Showing posts with label LibraryJournal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LibraryJournal. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Illinois Library Commits $25,000 Fraud; Library Media Covers Up

An Illinois library commits $25,000 fraud.  Atlanta Public Library, Atlanta, IL.  The Illinois State Library orders the money to be returned.  It all happened because of the persistent work of open government watchdogs, in this case Illinois Leaks "Edgar County Watchdogs":



Library Media Coverup—Fake News:


Stories by Edgar County Watchdogs:


Stories by American Library Association:

  • None

Stories by Library Journal:

  • None

26-0-0.  Library media provide no stories on the topic.  None.  They do not want people to know local libraries may not be the angels people think they are.  In this case, library media equals fake news for failing to report on fraud, etc.

Is your local library getting away with anything?  Is your media hiding anything?


URL of this page: 
safelibraries.blogspot.com/2017/10/illinois-library-commits-25000-fraud.html

On Twitter:  @ALALibrary @ECWDogs @ILSecOfState @LibraryJournal

Monday, September 8, 2014

Banned Books Week Nonsense Censorship Talk is Ridiculous, Says Library Journal

Banned Books Week is a hoax and fake censorship talk is ridiculous, all the while libraries justify censoring out works they don't like, like about ex-gays.  That's basically what the Annoyed Librarian at the Library Journal said when she discussed censorship versus selection.  I couldn't have said it better myself, so I'm reposting it in full:

