Sunday, September 8, 2024

Amanda Jones Trains Librarians to Blind Courts; FOIA Filed to Find Out Illegality School Administration Allowed

Dear Principal Hodges:

Under the Louisiana Public Records Act § 44:1 et seq., I am requesting electronic copies, sent as attachments to a reply email, of public records, even if personal accounts were used including on Slack or Signal and other communications apps, that discuss in any way:

1) the deletion and aftereffects of the deletion of @LOMiddleLibrary social media account on X, formerly known as Twitter, and its later reinstatement, on or after 15 April 2024, located here: https://twitter.com/LOMiddleLibrary,

2) the deletion and aftereffects of deletion of @lom_library social media account on Instagram and its later reinstatement, on or after 15 April 2024, located here: https://www.instagram.com/lom_library/,

3) any and all communications both verbal and written, including electronically, with Amanda Jones and anyone else regarding @LOMiddleLibrary and @lom_library social media accounts on X and Instagram, respectively, on or after 15 April 2024,

4) any and all communications both verbal and written, including electronically, between Amanda Jones and any member of the American Library Association including any and all of its subgroups including American Association of School Librarians, EveryLibrary (do not claim EveryLibrary is not a subgroup; it is, just structured to provide plausible deniability: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2023/06/library-boards-trained-to-lie-by-ala.html), Young Adult Library Services Association, and any of her "'inner circle' of trusted leaders,from 2021 to present,

5) any documents, including contemporaneous notes made by school administrators and employees after speaking with Amanda Jones, about anything related to the public’s business including the school’s library, book challenges, book acquisitions, Amanda Jones's job performance, how to handle parents who complain about books, how to handle media seeking informations relating to school books, from 2021 to present,

6) all communications from publishers providing a list of materials, such as a packing list, that were delivered from 2021 to present, and

7) all records of all posts, and of attachments in those posts, made by the X account @LOMiddleLibrary, other than those currently existing on the account.  For example, one such record is a post dated 8:31 AM - 12/7/23 that includes three pictures, each showing a child holding a sign saying "I Read 4 Titles For The MESH SOCIETY" and stating, "Congratulations to Maeleigh, Grayston, and Lennox on reading four titles for MESH Society!!!"  So I expect records on the post itself and on the underlying graphics and on anything else relating to those posts and the scheduling for publication of those posts.  I'm certain the public wants to see what was deleted in violation of records retention laws precipitated by my merely asking politely to be unblocked.  Recall public entities do not have the right to block people in the first place: "Public Libraries Must Unblock Social Media Participants," by Dan Kleinman, SafeLibraries, 9 January 2019, https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2019/01/public-libraries-must-unblock.html.  So at first I was illegally blocked, then the entire account was illegally deleted.  Likely all to protect illegal activities.  

All the above where "anyone" includes everyone and every person representing an organization, as well as the organizations themselves.

Let me explain a little background to better explain the public documents I seek.  Recall I sent an email dated 24 April 2024, with a courtesy copy to school librarian Amanda Jones who ran the @LOMiddleLibrary account, requesting that @LOMiddleLibrary unblock my X account due to such a block being illegal.  That night @LOMiddleLibrary was deleted, not just "protected" but actually deleted as in the account no longer existed.  Did my courtesy copy trigger that?  (So I'm not sending a courtesy CC to the librarian this time.  And the illegal condition was never resolved and neither have I received any response from anyone to my email, so now I’m thinking no response was provided because the account was deleted and no one wanted to admit that.  So there are communications between you and the librarian documenting this deletion, and you must now provide them.)  Initially thinking these deletions were a glitch, I waited for the accounts to return to being online.  They never did within at least a month and the names were relinquished but I now see both are back online, although at least in the X case all previous postings have disappeared completely, at least from X, in possible violation of records retention laws.  It is now clear to me that the accounts were intentionally deleted, liekly to hide evidence from the courts, and they no longer appear on school publications, although the Instagram account has been restored to such publications.  Looking at the school library’s web site at https://www.lomlibrary.org I noticed links across the top.  It’s from there that I learned the Instagram account listed and linked had been deleted, as well as the X account.  It’s from there that I learned the link to YouTube https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCwpfE-WUpZITcJv-0xUpMiw goes to a page for a personal business called, "Jones Education Consulting," having 19 videos, since changed to "Amanda Jones Librarian" having the same 19 videos.  I’ve never before seen a public school web site link to an employee’s private consulting business.  Right there that likely violates some rule or code of ethics, at a minimum, and may even look like gr**ming, which is partly why rules and ethics codes may have been written in the first place.

Now I’ll explain more.  I filed a previous FOIA request on or about 30 April 2024 and it was denied saying, "After a search of all email, we have not located any communication within our system that pertains to the public records request that you sent."  That reveals two things: 1) only emails were searched, and 2) only the "system" was searched.  Both are massive admissions of violations of the Louisiana Public Records Act § 44:1 et seq.  The Act is not restricted to emails and systems, and indeed I specifically stated, "even if personal accounts were used."  You searched nothing beyond emails in the system.  Further, your response is not credible in the slightest.  And another violation is that you are required to be a broad as possible.  It is apparent to me that you are acting in violation of the law to protect a school librarian who has publicly stated that she is s*xualizing and indoctrinating school children in her library.  Now that makes you responsible as well for covering up her acts.

As a result of your refusal to comply with the law, even where I hinted about its broadness, I will continue to bring FOIA requests until we get to the bottom of her hiding more information from more parents. You are not going to get away with playing FOIA games.  You have the answers and you are required by law to respond.  

Further, I’ll now have to expose more about Amanda Jones and her efforts to hide things from the "not modern" parents she serves.  The more you avoid complying with the law, the more I’ll keep digging for information pursuant to the law.  Sure, there will be more claims of harassment by the litigious one for my doing this, but it’s your noncompliance with the law that’s the problem, not my efforts to elicit lawful responses.

You have to broaden your search beyond mere emails.  And due to your failure to comply with the law, I have now requested another category of documents.  The FOIA requests will mount if you keep defying Louisiana law.

Because you failed to comply with the law, I dug deeper into the disaster that is Amanda Jones.  What did I find?  I found her bragging about how she colluded with you to hide public records from disclosure under the law or how to game the system to never create them in the first place, and how you now work with her to keep the public in the dark, specifically about her efforts to s*xualize and indoctrinate children of "not modern" parents.  She said, for example,

"And so, I knew that I wanted to teach my students some things, but I couldn't outright say it, 'This is what I'm teaching.' So, I developed a program called the MESH Society to incorporate media literacy which we all should be teaching anyway. But ethics, sociology and history, but infuse, um, some social justice in there without outright s- teaching social justice, if you read between the lines of what I'm saying."  

