith—there’s no First Amendment right to graphic child porn in public schools.  None.  But by reframing the issue as she has, she gets to mislead people about the law, and given her position, schools nationwide now feature graphic child pornography and training on how to go online to be victimized by child rapists, and the like.  A lawyer misleading people about the law, about the US Supreme Court, in a manner that sexualizes children nationwide by essentially making an end run around the Pico case, that’s Deborah Caldwell-Stone, Director of the Office for Intellectual Freedom and the Director of the Freedom to Read Foundation, both at the American Library Association, and it’s unethical and unprofessional at the very least.

On misleading people about the law, she misleads the ARDC as well.  Look at the Rules of Professional Conduct.  She lies about them right in her response to you, the ethics tribunal responsible for enforcing those Rules.  This is simply shocking to me.  She argues her actions during the webinar have nothing to do with attorney ethics, per Rule 8.4, so again her argument is there’s no there there.  She argues, “Nor was I engaged in the practice of law, as contemplated by Rule 8.4.”  

But what do the Rules of Professional Conduct say?  They say the exact opposite.  Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone has written to you a response that is the exact opposite of the Rules you are required to uphold.  The exact opposite.  

The Rules have a Preamble.  In the Preamble it says some of the Rules apply even when one is not engaged in the practice of law.  It then gives a single example of such Rules.  And the example?  Yes, RPC 8.4.  Specifically, the Preamble states:

“[3] … In addition, there are Rules that apply to lawyers who are not active in the practice of law or to practicing lawyers even when they are acting in a nonprofessional capacity. For example, a lawyer who commits fraud in the conduct of a business is subject to discipline for engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation. See Rule 8.4.”

Well Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone states in her response, “He bases his claims on information I shared during a webinar sponsored by the American Library Association, my employer.”  So we know two things.  One, she is an employee of the American Library Association.  Two, the webinar where she violated attorney ethics was sponsored by her employer, so she was conducting business for her employer.

Recall Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone argues, “Nor was I engaged in the practice of law, as contemplated by Rule 8.4.”  Recall the Preamble states, “a lawyer who commits fraud in the conduct of a business is subject to discipline for engaging in conduct involving dishonesty, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation. See Rule 8.4.”  Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone admits she was acting in the conduct of a business, but claims that Rule 8.4 does not apply when the Preamble says the exact opposite and even uses Rule 8.4 as an example of “Rules that apply to lawyers who are not active in the practice of law or to practicing lawyers even when they are acting in a nonprofessional capacity.”

Now according to the American Bar Association, “Rule 8.4 Misconduct - Comment” (https://www.americanbar.org/groups/professional_responsibility/publications/model_rules_of_professional_conduct/rule_8_4_misconduct/comment_on_rule_8_4/), “Lawyers may engage in conduct undertaken to promote diversity and inclusion without violating this Rule by, for example, implementing initiatives aimed at recruiting, hiring, retaining and advancing diverse employees or sponsoring diverse law student organizations.”  Certainly advising librarians to reframe sexually inappropriate material for children as diverse and inclusive would represent conduct that *does* violate Rule 8.4.  Her “reframing” ploy still violates Rule 8.4 even if diversity and inclusion is a good goal since there’s a fundamental deception to reframe graphic child pornography and guidance on how to meet men for sex using phone apps as diversity and inclusion.  Boys meeting men for sex is not inclusion but child abuse.  Children tucking into anal sex is not diversity.  We would not even be here having this discussion were it not for the American Library Association and specifically Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone saying the unethical things I raised in my original complaint and being in a leadership position to enforce it.  If that’s not a violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct, then I wouldn’t know what is.

Looking now at RPC 8.4, Comment 5: “Lawyers holding public office assume legal responsibilities going beyond those of other citizens. A lawyer's abuse of public office can suggest an inability to fulfill the professional role of lawyers. The same is true of abuse of positions of private trust such as trustee, executor, administrator, guardian, agent and officer, director or manager of a corporation or other organization.”  Well, Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone, as an employee of the American Library Association, is the Director of ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom and the Director of ALA’s Freedom to Read Foundation.  She is a “director” of an “organization.”  As such she “assume[s] legal responsibilities going beyond those of other citizens.”  So if any ordinary librarian said to reframe sexually inappropriate school books as diversity, that would not be so egregious as the Director of two separate entities within American Library Association saying as much.  She has a legal responsibility greater than the average attorney precisely because she is a Director, twice over, no less.  Training librarians to dishonestly reframe sexually inappropriate material she knows to be inappropriate as diversity and inclusion in her position as Director of the Office for Intellectual Freedom and Director of the Freedom to Read Foundation at the American Library Association compounds her ethical violations per Comment 5 of RPC 8.4.

Lastly, regarding “The Right to Read Act of 2022,” whether or not she was “the actual or proximate cause for the introduction of S. 5064” is irrelevant to the ethical and professional considerations at hand. She specifically stated “sustained messaging” that “reframes” materials “sexually inappropriate for minors” as “diverse” and “inclusion” “needs to happen most, and it needs to happen before these bills are introduced.”  Whether or not her unethical, unprofessional actions were the cause for one law or another is irrelevant to Rule 8.4 application.

So Deborah A. Caldwell-Stone has misrepresented or lied about the facts, and she has lied about the law.  It’s not advocacy to advocate directly opposite of what the law states.  That too is an ethical violation, compounded again by her dual positions as Directors.  Her response to you may represent yet another ethical violation. This is why I am so shocked by her response to my ethics complaint.  I had no idea when I brought this complaint that she would compound her ethics violations by misleading you about the facts and lying to you, the ARDC, about the law—on the very Rules of Professional Conduct themselves, no less.

I’m hoping there are significant consequences for her.  I’m hoping her wrapping herself in the cloak of a librarian who simply cares about diversity and inclusion does not turn you aside from applying the Rules to any lawyer, and all lawyers, and ones who are Directors per Comment 5.  I’ll bet there’s no similar ethical precedent of an attorney knowingly reframing harmful material for children as helpful, because her actions are so egregious that no previous lawyer has pushed this particular envelope. I am asking you to, please, give serious consideration to my complaint about a possible violation of Rule 8.4, and her disingenuous response, and perhaps you’ll have your own additional violations occasioned by that response containing lies and misrepresentations about both the law and the facts.

Children have no one to represent them.  Not lawyers, not unions, not even parents who are intentionally misled by people passing off harmful materials for children as helpful—from a high perch within the American Library Association as Director.  I’m hoping ARDC’s careful investigation and determination of what happened will end up being to the benefit of the children and the community as a whole, indeed the nation in this case, in part the very purpose for which the Rules of Professional Conduct where drawn up in the first place.

Thank you for your consideration.

Respectfully,

/Dan Kleinman/

Dan Kleinman
SafeLibraries® brand library educational services
641 Shunpike Rd #123
Chatham, NJ 07928


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The above is my response to Deborah Caldwell-Stone's response to my ethics complaint about her sexualizing children nationwide, published here:
Below is her response to which I responded as allowed by the ARDC, and I left out her large attachment of the so-called Right to Read Act: