Showing posts with label OrlandParkPrairie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OrlandParkPrairie. Show all posts

Friday, April 3, 2015

Ashamed of What Our Library Has Been Doing

Here's a published letter to the editor opposing child porn in a public library and exposing how the library wins awards for protecting it, "I don't think it's something to brag about that the [Illinois Library Association] gave our library an award for allowing guys to watch porn on library computers":

'I Am Ashamed of What Our Library Has Been Doing'

Dear Editor,

I have lived in Orland Park for most of my life and hate that we are now (and perhaps forever) known as the place where people are allowed to watch porn at the library.  I hate that we're the town where child porn was accessed at our library but the mayor and police really don't seem to care, and nobody feels compelled to do anything to stop that from happening again.

Why hasn't our village leadership ever stepped in and demanded to know why the library looked the other way when things like child porn were accessed in that building?  If ever there was a time for the Village manager to intervene, it is when somebody is not calling the police when child porn is being accessed in a public building.  For crying out loud.

It makes me sad that when I meet new people and they hear I am from Orland, that the first question I get asked is why our library lets people watch porn when there are children in the building.  Nobody I have ever talked to about this thinks it is OK.  Porn belongs at home, on people's personal computers, and not out in public.  Not even the most liberal people I know in New York or California think what our library does is OK.  Absolutely no one agrees with the library that it should be a place that's packed full of little kids but also should offer an X-rated good time upstairs.  People think we are out of our minds in Orland Park to condone this.  And I agree.

I don't think it's something to brag about that the [Illinois Library Association] gave our library an award for allowing guys to watch porn on library computers.

That's not something that deserves an award.  It instead warrants an industrial-strength disinfecting.  It is shameful.  I never knew that porn access in a public building was such an important "must-have" for these board members or that they think it's OK to allow child porn to go unreported in a public library.

They're still talking about it on the news.  I just heard it again on WLS today.  When will someone pay a consequence for this?

I am ashamed of what our library has been doing.

Jean Morrow

Orland Park resident

Source:  "Letters to the Editor April 2, 2015," by Editor, Orland Park Prairie, 2 April 2015.  Republished with permission of Story Time Digital Media.



URL of this page: safelibraries.blogspot.com/2015/04/ashamed-of-our-library.html

On Twitter: @IllLibraryAssoc @OPPrairie @OrlandPkLibrary @VillageOrlandPK @wlsam890

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Orland Park Public Library Still Covering Up Child Porn

The Orland Park Public Library (link) is the scene of the latest effort by a library to cover up its literally criminal ways, in this case award-winning criminal ways.  It did so by having published a letter to the editor of the Orland Park Prairie (link).  That prompted a response by the citizenry to expose the misinformation in the hope enough pressure is brought to bear to force the library board to change its anything-goes, law breaking policy.

Presented side by side are two letters to the editor, the first by elected library trustee Diane Jennings, pictured as right, and the second a response by library patron and child porn whistleblower Kevin DuJan.  Both were printed in the Orland Park Prairie:

Letters to the Editor

February 19, 2015

Library Staff Cares About 
Child Safety

Dear Editor,

As an Orland Park resident, library trustee and avid library user, I respond to recent letters questioning the Orland Park Public Library's commitment to child safety.

Specifically, some writers worry about patrons using the OPPL's computers to access inappropriate material on the Internet. A review of current OPPL policies and procedures at www.orlandparklibrary.org should dispel such concerns. They are stricter than those recommended by local and national library associations, and stricter than those followed by many Chicago-area libraries, including several nearby suburban libraries.

Consider the following.

The OPPL's first-floor collection and the activities held there are for children only. Adults are not allowed here, unless accompanying a child. All Internet access in this area is filtered.

The OPPL's teen collection is in the southwest corner of the second floor. All computers provided for teen use are filtered.

Computers accessible to adults are in the northeast corner of the second floor, with the adult collection. These computers are not filtered, but staff constantly monitors the area. No one under 18 may enter this computer area for any reason, and all users must first surrender to staff a picture ID containing their name, address and proof of age. Non-residents without an OPPL library card are allowed just one hour of use per day, for which they pay a fee.