Source: "Poster Girl for ALA: 'That Librarian' Amanda Jones Indoctrinates Students Without Parents Knowing," by Dan Kleinman, SafeLibraries, 16 February 2024: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2024/02/poster-girl-for-ala.html

So I published in full the training she gave to librarians where she discussed that she colluded with you to hide things from parents and legislators, even from the courts. This FOIA request is to make clear the gamesmanship is now out in the open, you have actively violated state law, and you better well not do that this time.  This time you will provide all information requested, in full, and even if it comes from apps on Amanda's and your own personal communications devices.  Are we clear?  Legislators will be watching how you respond to me.  They will have seen Amanda's full training on how to sidestep Louisiana Public Records Act § 44:1 et seq.  You know and they know Amanda's diktat does not trump the law.  Perhaps you should read what Amanda said in full, because if you play even one more game with me, the stakes will continue to get higher.  Here it is and read it in full, because if you step out of line again after reading exactly how Amanda games the system and how she revealed that she works with you to also game the system, there are going to be increasing consequences. "School Librarian Amanda Jones Leads Live Oak Middle School to Hide Information from Parents and Legislators," by Dan Kleinman, SafeLibraries, 31 August 2024: https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2024/08/school-librarian-amanda-jones-leads.html

And I've included the transcipt in full below.  You can't miss it now.

Amanda provides training on how to communicate in ways the "not modern" parents will never know.  You must provide answers that comprise all the methods Amanda revealed, at a minimum, to comply with the law.  See http://tinyurl.com/JonesBossPD and https://youtu.be/yYr3qjvXXAA dated 28 August 2023 where Amanda lectures other school librarians on "Self-Preservation When Dealing with Censorship Attempts" where "Attendees will learn ways to protect themselves on social media, precautions to take online, and tips for dealing with the stress associated with book banning and censorship attempts. It’s sad we need this in today’s world, but you can never be too safe."  The way they "protect themselves" are not legal means to violate open government laws.  "You can never be too safe."  From whom?  Parents?  Legislators?  Courts?

Amanda is literally an expert in hiding information to thwart the law, all while laughing and repeating she knows she's not doing anything wrong and bragging about even keeping the judicial system from getting information, and now you are an expert in helping her hide information from parents, legislators, and the courts.  Here is direct evidence, directly from Amanda's mouth:

(10:02):
Now, um, as far as messaging goes. You need to think about public records requests, hackers and subpoenas (laughs) and I'm not being uh dramatic. You really have to think about these things. So for your emails, um, they will take anything and everything out of context, cuz we know we're not doing wrong, you know you're not doing righ- anything wrong. Um, but they will go in, and they will get a, um, you know, Freedom of Information Act, they can request your public reah records, your um work emails, um, sometimes. It depends on what they ask for, but um, I have been asked for mine and uh, be very careful.
(10:39):
I do not, I will not talk about book challenges whatsoever on school email. Um, I will only speak about it in person with my administration now. Um, I will not talk about book orders or anything like that on school email. Um. Some people, um, I, I know uh, Katie Schwarzmann who is a lawyer with the Tulane First Amendment Law Clinic said even your personal email if you're using it at school, sometimes they can get right to it, especially if you're in a court case.
(11:10):
Um, so be very careful about what you're, even on your phone if you're connected to the Wi-Fi or you're doing it during work hours, be very careful. And again I know we're not doing anything wrong. They will just take anything and everything out of context.
(11:22):
Um, something that we like to use in Louisiana, um, our, our activism group that we have now, um, initiated. Um, we use Signal. Signal is an app that we can communicate with each other and you can set your messages to automatically (laughs) disappear after five minutes, so we we're like, we joke, we're like um detectives or whatever. Uh huh. But, and I don't know if they could actually get those for court. They I still careful about whatever I say. Um, we also use Slack to coordinate things, um, where we're... library board meetings, school board meetings, things like that, we'll use Slack and Signal to communicate, not Facebook Messenger, not text message, none of that. You just want to be very, very careful.
(12:00):
Conversations are always better, um, face to face or phone call. Remember, um, just everything you do, everything you email, everything you say, everything, um, just think that somebody's recordin it and watching you at all times (laughs), that's all I can say.

Oh no.  That’s not going to happen.  You are required by law to provide the information, and I intend to enforce that law if I have to.  It might be best for you to just provide the documentation as requested and per the law, even if it means searching her "activism group that we have now."  

Amanda trains people to use means outside emails in the "system."  Even during work hours!  So you must expand your search for what I originally requested as re-requested above and the new material I requested too, and I’ll have to list it out for you:
Personal emails
Personal text messages
Facebook
X (formerly Twitter)
Instagram
LinkedIn
TikTok
Snapchat
Signal
Telegram
Threads
Bluesky
Messenger
Slack
WhatsApp
Clubhouse
Discord
Reddit. 

Even her new book just published points out how to game the system.  On page 245, "Make sure all apps, websites, and social media only contain your personal emails.  Your work emails could be subject to public records requests.  Now, that's not to insinuate that you are doing anything wrong on your work emails!"  "Use an app like Slack, with channels for different topics, to help your cause.  Only invite the 'inner circle' of trusted leaders in these communications.  If you are a librarian, use an app like Signal to communicate with each other.  This app is less likely to be hacked, and you can set messages to disappear after a few minutes." [Highlighting omitted.]  So legislators will want to know LPRA and record retention laws need to be strengthened to account for Amanda telling school librarians to destroy public records within minutes.  School librarians—people having direct access to children almost throughout the year—are training each other to violate open government laws.  Your own Amanda Jones literally wrote the book on doing that.  And you are helping her to do that.

So let me remind you.  You must provide under the Louisiana Public Records Act § 44:1 et seq., and not under the Amanda Jones Protection Act of Live Oak Middle School Administrators "Detectives or Whatever" that only looks at emails and only those in the "system" in violation of the law, the documents contained in the "system" —> AND <— personal emails, personal text messages, Facebook, X, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Snapchat, Signal, Telegram, Threads, Bluesky, Messenger, Slack, WhatsApp, Clubhouse, Discord, Reddit, and other means of communication, where that communication involves  anything requested above.