Another Problem with Banned Books Talk

One of the many problems with the ALA approach to so-called banned books is that it opens the door to easy criticisms by raging homophobes like this person.
The general gist of the criticism is that while librarians talk a good game about intellectual freedom and are against “censorship” and “banning books,” in fact their entire collection development process effectively bans books that librarians disagree with politically.
Libraries use Collection Development Policies (CDP’s) to determine which books they will purchase with their limited budgets. CDP’s hold that librarians should purchase only books that have been positively reviewed by two “professionally recognized” review journals. Guess what folks, the “professionally recognized” review journals are dominated by ideological “progressives.”
That’s pretty hard to argue with, because she’s right and we all know it. It doesn’t even mention that a lot of times it’s other librarians reviewing the books anyway, thus guaranteeing that the choices will be kept within the profession and that books librarians don’t like won’t be reviewed and thus won’t be purchased.
Considering the way the ALA defines intellectual freedom and censorship, it’s hard not to agree with the homophobic crusader here. Librarians do effectively keep certain kinds of books out of the view of readers. They do it because of their beliefs about what books are good or bad, and those beliefs are occasionally political in nature.
If library patrons ask for a book to be moved or removed from the children’s section, it’s “censorship.” If librarians make sure a book never gets there in the first place through a deliberately rigged collection process, it’s “selection.” Double standards prevail, making librarians look like hypocrites.
It’s a pity that a profession that so upholds intellectual freedom can’t come up with better strategies and arguments than to whine about “censorship” while effectively doing the very thing they complain about.
It must be possible. One could argue that certain types of books are motivated by a kind of hatred that’s inappropriate for children to see.
Will they ask for picture books that show the joy a little birdie experiences when after the West Nile virus deaths of her two daddies, she’s finally adopted by a daddy and mommy?”
Anyone who writes a book where children are happy their parents died of a terrible disease because they hate gay people so much is a pretty horrible person, after all, and keeping the product of their sick minds away from the kiddies is probably a good idea.
But not all homophobic books are necessarily hateful. Fearful, probably, but that never stops libraries from buying books. If there’s a book warning about the dangers of rapid climate change, then there’s a fearful book in the library.
One could argue that some categories of books are just dumb, or that they’re so devoid of scientific evidence that they’re useless books. Praying away the gay is about as useful as praying away the stupid. It just doesn’t work.
But that’s never stopped libraries either. Plenty of libraries have books about UFO abductions in the nonfiction section, and yet the scientific evidence for them is almost nil. Libraries also buy books advocating homeopathy, crystal healing, and other new age nonsense. Same deal.
One could argue that the books are religiously motivated, which is somehow inappropriate for public libraries. Separation of church and state and all that.
But libraries purchase Bibles and Korans and other religious texts. Some public libraries probably purchase religious fiction like the Left Behind books. There’s no good reason they shouldn’t. Religious readers are library users, too. So that argument is out.
One could argue that libraries are about more than intellectual freedom, that they have some other sorts of political values as well. Equality, diversity, tolerance, etc.
The homophobic crusader might reply that not buying homophobic books signals a lack of diversity. After all, the homophobic position is one of the voices out there, if not a majority voice anymore certainly a popular one, and a truly diverse collection would include it in the “marketplace of ideas.”
That one’s hard to refute. Equality and tolerance might work better. Books that claim certain categories of people shouldn’t be allowed to marry or raise children can claim to be among the diversity of voices, but they can’t claim to support equality, tolerance, or even democracy in a lot of America these days.
There are librarians who talk about libraries as places to promote equality and tolerance, but that’s not the “official” line.
The ALA Library Bill of Rights talks about providing books for the “interest, information, and enlightenment of all people,” which sounds promising along those lines, but then immediately says libraries “should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues.”
That sounds like library collections are completely neutral collections, but obviously they’re not. Go to your local library and find some aggressively pro-racism books there. What? There aren’t any? Does that mean that there are no local racists around?
The homophobic crusader was discussing the Schaumburg Township District Library, which apparently had pictures of librarians holding up “banned books,” “you know, books that are widely available in virtually every community library.”
She then lists some antigay books that the librarians could also take pictures of themselves holding. Since none of those books are considered “banned” by the ALA, that’s a pointless suggestion, but her point is valid. “Unlike the books the librarians are holding this year, these books actually aren’t in their library. Hmmm, I wonder if they were banned.”
If there are no books in your library’s collection talking about how awful gay marriage is, then your library isn’t providing materials presenting all points of view.
Librarians tend to be true believers about the banned book nonsense, and it’s pretty hard to reason with them but I’m not giving up just yet. The censorship talk is ridiculous, and librarians would be better off promoting what they do in a smarter way.
Librarians should just own up to the fact that they have a broad political agenda, and one that promotes equality while fighting intolerance.
They don’t defend gay penguin books because they really believe all points of view should be represented in libraries. The defend gay penguin books because they believe that gay penguins should be treated equally to straight penguins, and their constituencies have both gay and straight penguins. Or something like that.
They don’t seek out homophobic children’s books because they’re opposed to diverse viewpoints in the library collection. They don’t seek them out because they don’t seek out children’s books that promote intolerance, hate, or inequality.
It’s the same reason they wouldn’t buy racist children’s books, and they probably wouldn’t buy racist children’s books even if a library patron requested the purchase. There are just certain viewpoints that people devoted to freedom, equality, diversity, and tolerance don’t consider worth buying.
So go on talking about censorship and banned books, librarians. I know what you’re really about. You’re really trying to promote intellectual freedom, equality, and tolerance for all types of library patrons. You’re just afraid to say it in your collection development policies.

# # #  30  # # #
Related post:

Through its de facto censorship mechanism, cunningly obscured behind the sterile nomenclature "Collection Development Policy," the American Library Association has become a corrupt, hypocritical organization committed to promulgating biased, subversive social and political views on the controversial topic of homosexuality. On this topic one thing's certain: if you're looking for intellectual diversity, stay out of your libraries.


URL of this page:  safelibraries.blogspot.com/2014/09/banned-books-week.html

On Twitter: @BannedBooksWeek @LibraryJournal @OIF @ProFamilyIL

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Finally, a Sensible Lawsuit Against a Librarian


The Annoyed Librarian hits the mark again, and I highly recommend following her.  My title of this post is a direct quote from her work.  Please read her work and the comments/links I have added below:


It’s always a little weird to see librarians acting all unlibrarianish. Last week there was the library employee in St. Louis who left a comment on this blog that notified the world of the library card holding status of a specific person named in a news article. So much for privacy!  [SafeLibraries:  Elided comment 16 March 2013.]


Now comes the result of a lawsuit against yet another public library in Missouri motivated by some pretty bizarre librarian behavior.
Someone at the Salem Public Library wanted to read about Native American religions, Wiccans, and other crazy topics that no God-fearing Salemite should ever want to know anything about, but she couldn’t get past the computer filters, which were apparently set to block “occult” sites.
The librarian wouldn’t remove the filters, so she sued. Finally, a sensible lawsuit against a librarian.  [SafeLibraries:  I completely agree.]
The ACLU victory statement has the best quote:
The resident had originally protested to library director Glenda Wofford about not being able to access websites about Native American religions and the Wiccan faith. While portions of the sites were unblocked, much remained censored. Wofford said she would only allow access to blocked sites if she felt patrons had a legitimate reason to view the content and added that she had an obligation to report people who wanted to view these sites to the authorities. The resident’s attempts to complain about the policy to the library board of trustees were brushed off.
To which I can only reply, wow.  [SafeLibraries:  And I reply that given the usual threats from the ACLU that libraries including school libraries should allow porn, once in a while ACLU takes the correct action, and this is one of those cases.]  That’s the strangest reply to a library patron I’ve heard of in a while. It’s not like the patron was trying to stream some Wiccan porn in the children’s section of the library. (If there is such a thing as Wiccan porn, I imagine it would involve a lot of slutty witch Halloween costumes.)
Outside of porn, which is blocked by law [SafeLibraries:  See how to legally remove legal porn from libraries here], libraries don’t usually block Internet searches. Most of them don’t even seem to want to block porn [SafeLibraries:  And that is a direct result of the ALA intentionally misleading American communities, according to the author of the Children's Internet Protection Act]. And here this librarian wanted to block religion sites.  [SafeLibraries:  Unlike hundreds of libraries intentionally accepting materials of a religious nature from the ALA, but having to do only with Islam.  So much for separation of church and state, right?]
To have the constrained sensibilities of the library director determine what everyone can research is a little bizarre. [SafeLibraries:  When it comes to Wicca, perhaps, but when it comes to ex-gays books or books having a Christian flavor, library directors regularly block such material.]  Add to that the total lie about having an obligation to report people to the authorities. [SafeLibraries:  Right.  The ALA even advises librarians not to call the police.]  Obviously that was meant as intimidation, and by librarian standards it’s pretty intimidating.
It’s no wonder the library lost the case, because the librarian’s behavior was pretty much indefensible. The library apparently knew they didn’t have a leg to stand on because they removed the filter months before the legal judgment came.
I was curious about where such a library might be found, and was unsurprised to discover Salem is a town of fewer than 5,000 people in the middle of nowhere. I couldn’t imagine that particular sort of unlibrarianish behavior happening in St. Louis or Columbia.
Are there other libraries that block non-porn sites? Or where the librarians only let patrons view websites if they feel patrons have a “legitimate reason”?
I’d never heard of this sort of librarian reaction to non-porn Internet searches before. However, plenty of libraries in effect keep their patrons from reading books on certain topics the librarians don’t like by just not buying the books. The ALA might call it censorship, others might call it selection, but either way it’s done all the time.  [SafeLibraries:  And to illustrate the point, check out the dichotomy of librarians arguing about "intellectual freedom" here: "Anti-Gay Books and Your Library" and read the comments carefully.  Notice one librarian, Miss Ingrid, aka The Magpie Librarian, literally uses repeated personal attack (even repeatedly mocking the name of an author) and flat out censorship and record redaction to attempt to coerce other librarians to join the "struggle" by keeping books with which she disagrees out of libraries.] 
The website challenge by a librarian seems unlibrarianish to me, but maybe that kind of thing happens all the time to websites and books, and we just don’t find out about it.  [SafeLibraries:  Indeed a parallel is all the porn viewing in public libraries and related crimes that are simply not reported.]


Sunday, August 12, 2012

Sexually Harassed Librarian Gets $150K; Library Media Play Hide the Poppycock

A sexually harassed library employee's civil suit against her library has just settled for $150,000.  But you wouldn't know it from the library media.  They're playing hide the "poppycock" so librarians will not figure out they can sue to stop the harm caused by unfiltered porn.


$150K for Sexual Harassment in Public Library

The Birmingham Public Library, Birmingham, AL, had (and may still have) an anything-goes policy that allowed pornography, and as a result the librarian was repeatedly sexually harassed by patrons.  Result?  A $150K settlement with the city of Birmingham.  And she's not the only librarian forced to sue in that library after library management refused to budge:

American Library Association and Sexually Harassed Librarians

The American Library Association [ALA], the leading group advising libraries nationwide how to skirt the Children's Internet Protection Act [CIPA] that would have blocked pornography, the group that state/federal filtering case winning library director Dean Marney says uses "dogma" to mislead people, the group where Birmingham library director Irene Blalock "is a member ... and presently serves on the board of the Public Library Association, a division of ALA," has done nothing to help the injured librarians.  In addition it has suppressed information on this latest librarian sexual harassment settlement from its publications.

Besides the ALA, the non-ALA Library Journal is also hiding something.  For example, the recent $150K settlement is nowhere to be found in the Library Journal or the ALA's monthly American Libraries magazine, its ILoveLibraries.org, or its home ALA.org, even months later.


The Library Journal Plays Hide the "Poppycock"

Worse still, in addition to not helping the beleaguered librarians and library employees, in addition to actively suppressing clearly library-related news of the settlement of a library employee harassment case, the Library Journal mocked anyone who would dare suggest unfiltered porn could lead to sexual harassment cases.  "Poppycock"!  No, I am not making that up, I'm just reporting it:
  • "ALA Picks and Pans:  Programs by Topic & Specialty," by John N. Berry III, Library Journal, 1 June 2002:
    Pornography in Libraries: Sexual Harassment?
    ACRL.  Sun., Jun. 16, 10:30 a.m.-noon.  Does the availability of sexually explicit materials on the Internet really create a sexually hostile workplace for library staff?  The EEOC says 'probably,' but they don't write laws.  Hear that poppycock and a response from librarians who still believe in intellectual freedom.
Below is a screen grab of the "poppycock" mockery because you have to see this for yourselves.  I've no doubt that sentiment comes from the ALA speaker herself, but I did not have luck finding the text of the poppycockery:



Highlighting the "poppycock" with which
the Library Journal mocked those
who say library porn may lead
to sexual harassment cases.

Is $150K poppycock?  Is $435K poppycock?


$435K for Sexual Harassment in Adamson v. Minneapolis Public Library

As to the $435K case, see:
  • "No Smut At Work, Please," by Gary Young and Staff Reporter, The National Law Journal, 15 September 2003:
    On Aug. 15, the Minneapolis Public Library announced that it had agreed to pay $435,000 to 12 employees-lead plaintiff Wendy Adamson, five other librarians, five aides and a page-who accused the library administration of subjecting them to a hostile work environment by leaving them exposed to pornography.
  • "EEOC Finds Library Policy of Unrestricted Internet Access Creates Sexually Hostile Work Environment for Librarians," by Unnamed, Tech Law Journal, 23 May 2001:
    The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), Minneapolis Area Office, issued a Determination that the Minneapolis Public Library subjected librarians employed by the library to a "sexually hostile work environment" in violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 for maintaining a policy of unrestricted Internet access.
  • "Controversial Ruling on Library Filters," by Carl S. Kaplan, Cyber Law Journal, The New York Times, 1 June 2001:
    In early 1997, the Minneapolis Public Library began giving its patrons unfettered and unlimited access to the Internet.  The library's First Amendment-inspired policy was intended to provide a needed service to the community.  But Wendy Adamson, a reference desk librarian at the library's central branch, said it effectively made her working life a nightmare, and federal officials appear poised to agree with her.

    Acting on complaints from Adamson and other librarians at the city's central branch library, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission's Minneapolis office ruled last week that the library, by exposing its staff to sexually explicit images on unrestricted computer terminals, may have allowed for a hostile work environment.  The blockbuster finding, issued on May 23 following an investigation by the agency, came in response to complaints filed a year ago by Adamson and 11 of her colleagues.

    Free speech advocates quickly expressed concern that the E.E.O.C.'s decision is a dangerous precedent that could pressure libraries to aggressively monitor patrons' viewing habits or install filtering software as a means to ward off potential discrimination suits.  But Adamson and Bob Halagan, the lawyer for the librarians, hailed the commission's finding as a victory for common sense.