The OPPL's policies in no way promote the viewing of child pornography. Instead, they expressly state that viewing child pornography or any other illegal material is prohibited. Violations may be reported to the police and subject to criminal prosecution. The policies ban even legal material that offends others within viewing distance.

The OPPL meets the needs of all its patrons. Children are kept safe, while adults are able to exercise their constitutional right to access information on the Internet without the interference of filters that block legitimate searches and sites along with those deemed "undesirable."

The OPPL's award-winning balancing of these interests makes our library both a family- and a user-friendly place. We can continue to rely on the professionalism and common sense of OPPL employees, as they serve everyone. Judging from the steady increases in visits, circulation and program attendance that the OPPL has enjoyed for many years, it seems that the majority of Orland Park residents agree.

Diane I. Jennings

Trustee, Orland Park Public Library Board

- See more at: http://www.opprairie.com/letters-editor/letters-editor-feb-19-2015#sthash.W1xfJM7N.dpuf [Note: paywall]
       
Letters to the Editor

March 5, 2015

More to the Story About 
Adult Computers at OPPL

Dear Editor,

I write in response to a letter to the editor published Feb. 19 that was written by a trustee of the Orland Park Public Library. Entitled, "Library staff cares about child safety," I feel it was misleading in the way it described the teen and adult computer areas of the OPPL and the problems therein.

No walls separate the OPPL's second floor adult computer area from the teen area. Both are open spaces bordered only by bookshelves, with only about 60 steps diagonally between them. While it may be true that library staff don't allow teens to use the adult computers and adults to use the teen computers, the OPPL's local history, political science, and Illinois studies sections are all located on bookshelves that form one of the boundaries of the adult computer area.

Specifically, all of the Chicago history books and the books about Orland Park itself are on shelves that directly face the rows of adult computers.

This means that teens needing these books for school reports must stand in unobstructed view of the adult computer area, with nothing but air separating them from the rows of adult computers. Since the OPPL is adamant about keeping the adult computers unfiltered and pornography is accessible on unfiltered computers, adults who become sexually aroused while viewing pornography at the OPPL would be in close proximity to teens who come to this area to find their history and political science books.

This is like butterflies being drawn into spiders' webs, because the OPPL has chosen to locate books the teens need for school reports right by the adult computers.

Because the adult computer area is an open space without walls, teens must also pass right by the rows of adult computers on their walk to the second floor study rooms. This is something else that was not noted in the Feb. 19 letter from the OPPL trustee. Adults using unfiltered computers to view pornography would come in contact with teens in this area, and they would also be using the same restrooms as the teens on the second floor.

Pornography is not an intellectual stimulant. It is a sexual stimulant. Sexual arousal and its resultant behaviors are neither appropriate nor safe in a public library. It is bad policy for the OPPL to ignore the many interactions between teens and adults on the second floor.

Kevin DuJan

- See more at: http://www.opprairie.com/letters-editor/letters-editor-march-5-2015#sthash.h5QEDNq5.dpuf [Note: paywall]


© Copyright 2015, 22nd Century Media, LLC. All rights reserved.  Reused under Fair Use provisions.

Can you see the issues there?  Let me now provide my comments.

"questioning the Orland Park Public Library's commitment to child safety":

This is a library that serves up child pornography then covers it up—watch Diane Jennings admitting in public on 18 August 2014 that the library allowed and covered up child pornography (link).  This is a library where the public relations employee Bridget Bittman, knowing it serves up child pornography and covers it up, declared the library to be a "safe library" (link).  So now elected official Diane Jennings is worried about people "questioning the Orland Park Public Library's commitment to child safety."  Funny, in a sad way.  By the way, watch both Diane Jennings and Bridget Bittman attacking Kevin DuJan for being gay (link), and these are supposed to be the people telling us this public library is a safe library.

Let me add this.  A year ago and a half ago, when the child porn whistleblowers Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan began to become the target of the library's "crisis management" efforts for simply asking questions, the library was much less safe for children, let alone adults.  While the library refuses to use Internet filters that would be the best way to improve safety and become compliant with the law (link), it has quietly and without acknowledgement implemented nearly all of Fox's and DuJan's suggestions for improving safety.  This list is too long to enumerate here.  To the extent the library has effective child safety practices and procedures in place today, most have been thanks to Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan, no thanks to Diane Jennings and the rest of the library board.  It has taken all this time and many Illinois Attorney General and expensive court decisions to force the library to get to the point where we are today.  The only "commitment to child safety" the library has is to do as little as possible so as to placate the public while keeping the child porn flowing per American Library Association diktat.

"current OPPL policies ... are stricter than those recommended by local and national library associations":

A library that allows and covers up child pornography in no way has policies strict in any way.  Instead it has an anything-goes policy.  Further, the library allows unfiltered Internet access on the "adult" computers.  The library associations of which she speaks recommend libraries allow unfiltered Internet access, so the library is not "stricter."

I really think she has gone unchallenged or protected by the media for so long (link) that she feels she can make statements that are simply not supported by reality.  Think about it.  She makes blatant, anti-gay statements anyone can see in that video linked above, admits to the police she made such gay slurs (link), and yet she remains on the library board instead of being kicked off as the hater she is.  So naturally she feels there are no consequences for her statements because—there are no consequences for her statements.

"These computers are not filtered, but staff constantly monitors the area":

Wow.  Staff monitors the area.  And when they are sexually harassed by patrons who have been viewing porn, they are told by library director Mary Weimar that if they don't like it, they can leave.  Strong statement?  Well I'm just reporting.  Listen for yourselves to library employee Linda Zec in that very library describing how she was sexually harassed and told to get out if she didn't like it (link).  By the way, what happened to that employee and at least one other in that library is called "constructive discharge (link)," even if they don't realize it.  Indeed it took almost a decade for Linda Zec to even speak publicly about the harassment.  So much for "staff constantly monitor[ing] the area."

Besides, even if they "monitor[] the area," they are trained by the American Library Association to ignore criminality, so what Diane Jennings said is intentionally misleading:
Libraries and librarians are not in a position to make those decisions for library users or for citizens generally.  Only courts have constitutional authority to determine, in accordance with due process, what materials are obscenity, child pornography, or "harmful to minors." 
....  
As for obscenity and child pornography, prosecutors and police have adequate tools to enforce criminal laws.  Libraries are not a component of law enforcement efforts naturally directed toward the source, i.e., the publishers, of such material. 
Source: "Guidelines and Considerations for Developing a Public Library Internet Use Policy (link)," by Office for Intellectual Freedom, American Library Association, 26 March 2013, emphasis in original.
And there's the main reason the library allows and covers up child pornography.  Maybe ALA should be called the American Child Pornography Association.

Speaking of sexual harassment of librarians, I raised that issue in that community per the mission of SafeLibraries to provide balance for people to become fully informed before making up their own minds instead of being misled into a single choice—ALA's choice—no filters—unfettered access despite the law.  I said, "She completely leaves out that libraries that do not filter really do face years of litigation and significant legal expenses for librarians who are sexually harassed as a result of unfettered porn viewing occasioned by library policy direct from the ALA (link)."  Apparently I was effective because just eight days later ALA saw fit to appear before that community to retrain the minds of the public that sexual harassment never happened in that library, in any library in the past, and likely will never happen in the future (link).

As a result of this blatant and heartless fraud, I and Kevin DuJan created a new publication called, "Sexual Harassment of Librarians (link)."  We are the only source for gathering information for librarians sexually harassed in libraries that place following ALA diktat above following the law.  We know we have already helped librarians still being sexually harassed to this day.  Others may be intimidated by ALA; we are not, not even if ALA is involved in a federal lawsuit to silence us, arising in part out of Diane Jennings homophobic behavior while representing the Orland Park Public Library, no less (link).  Apparently, not only are "computers ... not filtered" in Orland Park, neither is Diane Jennings.

"all users must first surrender to staff a picture ID":

Hahahaha!  This one is so funny that Saturday Night Live starring Lady Gaga made a joke about it (link)!

"Non-residents without an OPPL library card ... pay a fee":

Just like viewing porn at porn shops!