If there are any fees for searching or electronically copying these records, please inform me if the cost will exceed $25, but under the circumstances of your having been caught violating the law, I'd be shocked if you decided to use any further roadblocks to public information.  However, I would also like to request a waiver of all fees in that the disclosure of the requested information is in the public interest and will contribute significantly to the public’s understanding of Amanda Jones’ statements that local parents are "not modern" so she sneaks past the parents materials that train children in "social justice" and that s*xualize them, about which I have reported here: "Poster Girl for ALA: 'That Librarian' Amanda Jones Indoctrinates Students Without Parents Knowing" https://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2024/02/poster-girl-for-ala.html, since I am a representative of the news media as a citizen journalist and my request is related to news gathering purposes.   I asked for my account to be unblocked and the response was to delete the entire @LOMiddleLibrary account that very night.  That account deletion is super newsworthy.  And the destruction of public documents, namely the deletion of tweets or posts, might even be a violation of Louisiana public records retention laws and perhaps ethics codes, and might even be worth another FOIA request to seek existing records of what has been deleted.  Certainly the deletion of school social media sites will be of public interest to at least the parish residents, including the "not modern" parents, and likely to the nation generally given Amanda Jones’s fiction book called, "That Librarian: The Fight Against Book Banning in America," a fiction book since the last book banned in the USA was banned in 1963 and removing pervasively vulgar and educationally unsuitable materials from school libraries is legal under Board of Education v. Pico.  Certainly the public will want to know if and why the author of "That Librarian" has violated Louisiana law to apparently protect herself from her own self-revealed method of indoctrinating school children without parents knowing.  Certainly the public will want to know if her school administration is defending her instead of taking appropriate action to protect the children and comply with Louisiana law.  This information is not being sought for commercial purposes.

Section 44:32(D) of the Louisiana Public Records Act requires a response within three business days, so, by Thursday, September 12, 2024.  If access to the records I am requesting will take longer than that time period, please contact me with information about when I might expect electronic copies of the requested records.

If you deny any or all of this request, please cite each specific exemption you feel justifies the refusal to release the information and notify me of the appeal procedures available to me under the law.

The audacity of you people.  You have Louisiana’s most prominent school librarian, now the nation's most prominent school librarian given the push she has gotten from American Library Association, who admitted publicly to gr**ming middle school children.  She provides training nationwide on how librarians should and can hide how the sausage is made from parents, politicians, and the judicial system precisely by taking actions to evade FOIA laws.  She stated in that training that she has made special arrangements with her administration, that’s you, to keep parents from learning things they could and would have otherwise known under FOIA laws.  I then filed a FOIA request with you and, wonder of wonders, you have no responsive documents to disclose, just as Amanda trains and said you do.  The audacity of you people.  You really think the "not modern" parents are stupid.  But now you have joined Amanda Jones in her gr**ming of children.  You are now accessories after the fact.  I am going to do my best to make sure every Louisiana legislator and relevant court knows this.  A proper response to this FOIA may mollify what I might say.

Recently Amanda Jones was gloating that H777 was shot down, and she showed a video of legislators stating they got hundreds of letters opposed to the legislation but few in support.  She said, "We will continue to protect our libraries here in Louisiana.  Thank you to the members of #lalege who see reason."  And she included a tweet from here own astroturf group called "Louisiana Citizens Against Censorship" that stated, "Because of YOU, we are protecting #libraries in #Louisiana.  But we still have work to do!  Write your legislators at: la-cac.org/contact-your-r…"  That’s because Amanda Jones works closely with a massive bullying campaign created by the American Library Association from Chicago, Illinois, to create, fund, and empower fake grassroots groups to do exactly what she is doing and to get hundreds of emails sent to legislators.  The "not modern" parents have no equivalent organization working on their behalf.  That’s what’s happening in Louisiana.  Amanda Jones is part of that, even bragging about that.  And now you are assisting Amanda Jones in doing that and much more.

So here’s the deal.  You respond in accordance with Louisiana law instead of the Amanda Jones Protection Act of Live Oak Middle School Administrators, and you provide each and every document requested, then the public won’t think you have joined Amanda Jones in violating the law to keep the "not modern" parents in the dark while their children are s*xualized and indoctrinated by school librarians like Amanda and those she trains.  Because right now it looks like you have.  Here’s your chance to prove me wrong.  And I’ll be letting Louisiana legislators and courts know what you have chosen to do.  Yes?  

You know, we all understand that some things are private and should not be recorded.  But in a public school, documentation is required for certain actions, like responses to book challenges and new book orders, and according to Amanda Jones, you and her have colluded not to create such documentation.  "I do not, I will not talk about book challenges whatsoever on school email. Um, I will only speak about it in person with my administration now. Um, I will not talk about book orders or anything like that on school email."  So if you or anyone thinks my FOIA request for documentation is designed for harassment purposes, no, it’s designed to get around your own collusion to violate FOIA and records retention laws.  Even if Amanda Jones didn’t email you on this or that, you might still have written down contemporaneous notes on your thoughts about what she said, or you might have used a means other than work emails to communicate, so now I’ll have to ask for those notes.  You forced me to do this and she admitted publicly she’s doing this, even wrote a book about it.  If there’s any harassment going on, it’s you colluding with an admitted gr**mer to hide things from "not modern" parents, legislators, and the courts.

Thank you for considering my request.

Sincerely,

Dan Kleinman
973-610-8296

PS, here is the transcript of Amanda Jones' training on 28 August 2023 located here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYr3qjvXXAA

K.C. Boyd:
(00:02):
All right, coming up next is the 2021 School Librarian of the Year, Amanda Jones from Louisiana. Her title of her session is, "Self-Preservation: When Dealing with Censorship Attempts" and this is going to be a good one. Make sure that you have a pen and paper out and take some notes because, uh, Amanda's going to drop some, some gems on us. I, I know she will. Okay? So as soon as I see your screen I'm gunna drop off but you can just go on and take it away.

Amanda Jones:
(00:35):
All right.

K.C. Boyd:
(00:36):
Okay, I see your screen.

Amanda Jones:
(00:38):
Okay I'm trying, look, it's been so long since I've been on, uh, I can't see anybody so I'm just doing this blindly. Y'all can see me and everything?

K.C. Boyd:
(00:50):
Yes, we can see you and the screen.

Amanda Jones:
(00:52):
Okay, sorry. Y'all give me a second. I swear I'm better at tech than this normally. Okay, so I'm going to be monitoring the chat and K.C., if you see a question in the Q&A, I'm ha- I havin' trouble looking at, you know, the chat and the Q&A and everything at once.

K.C. Boyd:
(01:09):
Sure can.

Amanda Jones:
(01:10):
But, um, so I'm going to go ahead and start. My name is Amanda Jones and I'm going to drop the slide. Let's see... That should be it right there, so you should have access now to the slide deck and I'll, I'll post it multiple times, um, let's see... Y'all give me one second. There we are. Okay, now I can see. All right, so self-preservation, um, when dealing with censorship (laughs). So, uh, I've been through it the past year and hopefully you haven't been through it, um, but I'm gonna talk to you about ways you can prepare if you ha-are going through it. Some things to mitigate, uh, some some of your concerns, um, but before we start, I, I just kinda wanna know, um, what type of like, librarian you are, like school, public, or what grades or age levels, and then what state or country you're in. If you could drop that in the chat, I'd just like to know who I'm talking to. (laughs)
(02:15):
But um, in case you haven't heard, while waiting for everybody to do that, um, I'll, I'll say uh, uh the past year I've, I'm in currently in a lawsuit. Um, I am, uh, I was attacked (laughs) last summer for speaking out at the public library as a resident and, um, what ensued was just a nightmare and it's still going on. Why... There we go. It's still going on, I just filed an appeal, um, in my lawsuit, so that's like the whole thing. I'm not gonna talk about the lawsuit too much, but it is, uh, I got tired of being called a gr**mer and a p*d*phile online, and being, uh, and have ugly things said about me, so I did something about it. And we're going to talk about a little bit about some of that. All right, so I'm seeing where everybody's from and I'm going to continue on.
(03:05):
So what I want you to do is, you you have to prepare for the worst. And I remember back in May of uh 2022, I was on a panel with uh Nik- author Nikki Grimes, like the fabulous author Nikki Grimes, and she and I and Burton Ball [?] were talking about censorship and how to prepare yourself. And we were talking about book bans and censorship, as in like, prepare your collection development policies and, and, um, Miss Grimes's perspective as an author and all of that. Um, and I said, "Well, it hasn't happened to me yet, hahaha!" and then like fast-forward three months later and it was a nightmare. So, yi ya yit's just better to be safe and sorry?
(03:46):
So hopefully I will offer you some of these tips. Um, some of these came from me, some came from other people that they told me about, and I, um, have, have done a lot of these, so it's better to be safe than sorry. So the first thing I want to tell you is that, um, there are people out there, obviously, that, um, will or are just waiting to make your life a living hell just for being a librarian. And I don't know the why's or the how's, or I don't know their thought process on that, but it's happening. And um, everything's fair game to them. You, your family, your children, your job, everything is fair game to them. So you wanna be as prepared as possible.
(04:30):
You want to make sure the first thing you're going to do when you start preparing is you're going to go and you're gunna remove any references to your school or your library on everything. I have a professional website, um, that I keep, you know, I do speaking engagements and things like that and I, I, I keep all of that information up there and I have a school email on it so I had to go and take that off. Now there are some things I post on my website, like news articles and the title of the article has my school. I've done the best I can to take, um, every reference though off, of my school, my school email, all of the websites. But you also wanna make sure you do that on all social media, so whatever it is, LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, whatever, take off any reference that you have to your school or your school district. Just trust me on this. Just do it (laughs) okay? Take it off.
(05:19):
I know you wanna say, "Hey, I'm a proud teacher librarian at blank school!" No (laughs), just take it off. You wanna make sure you only include your personal email on all of your accounts and your pages. Personal email, not school. And I was, I used my school email for everything. I was naïve. So now I use my personal for everything and I will only use school email at school, I will not use it when I leave home, I mean when I leave school and I use my personal for everything. But, um, you also want to go through all of your social media and you want to look at your pictures.
(05:55):
I would suggest that you take any pictures of your children off if they're younger. Now my daughter is 16 goin on 17 and, dum, I always ask her before I post stuff anyway, um, but you want to take it all off if possible? Even think about um like, even think about your pictures. Now I, my pictures on my socials are my face, um, but for a while there when I was being like, really attacked hardcore at the beginning, I took my picture off of everything, um, and I just now, uh, a couple months ago put it back on. But look at your pictures, look at your family. Um, you want to remove any phone numbers. I didn't realize that my Twitter was linked to my um, my cellphone and some, some apps you have to have a link to a phone, but go make sure it's not visible (laughs) to anybody. I was so clueless, y'all. So you wanna make sure you do that. You wanna make sure, um, even stuff like Goodreads, your Amazon account, your TikTok account, you take off your school email, reference to your school, any of that.
(06:59):
Now, something else you want to do, because everything to them is fair game and because they're a little, um, uh some people can be a little unhinged? You want to go back and do things like on Facebook you can go and retroactively set every prior Facebook post to friends-only and there's a little GIF on the screen, um, but basically you go under Settings and you go into, um, Posts and then you click on it, says "limit who can see past posts" and you can click on Friends Only and you can limit every single post you have ever made because y'all (laughs), I have a friend, Kelisa Wing from Virginia, they found a tweet of hers from three years ago that I didn't even think was bad and it was though they put it on Fox News. So (laughs), it, it, it was awful. So you go through, um, I lock down my Twitter periodically, um, whenever I wanna share stuff or, all- allow things to be retweeted, I'll unlock, but I go back and forth between that.
(08:00):
But you wanna go through, do a deep dive on all your social media. Clear anything and everything, lock it down, go through your privacy settings, um like in Instagram you can set it where people cannot comment? Facebook you can, um. Let me mention this. Because I run, I have a Facebook page for my school library. And so people, that's a little different, you, cause you, you can't really block a parent (laughs) of a child of yours at your school for the school library but what you can do is you could go and hide comments, and if you go in and you just copy and paste all the prepositions, and then like the hot-topic, um, words like 'gr**mer', 'p*d*phile', 's*xually explicit', 'por-' like all these things, 'woke', these buh words that they use and put those and all the prepositions, um, into the hide comments section. It will automatically hide all your comments on those pages, every comment that people put until you unhide it. I would suggest doing that.
(09:00):
You want to go through and you want to weed your friend list. Um, when I first started being targeted back last summer, um, I went through and weeded my friend list and I did not do it good enough. Um, there were people that were going in on my friends only posts and taking stuff and I figured out who it was and so I'm very, very cautious now. Um, mine was, it was a little heartbreaking, you have people I grew up with (laughs), but, um I would very much limit? Also on Facebook, there is, um, uh there's an option that you, you know, you like to link your family members? It'll say like Amanda's family and all my, my dad, my mom, my grandmother, everybody is linked. I went and unlinked it all, I took it off because they will come after your family as well. I know that from personal experience. They, they, they have targeted, um, my siblings, um, so, uh, and and they even go into, to School Librarian Facebook posts. Be careful what you post on, in the Facebook groups, cause they'll go in there and there's lurkers and they screenshot and all that. Um, but you wanna make sure you set everything to private, do the best you can on that end.