    Adamson said the complaints were filed only after she and other librarians repeatedly notified library officials about their concerns and detailed what they said were the new policy’s negative impact on staff and patrons.

    "Our downtown library became a club for a large number of men who were viewing pornography all day," Adamson, who has been a librarian for over 30 years, said in an interview.  "I'd see these men at the door at 9 a.m. and some of them would still be there at 9 at night."

    Adamson said that while she was sitting at her workplace and doing her job, she would look up and see "horrible" stuff on the screens of nearby terminals.  "I'm talking about torture and sex with animals," she said.  It was "really demoralizing and depressing."

    Computer printouts of sexually explicit pictures littered the library, Adamson said.  She said she saw some men at computer terminals engage in what appeared to her to be masturbation and that computer users would verbally abuse her when she tried to enforce time limits.

    The worst part of her day, she said, was watching, helplessly, as members of the public—including children—encountered unwanted sexual images on terminals.  Often, she said, a patron who wanted to do conventional research would approach a terminal and find that it was locked onto a sexually explicit site—owing to a "quicksand" feature some porn sites use that prevents users from leaving the site.  She said she repeatedly had to calm the patrons and reset the terminal's browser.

    "We were told [by administrators] to avert our eyes.  But we were surrounded by it," she said, adding that library officials did not respond to staff complaints about the policy.
    ....
    For her part, Adamson said that she hopes the ruling will empower other librarians who feel harassed to speak up.
    ....
Sound familiar?


Blocking Porn is Antithetical to Intellectual Freedom?

Read that poppycock paragraph again: "Hear that poppycock and a response from librarians who still believe in intellectual freedom."  Notice anything?  In context with the title and the rest of the paragraph, the writer is saying that blocking pornography is antithetical to "intellectual freedom."  The US Supreme Court said the exact opposite a year later in 2003.  So the ALA (and Library Journal) is teaching things that it wants people to think but that is simply the exact opposite of reality.  See:

  • US v. ALA, 539 US 194 (2003), e.g., "public libraries' use of Internet filtering software does not violate their patrons' First Amendment rights."  See also: 
  • "Library Porn Challenge," by Annoyed Librarian, Annoyed Librarian, 5 March 2007,
  • "The Problem of Library Porn for Librarians," by Annoyed Librarian, Library Journal, 4 May 2011, "[Librarians who defend pornography access]… sound like fools when they defend public library porn because of an alleged dedication to access to information.  Men who sit in front of library computers viewing Internet porn aren't 'accessing information,' unless we want to make 'accessing information' a new euphemism for getting sexually aroused and possibly doing something about that arousal," and
  • "Libraries and Porn Privacy," by Annoyed Librarian, Library Journal, 27 April 2011.



ALA Propagandist Attorney Theresa Chamara

Speaking of the exact opposite of reality, the ALA is still pulling the wool over people's eyes.  Just recently one of its leading attorneys warned libraries to avoid filtering libraries claiming such filtering would invite litigation.  First, it would be the ALA/ACLU, both losing plaintiffs in US v. ALA, that would bring such suit, so warning libraries about law suits they might themselves bring is partly dishonest and partly a threat.  Second, the ALA attorney, Theresa Chamara, writing even after the $150K and the $435K poppycock, while threatening litigation should libraries filter, completely 100% leaves out the exact opposite, that not filtering may result in $150K/$435K poppycock.  So librarians are getting intentionally misleading information from top ALA leadership using an attorney to freeze them into inaction on filters.  See for yourself, and pay attention to the comments as well:
  • "Why Recent Court Decisions Don't Change the Rules on Filtering," by Theresa Chmara, American Libraries, 24 July 2012:
    Libraries should continue to be wary of using internet filtering systems that block constitutionally protected material for adults or minors.  ....  If libraries use filters that block constitutionally protected material deemed harmful to minors and do not allow adults to disable filters, or fail to provide an effective unblocking system, those libraries may open the door to years of litigation and significant legal expenses.
Isn't $150K or $435K significant?  But there's no hint of such costs for the failure to filter, merely a warning that filtering "may open the door to years of litigation and significant legal expenses."  That is intentionally misleading.