"The OPPL's policies in no way promote the viewing of child pornography":

What Diane Jennings leaves out is that it follows American Library Association diktat to allow and take no action when child pornography is showing because, get this, librarians are not judges and may not decide what is child porn; only judges may decide and only for each one of the millions of porn websites (link).  So the library may not promote child porn viewing per se, but Diane Jennings leaves out that it is trained not to recognize what is child pornography.  Remember, this is a library that has already admitted to allowing and covering it up.  The very same people are still there to ensure a continued flow of unfettered child pornography since there were no consequences for the last incident of aiding and abetting child pornography or any other criminality.

"Instead, they expressly state that viewing child pornography or any other illegal material is prohibited":

Right, and I just discussed that librarians are trained by the American Library Association to overlook child pornography.  Many libraries follow but some do not follow ALA advice and instead preserve evidence and report criminality to the police (link).  Orland Park has the kind of library that follows ALA diktat to the letter, so much so that ALA uses the library's personnel to train other librarians and library trustees how to thwart child porn whistleblowers and cover up evidence, even allowing homophobic statements to be made during that training then rehiring that trainer for the next training (link).

"Children are kept safe, while adults are able to exercise their constitutional right to access information on the Internet without the interference of filters that block legitimate searches":

No.  Children have seen porn on the adult computers and the adults have acted out as a result of the porn and the library has did nothing.  But there is so much more wrong with this statement.

See that "interference of filters that block legitimate searches"?  Diane Jennings leaves out that ALA itself admits library filters work (link) and that the Federal Communications Commission has more recently said library filters are very good and past opposition to them is no longer relevant (link).  So if there's "interference," it's caused by the library itself to fool people into thinking filters don't work, a tried and true trick used in Illinois year after year to defeat library filtering legislation (link).  This is a library that spends huge sums of money on legal fees to silence the child porn whistleblowers then raises taxes to obtain more funding for litigation (link), so certainly they have the wherewithal to get good filters like those the FCC mentioned.

And the claim that people may "exercise their constitutional right to access information on the Internet" as the reason to allow porn, now that's a good one.  Diane Jennings intentionally misleads people on that because the US Supreme Court ruled, twelve years ago now, there is no First Amendment right to porn in public libraries (link).  Porn may be "constitutionally protected material" that one can buy anywhere, but it simply is not protected in public libraries.  Case closed.  So why is Diane Jennings misleading on this?  And since when is porn considered "information"?  Librarians sound like "smut peddlers" when they say porn is "information."  "If this is the hill librarians want to die on while they pretend they're protecting free speech, then so be it" (link).

"The OPPL's award-winning balancing of these interests makes our library both a family- and a user-friendly place":

This statement is really unbelievable, but I have to tell you first some background before you can see just how in your face is this statement.

Yes, the library won awards.  The awards were for protecting "intellectual freedom" by maintaining a policy of allowing access to Internet pornography despite Illinois law (link) and despite the efforts of child porn whistleblowers Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan.  The awards were granted on the recommendation of ALA itself; ALA got the awards granted to the library that it uses as a model library on how to thwart child porn whistleblowing.  One of the awards was granted based on the passing of an anything-goes policy at a hastily arranged public meeting on Lincoln's Birthday: "After two customers voiced opposition to the policy, the Orland Park Library Board of Trustees voted in February 2014 to continue unfiltered Internet access for adults, an action which 'challenges censorship in the fulfillment of their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment' as stated in the ALA Library Bill of Rights (link)."  The meeting was hastily arranged in that the media and the public were never informed of the meeting in a timely manner.  At the meeting, patient Megan Fox was not allowed to speak in violation of the law; she was rudely waved away and the meeting was adjourned while she was still speaking (link).  The free speech to speak to a public board to oppose its illegal policies is not the kind of free speech the child porn enablers have in mind.

The matter of the multiple violations of the Open Meetings Act was brought before the Illinois Attorney General.  In its defense the library director signed and the library attorney provided a falsified affidavit claiming the public was properly notified of the meeting (link).  The Illinois Attorney General determined that the Orland Park Public Library meeting violated the law and the policy was declared void ab initio (link).  The library board went on to break the law further in a literal crime spree but the Illinois AG ruled that illegal as well (link).  So this "award-winning" library as Diane Jennings puts it got the awards, but consider:

  1. ALA arranged for the library to win the awards to promote its own pro-child porn policy, 
  2. the February 2014 board meeting named in the award was ruled to have occurred illegally and the policy was void ab initio
  3. the library went on a crime spree to force this pro-child porn policy on the community in an illegal fashion and was caught again, although it eventually wore out the system and the policy was imposed and is in place today (link) showing crime does pay,
  4. the public was not allowed to participate in violation of the law, 
  5. the public was not notified of the meeting in violation of the law, and 
  6. the library defended its actions by submitting a falsified affidavit.  

So this "award-winning" library was literally awarded for acting illegally and unethically.  I say again, this "award-winning" library was awarded for breaking the law repeatedly.  That's why this statement of Diane Jennings about "OPPL's award-winning balancing of these interests" is really unbelievable.  It's literally an award-winning, law-breaking library, winning those awards for breaking the law.  Maybe I should give an award to the library too, only I'd call it USA's Most Homophobic and Law Breaking Public Library.

And Kevin DuJan attempted to attend a public meeting at the 2015 ALA Midwinter Conference lauding the library for its award-winning law breaking and silencing of Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan, only to be turned away at the door when the greeter found out it was Kevin DuJan trying to obtain access to a meeting certain to be in part about him.  The Orland Park public paid for its library personnel to attend and speak at that celebratory occasion but the subject of that occasion and library patron Kevin DuJan was persona non grata.  These are the "free speech" and "equal access" people.

"We can continue to rely on the professionalism and common sense":

There is no professionalism nor common sense in allowing and covering up child porn, elected officials calling people "asshole" (link), crowing about awards won for breaking the law, submitting falsified affidavits to the state attorney general in possible violation of attorney ethics, using homophobia to attack child porn whistleblowers, misleading people about library law, lying to the media (link), and constructively discharging sexually harassed employees.  No professionalism nor common sense at all.  None.  Actions speak louder than words.

As to what Kevin DuJan said, it is 100% accurate to the extent I can see, for example I did not count the number of steps.  And this is a real danger: "This is like butterflies being drawn into spiders' webs, because the OPPL has chosen to locate books the teens need for school reports right by the adult computers."  Internet filters are the means to choke off this danger, but this library refuses to do so and, as Diane Jennings illustrates, freely uses flat out false and misleading information and criminality, even homophobia, to keep the public misinformed.

It's only a matter of time before the next criminal incident occurs.

I asked at the beginning of my comments, "Can you see the issues there?"  How about now having read what I wrote and looked at the sources I linked.  Can you see the issues now?

See also:

NOTE ADDED 8 MARCH 2015:

Here is a substantially similar situation in Canada, where the library claims it's "very child-friendly" but actions speak louder than words:


I left a comment there saying the following:
Right! There's a library I just wrote about that touts its being a "safe library" and that it is very concerned for "child safety." Yet it allows and covers up child pornography and uses repeat criminality and homophobia to defend it, and is given awards by the state library association and a local library school for this criminality, only it's called "intellectual freedom." See:  
"Orland Park Public Library Still Covering Up Child Porn"
http://safelibraries.blogspot.com/2015/03/OPPL-still-covering-up.html  
While not connected directly to your situation, there is a hidden link to Canada. The link is this. In that post you can see how the American Library Association pushes child porn on communities by training librarians that they are in no position to determine what is child pornography. Only a court can do that, supposedly. And only on a one-off basis for each of the millions of porn sites. So that's a problem in America.  
The hidden link to Canada? The very same people at ALA pushing the child porn into libraries that I wrote about in the above piece are now providing training to Canadian libraries on how to push child porn into Canada. Look:  
Intellectual Freedom Training Workshops in Toronto  
Barbara Jones, Director, OIF, and Deborah Caldwell-Stone, Deputy Director, OIF, traveled to Toronto, Canada in late February to conduct a series of intellectual freedom training workshops for the staff of the Toronto Public Library (TPL). Approximately 150 staff members turned out to consider and discuss how to manage challenges and the impact of intellectual freedom on collection development policies. Staff response was excellent, and the TPL administration said it is looking forward to inviting OIF staff back to Toronto to conduct further training sessions.

NOTE ADDED 8 MARCH 2015:

"The OPPL's policies in no way promote the viewing of child pornography. Instead, they expressly state that viewing child pornography or any other illegal material is prohibited. Violations may be reported to the police and subject to criminal prosecution":

Megan Fox alerted me to this.  She says:
Do you see the problems with this?  She says they MAY report child pornography and other illegal activities to the police.  They MAY do that.  Not that they will do that.  They MAY do that. 

That's very important.  It's also sick and wrong.  They SHOULD ALWAYS REPORT THIS TO THE POLICE.  Not that maybe they will do it and maybe they will not.  That's a big problem here.  There should be no question of whether they are going to report the child porn and illegal activity to the police or not.  There should never again be Mary Weimar choosing not to call the police. 


URL of this page: safelibraries.blogspot.com/2015/03/OPPL-still-covering-up.html

On Twitter:  @ECWDogs @HillBuzz; @IlAttyGeneral;  +Megan Fox @IntolerantFox; @OIF; @OPPrairie; @OrlandPkLibrary; @VillageOrlandPk

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Media Help Cover Up Child Pornography in Public Libraries; Chicago Tribune Covers Up for Orland Park Public Library

Chicago Tribune "Believe it!"
Actually don't believe itit helps
hide child porn in libraries.
Media help cover up child pornography in public libraries by not reporting about it.  By not reporting about it, it doesn't exist.  Since it doesn't exist, it keeps going on and people in libraries and victims featured in the child pornography keep getting harmed.  Media help enable this.


The Chicago Tribune Helps Cover Up Child Pornography

Case in point, the Chicago Tribune helps cover up child pornography in the Orland Park Public Library [OPPL].  OPPL allows unfettered child pornography, does not call the police when a patron complains, and destroys computer records police need for an investigation.  Yet one would never know from Dennis Sullivan's reporting for the Chicago Tribune: "The state agency's decision responds to a complaint by Mokena resident Megan Fox who, with Chicago resident Kevin DuJan, has been trying to get the library board to modify policies that allow unrestricted online access, including to pornography, on library computers."

So, according to the Chicago Tribune report, the problem is merely pornography, not child pornography, and who cares anyway because neither whistleblower is from Orland Park.  Now, having established the problem is mere pornography, it is easy to say, "The Orland Park library, with the backing of the American Library Association, has cited the First Amendment as one reason for its policy that does not restrict Internet access in its adult computer area.”


Imagine If an Honest Reporter Had Written About Child Pornography in Libraries

Imagine if that sentence had been reported by an honest reporter: "The Orland Park library, with the backing of the American Library Association, has cited the First Amendment as one reason for its policy that does not restrict Internet access to child pornography in its adult computer area and does not report such crime to the police."  That is what the library has been and is now doing, but the Chicago Tribune will not report that.  By not reporting it, it doesn't exist.  Since it doesn't exist, it will never be stopped.  And the Chicago Tribune will have aided and abetted child pornography in public libraries.  And the Chicago Tribune does this repeatedly.

As honest reporter Sharyl Attkisson said, "You usually know you're onto a story when opponents/critics want to censor even the discussion of the topic."


Other media can appear to be slightly better.  The Orland Park Prairie presents a story that is closer to reporting instead of repeating, but still the issue of the presence of child pornography is completely absent.  If it exists at all, it is merely the word "controversial" in the title.  The whole issue is about the library voting on policy allowing child pornography, covering it up, then silencing whistleblowers, and this will be the issue at the library board meeting on August 18, but you would never know from The Orland Park Prairie:

By way of disclosure, the "Public Comment Policy revision" was specifically designed to silence me personally as I was the only person seeking to speak via electronic means.  OPPL has prevented me from speaking at three separate meetings for about half a year, once by misapplying policy and twice by applying policy that the Illinois Attorney General eventually ruled was illegal.  I wonder if the library will discuss the policy in a manner that makes it clear it was designed to allow child pornography and block disfavored experts in library law from speaking while the library allows favored experts in library law to speak, even though they too are from out of town, but they too favor child pornography.  Oh sure they say they don't, but then they teach that only judges can determine what is child pornography, not librarians, and librarians are not a component of law enforcement.