(10:02):
Now, um, as far as messaging goes. You need to think about public records requests, hackers and subpoenas (laughs) and I'm not being uh dramatic. You really have to think about these things. So for your emails, um, they will take anything and everything out of context, cuz we know we're not doing wrong, you know you're not doing righ- anything wrong. Um, but they will go in, and they will get a, um, you know, Freedom of Information Act, they can request your public reah records, your um work emails, um, sometimes. It depends on what they ask for, but um, I have been asked for mine and uh, be very careful.
(10:39):
I do not, I will not talk about book challenges whatsoever on school email. Um, I will only speak about it in person with my administration now. Um, I will not talk about book orders or anything like that on school email. Um. Some people, um, I, I know uh, Katie Schwarzmann who is a lawyer with the Tulane First Amendment Law Clinic said even your personal email if you're using it at school, sometimes they can get right to it, especially if you're in a court case.
(11:10):
Um, so be very careful about what you're, even on your phone if you're connected to the Wi-Fi or you're doing it during work hours, be very careful. And again I know we're not doing anything wrong. They will just take anything and everything out of context.
(11:22):
Um, something that we like to use in Louisiana, um, our, our activism group that we have now, um, initiated. Um, we use Signal. Signal is an app that we can communicate with each other and you can set your messages to automatically (laughs) disappear after five minutes, so we we're like, we joke, we're like um detectives or whatever. Uh huh. But, and I don't know if they could actually get those for court. They I still careful about whatever I say. Um, we also use Slack to coordinate things, um, where we're... library board meetings, school board meetings, things like that, we'll use Slack and Signal to communicate, not Facebook Messenger, not text message, none of that. You just want to be very, very careful.
(12:00):
Conversations are always better, um, face to face or phone call. Remember, um, just everything you do, everything you email, everything you say, everything, um, just think that somebody's recordin it and watching you at all times (laughs), that's all I can say. Um, ah. Cuz you know, I, I thought about this, um, I'll be at like a library board meeting and I just wanna tell people off and just like go in double barrels and like, they're recording me at all times, so um, yeah. Plus I always try to live by what Michelle Obama says about go, go, "When they go low, you go high" (laughs). So I keep that and the fact that I can be recorded, um, in my head at all times.
(12:41):
You want to stay in the know, so in order to prepare for this you want to stay in the know. So you want to, you know, you want to go to meetings, go to your school board meetings, go to your library board control meetings, go to your... We are governed by a parish council which is like a county, or county governance for parishes in Louisiana. Um, I don't attend every single one of those but I'll watch it online. Um, I do attend every library board meeting and I watch the school board meetings. You want to make sure that um, you ahead of time you click on this and these are clickable links and I'll put the, put it back in the chat. Um, reading up on PEN America's Field Guide to Harassment, it can come in very, very handy?
(13:14):
Very handy. Um, and I cannot say enough positive things about Kelly Jensen uh, from Book Riot? She does a weekly censorship round up. Now she's on vacation right now, so I don't know if she's posting things today but she keeps everything up to date? Um, she posts about stories all over the country, so even if it's not affecting your school or your state, read up on other states and what is happening because I get ideas on how to fight things and, and people who I can contact for support so I'm always reading Kelly's, um, Book Riot.
(13:46):
And if, they should be announcing, AASL should be announcing this week, she got a geuha, commendation 26 states, uh, chapters, um, we, we wrote a recommendation or commendation for her resolution for a ca commendation, whatever they call it. Should be announced soon. So I'm really excited about that for Kelly.
(14:04):
Um, and then SLJ, Library Journal, they're always posting things, read up on that.
(14:09):
And then there's something called Plural. It used to be called Open States but they changed at the end of July and it's now called Plural and I go on there all the time and I stay in the know on what's happening in the legislature, the bills, who's running for office. Now in Louisiana, we have it's called Geaux Vote, so I'm always looking at like, what's up for vote.
(14:27):
You just need to know all the players. Know all the players and know the game. Cuz it's a game to them, it's not a game to us, it's a game to them and you need to know the players in the game.
(14:38):
Um, you also want to preempt, uh, if it hasn't happened to you, still do this. You'll need to form an alliance (laughs), a super-secret alliance. Um, we, we formed an alliance in my parish um after the, after we were targeted. And dum, so I founded the Livingston Parish Library Alliance with the help of John Chrastka and EveryLibrary and Patrick and Peter at, at EveryLibrary. Um, and we, we have an alliance that whether you are working for your public or your school's library, start building your citizen coalition, you know? And the easiest thing to do is just start a Facebook page and post like, updates like, here's the school board meeting and this is on the agenda or I post positive memes about the library and like "We love our libraries because" and then I'll post some of Kelly's articles and different things, um, to help spread the word and you build up so that if something does happen you have a built in support system already. Okay?
(15:34):
Um, we had to do it (laughs) after the fact. And then, um, I I joined, so we have two wonderful women in our state, Lynette Mejia and Melanie Brevis, and they um formed Louisiana Citizens Against Censorship and they allowed me to help them, and then the three of us kind of joined together and we are uniting or trying to unite all of the alliances across the state and build that support not just not in our parish which is our counties, but also state wide. Um, it's really great if you just go ahead and, just do it (laughs). Build yourself an alliance.
(16:04):
Now. If you do, um, come under attack, watch what you say and do. I cannot stress that enough, watch what you say and do. I have diarrhea of the mouth. I am I am well-known for having diarrhea of the mouth and flying off the handle, and so I have to be very, very careful. Um, when I first started being attacked, um, I thought "This is not serious, like this is ridiculous." I went on their page and put the laughing emoji (laughs) and I wish I could take that back cuz it's not funny, um, and they talk about that all the time. "She put the laugh, she thinks it's funny". So, um, I learned that the hard way. Um. But what you wanna do, don't engage (laughs), it's not worth it. Yeah, you, somebody calls you a p*d*phile online or somebody says, like in my case they announced to my community that I'm giving p*rn*graphy and er*tica to six-year-olds and I'm teaching 11-year-olds how to perform an*l s*x (laughs). You know, I'm not and I wanna go online and say, "I am not doing that," um, but you just, you just can't, just don't. Um, it's not worth it.