Further, Eugene Volokh, a law professor at UCLA, points out the significant differences between a filtering suit and a sexual harassment suit, something else Ms. Chmara conveniently omits:
Of course, a library that uses filtering software on all its terminals risks inviting—and losing—a First Amendment lawsuit, Volokh said, alluding to a 1998 federal district court decision declaring that the filtering policy of a public library in Loudoun County, Va., was unconstitutional.  [Note:  US v. ALA grew out of that case and effectively reversed the Loudoun decision.] 
But losing a First Amendment lawsuit will subject a library to "nominal damages," Volokh said.  Losing a Title VII discrimination lawsuit can result in damages "with lots of zeros in it," he said.  Faced with the choice between two equally hazardous legal alternatives, library trustees will logically opt to install filters and ward off harassment suits with potentially massive damages, he said.
Exactly.

Can you see why the ALA attorney conveniently left that out?  Quote source:  "Controversial Ruling on Library Filters," by Carl S. KaplanCyber Law JournalThe New York Times, 1 June 2001.


Keep In Mind That ALA Intentionally Misleads on Library Filtering

Keep this in mind when false advice comes your way from the ALA.  ALA said filters were unconstitutional.  False.  ALA said blocking porn violates intellectual freedom.  False.  ALA now says libraries may be exposed to litigation for filtering computers.  True, but not the whole truth, it is very rare, and it pales in comparison to consequences for not filtering, as Mr. Volokh pointed out.


Librarians May Wish to Consider Other Sources of Library News

If you are a librarian reading this post, this may be the only source of information for you about sexual harassment in libraries due to unfettered porn occasioned by ALA diktat.  ALA/Library Journal suppresses such information and calls it "poppycock."  In contrast, information contained herein, along with the underlying hyperlinks and their associated primary sources linked therein such as actual legal complaints, may give you what you need to bring your own legal action for redress and an end to ALA policy applied locally that is causing so much harm—like $150K worth of harm for one librarian, the case for the other librarian still in the works, and $435K worth of harm for twelve librarians.


Birmingham Public Library $187,107.94 CIPA Fraud

In the past I spelled out how the Birmingham Public Library may be defrauding the federal government.  In the year and a half since then, I am now convinced that the library is indeed defrauding the federal government, I can prove it, and I will submit a CIPA Whistleblower Alert.
  • First, reread what I wrote about the issue in the past.
  • Second, I hereby update those numbers which show the fraud continued even after the filing of the EEOC complaints and civil suits and even after I provided the library with notice that it may be committing fraud:
  • 2010:  $21,805.20
  • 2011:  $6,814.08 + $16,935.36 = $23,749.44
  • Total defrauded from 2004 to 2011:  $187,107.94
If the allegations had no validity, Birmingham may have settled for nuisance value, but $150K out of the demanded $300K far exceeds nuisance value.  Fifty percent is no nuisance value.





Is There a Tactical Effort to Settle Cases to Prevent Precedent Setting?

The $435K case settled.  Now the $150K case settled.  Who wants to bet that the cases are settling due to a tactical effort to avoid any court from setting precedent by ruling that pornography in public libraries may lead to sexually harassing work environments like the EEOC did?  I predict all such cases will settle because the ALA and its acolytes do not want a poppycock precedent.


ALA Will Never Assist Sexually Harassed Librarians

To help keep these cases low key, library media play hide the poppycock and effectively censors out settlement news so it will not be known to librarians generally.  Think about this.  Librarians and library employees are sexually harassed in their places of employment due to unlimited porn viewing.  The policies that enabled such porn viewing come directly from the ALA and from local acolytes like Irene Blalock who will refuse to change such policies until forced.  "[W]e have a filter and her allegations have no validity."  "If you don't like it, leave."  There's a general disdain among the "intellectual freedom" crowd for anyone who would dare cut off access to public library pornography, despite the law such as US v. ALA.  That's "poppycock," a British term for bullsh-t.  ALA even misleads the entire nation to think library porn is not a problem while library filters are.  In furtherance of maintaining the illusion of control over public libraries to allow continuing access to unfettered porn, such people will never come to the assistance of the employees suffering as a direct result, they will never provide truthful information when misleading people carries their agenda so much further.