(17:06):
You don't want to engage back, um, you you wanna lock down, lock your Twitter, you wanna lock your Facebook, you wanna mute, block. And what's funny is so I block a lot of people on Twitter, and so my haters are like, "I thought the person who, um, is against censorship is... she's, she's against censorship but she's blocking us." I'm sorry, but I, my personal Twitter is not a government entity, uh, that's my personal Twitter. They can rail all they want about it. I'm blocking them. You have to block them for your peace. Just block 'em and don't go look at what they're saying. And I know that's easier said than done. It took me six months to realize that, that no good will come out of you looking at it. You just, you just, it just hurts your heart and there's just, there's no... Just don't go look at it.
(17:50):
Um, if I were you, I'd get a really trusted friend to go take screenshots and document all of that. Change your name if you need it.
(17:56):
If you get an email, so I received a death threat. Don't forward it, cause it can mess up the chain of uh, the encry- the, oh, I don't know, I'm not cyber tech-y, but um, you don't want to forward it, you want to print it, you want to document it, block the sender.
(18:10):
And I have a folder called Whackadoos (laughs), and when I get a Whackadoo email I just put it in my Whackadoo folder for future reference and I don't go back and look at it. Um, so, do that. And if it's, now if it's a school email, you need to report that to your administration.
(18:24):
Also make sure that tell your family not to respond. Um, they will, they will come after your family. They will do deep dives and track every member of your family. I'm sure some one of my haters probably has a whole family tree on me, um, and that, that scares me. So, um, tell your family not to respond either.
(18:38):
You wanna document it all. And I laugh because (laughs) I use Wakelet (laugh) to document it (laughs). I have like columns, like all the players (laughs), and every screenshot and every link and everything but I don't just do, do it it there, and do it in multiple places on multiple clouds, on a hard drives, in the cloud, um, very securely and I document everything. You wanna document everything. If it's a social media post, you want to go and get the link for that post, save the link. You wanna take a screenshot. You wanna save that. You wanna save every screenshot, um, of every comment? You want to do all of that. Okay?
(19:12):
Um, you want to, every text message you get, and and I even, I have things printed, just in case, um, but I have everything. You wanna organize it by who, what, when, where, why. And if it's a, if it's a death threat, you you need to... If you feel unsafe you need to report that to law enforcement. Now I'm not saying it went anywhere for me for law enforcement but I did report mine, and after several months, they um eh, they'd given me the run around and I reported to the FBI and they deferred to the local sheriff's department, but you want to report it, you want that on record.
(19:44):
You also wanna document all of the police reports, harassment, anything like that, and you also want to document doctor's visits. If you start getting attacked online, you need to go to the doctor and have your weight, your vitals because I lost 50 pounds, my blood pressure went through the roof. I had to get on the anxiety medication and all of that is documented for my court case. And I go every month and a half, two months and get all of that to show the physical toll that it has taken on me. Hopefully that doesn't happen to you. Um, but also therapy. I document therapy sessions, how much I pay, ah my co-pays, what it co- like everything, you document everything.
(20:20):
Now reporting, um, you wanna make sure you report it to as many places as possible, um, either to cyber crime unit, you can go online, you can, you know, these are all the thi- places you can report it. But you definitely wanna make sure that your administration, your district, your school board rep, your union is all aware of these things so if someone goes on online and says you're getting s*xually explicit material to children, you need to make them aware of that. Um. And don't forget to tell your family, um, to report it to you as well. I take the screenshots and links from all the things that have been done on my family's website as well.
(20:53):
Now, do you want to take a stand? That's up to you. And I will say that um, I don't regret taking a stand and I don't regret, um, I, I don't regret filing a lawsuit. It has been a solid year (laughs), and I am nowhere in sight of any of this going away. Um, if I had let it go, I truly feel they would have moved on with life, they would've left me alone and that would be that. I now have my own personal stalkers. Um, I'm not even, I'm not even, alleged stalkers, for the court case (laughs). Um, but I uh, it's it's horrendous, it's it's really horrendous. Um, but I don't regret it, but you have to understand that I had the means and I am privileged and not everybody does. I am a white, straight woman. That affords me privilege. It does. Um. I am not a historically marginalized, um, person. Um, I also have a very solid support system with family. I have a very solid support system across the country with school librarians. Um, and I have a GoFundMe. It is super-expensive. I have spent $60,000 so far and we're not even like, I and I, oh by the way, if I lose, I have to pay their cour- court costs, too. So you just have to weigh that.
(22:08):
Um, several people have contacted me about, you know, they've sent me screenshots like, "Can I file suit? Can I file suit?" It's very hard. So if you are uh ever, um, if you have spoken of any of your school board or public library board meetings, if you've spoken in public, you will be classified as a public figure and that is another level of defamation that has to be proven. You have to prove malice. So it's super-super hard to file a suit, so you need to know that going in, and you know need to know that this is very, very expensive. But again, I have no regrets. So, um. I always tell people, you know, let it go, if you can. If you have it in you to fight back, fight back. I don't, I don't judge either way. Um, It has taken a very, very, very emotional, physical and mental toll on me, and I don't want that for anyone else.
(23:00):
Um, the aftermath. How do we cope and how do we, how do we move on? So, um, my friend Andrea Trudeau showed me the app, uh, Engageable? Think it used to be called Focusable, it's now called Engageable. You can do meditations. My friend Tiffany Whitehead showed me the Breeze: Mental Health app, you can go on and you can do, um, do guided meditations, breathing, take deep breaths, um. You have to, ih, get someone else to take the screenshots and do all that business for you so you don't have to look at it just for your own mental health. Um. Karina Quilantán[-Garza] introduced me to Spotify cuz I was not a Spotify user and she sent me a um playlist (laughs) like a, like a womanhood, like a bad*ss women playlist, and so I got uh, I got like, really into Spotify, so I have like, when I'm in the mood to like, really just rail, and then I have like, when I need, I have my Lauren Daigle and my own S- Southern Baptist hymns, when I need like, Jesus like (laughs) so that I don't go wild. So I have different playlists, that's helped me a lot. Go to the doctor, though, seriously, go to the doctor. Um, go get therapy. There's such a stigma about therapy, um, therapy's been amazing for me. Uh, I'm, I'm. I say yoga next or something, I haven't done that in a while. But I I did, um, I have tried that and it does help.
(24:18):
Ask for help. I asked for help immediately. K.C. was like, probably the first person I texted other than family (laughs) and K.C. helped, uh, and it it was amazing. And I, I don't know, I'm tryin not to cry, but I am forever indebted to her (cries). Um, reach out for help, um (cries).

K.C. Boyd:
(24:37):
Uh-uh, uh-uh, come on, come on, come on. Don't do it, don't do it.

Amanda Jones:
(24:37):
I know, I know, look!

K.C. Boyd:
(24:40):
It's all right, come on. You, you almost made it through. (laughs)

Amanda Jones:
(24:43):
I know, right? It's like I haven't thought in so long about this. Um, but reach out for help, like reach out to me, um, reach out to, I saw Carolyn comment, Carolyn Foote, the Texas FReadom Fighters, Becky. Um, reach out to your PLN because they're just wonderful. Um, but um, there, you know how on the airplane you have to put on your oxygen mask before you can help others? You really have to take care of yourself first, um, and I, I didn't learn that, I had to take a sabbatical, um, in December, uh. I start back school next week. Yay! I'm excited about it.
(25:17):
Uh, but you have to take a, um, I I did too much, and I didn't take care of myself and so, but now, I'm like, and now I was crying a minute ago cause I just, I love K.C. and I just wanted to, I get emotional when I think about her help. But um, I'm in such a better place, y'all. I'm I'm in a good place, um. And uh, but you have to ask for help and you have to talk about it, and um, so use some of these.
(25:38):
And know, you need to know there's no shame? So what these people want to do is they want to shame you. They want to tell, like, when you go online and they're posting this pers- this librarian is a p*rn pusher and they're always like the Marxist ALA and whatever, and I don't know that. Um, they wanna shame you. You've done nothing wrong (laughs) so don't let them shame you. You know you're not givin out p*rn to children? Um, hold your head up high. Like, you know, um. Th- ih th th- They wanna silence you, they wanna shame you, don't let them. But in the same regard, be safe about it, okay? Be safe. I have had to, you know and I've, I've had to be very safe, I have, we have security cameras, um, I have weapons (laughs) uh, I travel with mace and a taser and, um, you know, we are an open-carry state and uh if I have to travel a back road, it's, it is what it is. Um, cuz you can't be ss safe enough.
(26:39):
I even have checked my car for um GPS tracking devices, uh, because I have been very vocal against our attorney general who is running for governor, so you just cannot be too safe, uh, it's it's really wild out there (laughs). But, um, so that is, I think that's pretty much it on my spiel. Um, and yeah, final thoughts, it's not your fault. They wanna silence you, don't let them, you know, you've done nothing wrong.
(27:03):
And yet, and something you need to remember, it's a, it feels like a lot, like it feels like a lot. I'm in a small community, two red lights, so my whole community, my whole community shared all of these things and it's really hard when you see your kindergarten teacher writing about you, that you're (laughs) a problem person. But um, what you need to remember is, it's a vocal few that are stirring the pot. Don't give 'em an inch. Um, you know, don't give them anything, they'll move on. They really will. Um, and if they don't, then it's time to start thinking about what you need to do and if you need to get an attorney.
(27:37):
So, that was it. Um, I don't know if anybody had any questions (laughs).

K.C. Boyd:
(27:40):
Yeah, there's actually some questions and I just wanna make a quick comment. When it first started, ya uh, that weekend, I was so ticked off that I was just like on social media and I was fighting, arguing back with 'em, and it Carolyn Foote from Freadom Fighters that said, "Don't engage". And that was the best suggestion that, um, she could give me because, you know, when a friend of mine is going through something I'm ready to fight. I'm from the south side of Chicago, so you know I can't help myself. But the thing is (laughs), is that, you know, you it's it's not, it's not, any, it's, it doesn't, it, it doesn't gain an inch with any of these people.

Amanda Jones:
(28:17):
It doesn't.

K.C. Boyd:
(28:17):
They're just going to do, continue to say and do what they want to do. Amanda you do have some questions in the the ...

Amanda Jones:
(28:24):
I see 'em now, I pulled 'em up.

K.C. Boyd:
(28:27):
Okay.

Amanda Jones:
(28:27):
Um. So I will, so I, um, I'll put the link in here again and you should be able to take my slide. What I'll do is I'll put in the document that K.C.'s gonna, um, pass out. I'll put the PD, uh, PDF version too, as well as the slide deck. I'll do that. As far as MARC records for book orders, um, packing list comes in an email. It just is what it is, but I, you know, I don't order anything that's not age-relevant for my kids, so if they have a problem with it because it's black history or it has a black character and they say I'm teaching CRT or they have a problem with it cuz it has an LGBTQ character or by an author, too bad for them (laughs). Like (laughs) too bad for them. Um, uh, you know, it is what it is, um, I'm saying not a lot.
(29:09):
What's my opinion about joining the union? So I was, uh, a member of a professional organization and I switched to a union actually while I was in both, because of um, the legal representation, and my situation is unique because I'm being harassed for speaking up about my public library? I didn't do anything at school, like I haven't done anything or said anything, um, in all my interviews I do not mention my school or anything, so I am, I'm job-secure as of right now? Um, so I haven't had to, uh, have any issues but I'm in a union just in case, and I update my union attorneys on what's happening.
(29:45):
Um, now how did my admin respond to what they were saying. Okay, so I'm writing a book, it will be out September 24, uh, and I am going all into about uh what my administration said, um, because I will say on a personal level, uh, I mean on a professional level, they were amazing. Um, they they backed me 100%. My district, my everyone in my school system backed me 100%.
(30:12):
Um. When you grow up with someone who you work with for 22 years and they're your boss, there's some expectations when they, when they say that you're a school family. There's some expectations and I've learned that. And I, I went and told them this two days ago before school started, I said "We're not a family anymore, I don't wanna ever hear you talk about school family (laughs), we're not a family." And I just it is, ah, and I I said I'm writing about, I, there's a whole chapter in my book about the hurt. Um, ah, my school board representative, um, was a really good friend of mine and we don't no longer speak, so she's not gonna like my book either. It is, it'll be okay.

K.C. Boyd:
(30:51):
It is what it is. It is what it is.

Amanda Jones:
(30:52):
I'm telling my truth, so. (laughs)

K.C. Boyd:
(30:54):
Mm-hmm.

Amanda Jones:
(30:56):
But I think that was the... What is the name of my book? Oh, it's called "That Librarian" cause that's what they call me now that I'm suin' 'em, they don't put my name they say, "That Librarian" (laughs), so it's called "That Librarian: Book Bans in the United States," and it's actually, it goes into my story but it also zooms out and talks about Louisiana and the state as a whole, and it goes back and forth in like, what's the underlying like, it talks about white Christian nationalism and um, it talks about, um, how I was very Republican growing up and I was raised Southern Baptist and my coming to terms with things in 2020, um, ah, during COVID and George Floyd and and my whole change in mindset and uh, K.C., I hope you don't know, but I, I mean I hope you don't mind, but you're in the chapter about making me the person I am today.

K.C. Boyd:
(31:39):
Aww. Wow.

Amanda Jones:
(31:41):
And uh, just, it's, it's a, it's a lot about that, so, um.

K.C. Boyd:
(31:45):
You need to have T-shirts ready called that li- "I'm That Librarian". (laughs)

Amanda Jones:
(31:49):
And I do have my shirt, I don't know if you saw it at ALA, I have my shirt, it says, um, "Amanda Jones has joined the radical leftists to burn uh morals and uh, morals and common sense on the altar of wokeism" (laughs). That was an actual quote about (laughs) me in the paper (laughs).

K.C. Boyd:
(32:08):
I need to see that. Oh god, oh god.

Amanda Jones:
(32:09):
So I made a shirt. (laughs)

K.C. Boyd:
(32:11):
Well look, look y'all, give Amanda some love in the chat.

Amanda Jones:
(32:15):
Thank y'all.

K.C. Boyd:
(32:15):
Because this was painful for her to go through and, and she's able to still rise up up top and, and share this experience with all of us so we could be better prepared, you know, um, for a possible attack like this. She lived through it? So she's telling you the things that she did wrong, things she did right, and things that she wants you to do, so if you are attacked like this, you will be ready. Give her some love in the chat, give her some love on social me- Well, uh...