Advice for Attorneys to Push for More Settlement Money

Therefore, given the above, I hereby suggest that attorney Adam Morel push for an even higher settlement percentage for the next harassment case.  The library would rather settle than allow a precedent that will show other librarians the way to stop being harassed in their own libraries as a result of unlimited porn. And see if this helps any:

Nice new logo.  Just add "of poppycock and porn" to the end of the sentence.

Lastly, note I have been writing and speaking on this particular injustice in Birmingham for years, since 18 January 2011.  I'll be happy to assist any library employee or legal counsel.


Isn't It Sad

Isn't it sad that SafeLibraries is speaking out for sexually harassed librarians and library employees, while "ALA Blowhards" do nothing to help and may actually be making things worse?  "Know the ALA."


Hat Tip to Safe Schools, Safe Libraries Project

Hat tip: "Birmingham Settled Sexually Hostile Work Environment Suit Against Library for $150,000," by Dawn HawkinsSafe Schools, Safe Libraries Project, 8 August 2012.  Note:  Safe Schools, Safe Libraries Project is not SafeLibraries, and I recommend following them on Twitter @Porn_Harms.  Curious note:  The Birmingham Public Library @BPL, free speech advocates as they want us to think they are with all porn all the time, blocks me from following them on Twitter!


Thursday, February 17, 2011

The Undemocratic ALA Muzzles Members

Library Journal Logo
The American Library Association [ALA] is "anything goes" for children.  Yet it "muzzles" its own members, "stifles" free speech, and is "undemocratic," according to a Library Journal editorial. 

One wonders what the ALA has to hide and from whom it is hiding.  Is the ALA censoring its own members?  As the Annoyed Librarian safely predicts, also in the Library Journal, "The ALA will continue to abuse the word 'censorship.'"  It appears it will also abuse its own members by insisting on censorship:

"Blatant Berry, Eroding ALA Democracy; Virtual Participation Must Not be Second-Class Membership," by Editor-at-Large John N. Berry III, Library Journal, 15 February 2011, emphasis added:

Long before Midwinter, more than one ALA unit actually forbade and prevented individual members from access to electronic discussion lists because of what were deemed “inappropriate” postings by them.  These members were muzzled by whomever in that unit had control of the list in ­question.

At the Saturday meeting of the board of the Library Information and Technology Association (LITA), an ALA division, board member Jason Griffey was set up to stream (broadcast over the Internet) the session to LITA members and others.  Some board members protested that such streaming would force them to be less candid.  Later, they also argued that because they had hired a consultant to tell them how to improve board sessions, streaming that consultant’s comments would encroach on his intellectual property.  The LITA board voted to stifle Griffey, and he disabled the stream.  To add insult to injury, the consultant had advised the LITA board that once they had voted on an issue, all board members should agree to go along with the decision and not publicly oppose it, a bizarre bit of undemocratic wisdom.

....

There can be solid reasons for members of boards to meet fact-to-face, but they were not apparent at Midwinter.  That makes discussion of “tiered” membership for virtual participants sound like second-class membership.  It violates the purpose of ALA’s open meeting policy and ALA democracy.

....

ALA leaders must ... protect the ALA democracy we fought for decades ago.  Virtual participation is coming, but it must not bring second-class membership in ALA.

.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

"Censors" are So Scary!

"Censors" are So Scary!:
So if some rube gets a book removed from some library, that's the "power of the state" suppressing ideas? What a tremendous leap in logic. Since most book challenges seem to be about books for children, the argument becomes even more bizarre. So, EVERY book is suitable for children? Oh, even on the off chance some librarian actually removed a book, how does that suppress ideas for any of us? If a book is gone, does that really mean "no one else has the chance to read" it? How dumb do you have to be to believe this stuff?

Click to see more clarity like that. It really exemplifies everything SafeLibraries has been saying. The Annoyed Librarian sees right through the ALA's "shameless propaganda."

I highly recommend everyone read the Annoyed Librarian at her new blog at the Library Journal. Here's her former blog.

Brava, AL.