Amanda Jones:
(32:45):
You can, you can, yeah, yeah, oh and I...

K.C. Boyd:
(32:47):
How you feel about that?

Amanda Jones:
(32:50):
You can, and I'm locked down on Twitter right now.

K.C. Boyd:
(32:51):
Okay, okay.

Amanda Jones:
(32:52):
But um, if they, if you request me, Ali will follow you back if it says you're a librarian or educator because I'm very careful.

K.C. Boyd:
(32:58):
Yeah, yeah, that's another thing is that a lot of y'all, like, friend me, on Instagram. If I can't tell you're an educator or, or a librarian and it's just your name, I'm sorry, you can't friend me, no. and I I got that from Amanda. It's like you got to be, Amanda said, "K.C., you gotta be very careful who you're friending on online," you know, and I took that to heart.

Amanda Jones:
(33:21):
And uh, y'all can follow my case on librarianjones.com. I give updates, there's a speaking out tab, and I, I give updates. But thank y'all everybody, y'all have a good rest of your day and thank you, K.C., for hosting this amazing, uh, four days of PD.

K.C. Boyd:
(33:32):
Thank you for taking the time. I really appreciate you, hun. Love you.

Amanda Jones:
(33:36):
Love you, bye.

K.C. Boyd:
(33:37):
Alrighty. Bye-bye now. All right, y'all, we're gonna continue on with our presentations.

--
----------
Dan Kleinman, Owner of SafeLibraries® brand library educational services

=== 30 30 30 ===


For the previous FOIA the school denied per Amanda's direction, see:
Basically, Amanda Jones trains librarians to illegally blind parents, legislators, even courts so school librarians can better indoctrinate school children, something she's done with her "MESH Society" without "not modern" parents knowing.  Her feelings of power provided by her network of Chicago-organized librarians has enabled her to feel just fine about destroying evidence of collusion to hide information from even the courts.  The power rush must be incredible.  The feeling that she's untouchable.  She's literally on a nationwide book tour right now sucking down public funding to bask in the glow, the glow of stepping all over your community and its children and getting away with it.  Personally, I see no reason her school administration doesn't fire her, except they are complicit in her lawless power rush. 

I also urge Louisiana legislators to look at the evidence provided in the transcript, and my FOIA above, then adjust laws accordingly.  We see evidence of multiple means to manipulate multiple laws that have essentially been rendered useless by the American Library Association's poster girl for indoctrinating children.

The Louisiana Department of Education "Louisiana Believes" including the Louisiana State Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) may need to look at what's happening at Live Oak Middle School, 8444 Cecil Dr, Denham Springs, LA 70706, Livingston Parish.  The school administration there is actively working with a school librarian who has acted illegally and are themselves now involved in the same crimes and perhaps more, and all to carry out Chicago's American Library Association's 60 year efforts to s*xualize and indoctrinate children.  No doubt other schools are copying Amanda's illegality.  Read more about that 60 year mission here that includes ALA making up the "right to read" to take power away from parents and adding the word "age" to the "Library Bill of Rights":
And to Livingston Parish parents, I'm doing my best to expose the harm Amanda Jones and now Live Oak Middle School is doing to your children.  I even appeared in Baton Rouge to speak for Citizens for a New Louisiana.  Two of Amanda's compatriots came to find dirt on me!  Fun!  You can see me in the header graphic for @NewLouisiana on X.  I'm wearing the New Orleans Saints shirt.  I'm standing with many people Amanda Jones maligns in her new book as "Liars and Buzzards and Trolls" who are "pro-censors" and "loud and obnoxious."  


But I'm not there now.  You need to stand up and demand your school serve you and not some Chicago, Illinois, organization empowering Amanda Jones to create astroturf like "Livingston Parish Library Alliance" to pressure you into thinking Board of Education v. Pico, 457 US 853 (1982) no longer applies in public schools and instead you should "ban hate, not books."  Yes, American Library Association is funding and empowering Amanda Jones to indoctrinate and s*xualize your children.  American Library Association leaders even admit this:

One thing to consider could be challenging the teaching certificate of Amanda Jones.  According to Title 28, Education, Part CXXXI, Bulletin 746, Louisiana Standards for State Certification of School Personnel, https://www.doa.la.gov/media/ebbnvnr2/28v131.doc, "Chapter 19, Actions Related to the Suspension/Denial and Revocation of Louisiana Certificates, §1901. Overview; A. Educator credentials can be sanctioned for a conviction of certain criminal offenses, for the submission of fraudulent documentation, for professional license censure, for failure to meet the standards for effectiveness, or for participation in cheating. This chapter presents the circumstances that result in sanction plus the criteria under which reinstatement or issuance may be obtained. Conditions and mandates for issuance and sanction outlined in this chapter will be the same for all educator credentials issued by the Louisiana Department of Education."  Anyone see anything there or in the remaining sections?  I do.  

"Louisiana Believes" or BESE better enforce and reinforce/rewrite its rules or "teachers" are going to continue riding roughshod over Louisiana children.  She's bragged how she indoctrinates the children of "not modern" parents, trains librarians how to hide how to do that from everyone including the courts, got her school administration to go along with the scam, wrote a book detailing how to do it, and is now on a nationwide tour, all as created and promoted by a Chicago organization headed by a "nonbinary" Marxist and its "Unite Against Book Bans" partners including Amanda's publisher, Bloomsbury Publishing Inc.  She really is the poster girl for ALA.  She's also the poster girl for blowing past Louisiana laws, ethics, and educational standards.  If her actions don't lead to change, no one's will, and it's open season on the children.

And I haven't even discussed yet about how her vaunted award she keeps bragging about came about because she self-nominated herself—and even then it took three years to get it.  

Neither have I discussed that nearly every point Amanda makes has essentially been stolen (but not directly plagiarized) from ALA's former leader Judith Krug who wrote in SIECUS Report in 1994 how to play the game, starting with this lie that Amanda basically repeats: "Censorship is on the rise, and pressure groups have grown increasingly strident and unrelenting in their efforts to curtail the freedom to read."  You know, SIECUS, the "S*xuality Information and Education Council of the United States," the group that supports child r*pist Alfred Kinsey and that has this motto, "S*x Ed for Social Change," that's what's publishing Chicago's ALA leader:










Why is public employee Amanda Jones still employed in your school?  Why are school administrators allowed to help her target your children?  How much more evidence is needed before you act?



NOTE ADDED SUNDAY, 15 SEPTEMBER 2024:

The deadline for responding within three business still stands, but a hurricane meant the school was closed on Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday, so only Tuesday counted towards the three business days rule, given they officially received my weekend email on Monday.  I'll expect a response to be submitted by Tuesday of this week.