Media Gives ALA the Home Field Advantage By Not Discussion Child Pornography

Part of the reason people like Dennis Sullivan and Bill Jones decide to couch library criminality in terms of "pornography" is to give the American Library Association [ALA] the home field advantage.  They know that if they wrote the truth, namely, child pornography is being accessed, men are masturbating publicly in the library, sex crimes are frequent and go unreported, and ALA guides local libraries how to hide such crimes from public disclosure including by destroying public records, the public would naturally side against the library.  So, Dennis Sullivan chose to change what this is all about, to make it seem like it's just another in a string of moms who don't like porn and want it out of the library.  That's so the ALA will be believed when it swoops in and regurgitates its tried and true missives about "the First Amendment," "constitutionally protected material," and "liberty."


OPPL Covers Up Child Pornography Then Delays or Omits Reporting to the Police

If you've been following this story, it actually started back in October of 2013 when it was discovered that child porn was accessed in OPPL and its director, Mary Weimar, covered it up.  She never reported it to police and hid the report for several years until is was uncovered by the whistleblowers.  This is part of a pattern where illegal behavior like accessing child porn and masturbating at the computers in the library was covered up, aided and abetted if you will, with the police either never being called or deliberately not called until after the offenders had been given the chance to leave the building.  That way the criminals would not be arrested and nothing about arrests in the library would ever make the local papers—and no one would notice the library's own policy allowing child pornography is the very facilitator of the criminality.


Some Media Act Like Public Relations for Libraries That Allow Child Porn

Dennis Sullivan and reporters like him deliberately decide to engage in public relations assistance for libraries like OPPL.  They purposefully choose to ignore the child porn, the masturbation, and the other sex crimes and instead pretend this is about a mom in the suburbs hating porn, whereas the good library is standing up for First Amendment rights.  This would be like if a reporter went to the beach because of a shark attack and instead of writing about that, to not scare off tourists and help keep local businesses open, the reporter chose instead to do a story about a helicopter mom who was haranguing people about not going into the water until thirty minutes after eating.


Media Tees Up a Win for ALA and its First Amendment Dogma

Dennis Sullivan deliberately misses the real story (including the danger to children) because he wants to frame the story in a way that allows the ALA and the library to "win" by teeing up this "First Amendment" dogma.  In reality, child porn and public masturbation have nothing at all to do with the First Amendment.


Conclusion

Some media run cover for public libraries that follow ALA diktat to allow child porn then cover it up.  If you see libraries and media making people appear to be busybodies poking their noses into nobody's business, you'll need to dig deeper on your own.  As Sharyl Attkisson said, "When somebody doesn't want you to even hear info because they have decided the 'truth' for you--you should be wary.  Think for yourself, do your own research, make up your own mind."



NOTE ADDED 23 DECEMBER 2014:

The public library has admitted to allowing and covering up child pornography.  See:




On Twitter:  @ChicagoTribune @IntolerantFox @OIF @OPPrairie @OrlandPkLibrary


Saturday, April 12, 2014

Jack Ryan Editorial Strongly Opposes Libraries Using Bullying and Character Assassination to Assist In the Distribution of Pornography

Jeri Ryan as Star Trek
Voyager
's Seven of Nine,
former spouse of Jack Ryan
An Orland Park Prairie editorial by owner Jack Ryan has come out strongly against the Orland Park Public Library for its policy of 1) allowing Internet pornography in the library with false First Amendment claims and 2) personally attacking those who oppose its pro-porn policy so as to be "bullied into silence or submission" and undergo "character assassination."  For those not yet aware, the OPPL library's pro-porn policy and use of character assassination to protect that policy is such a joke that even Saturday Night Live with guest star Lady Gaga made fun of the library.

Jack Ryan's editorial should set an example for other media to "try to improve things."  I republish it here so my readers can benefit from what it says and use it to oppose Internet porn as promoted by the American Library Association in their own libraries.

As Jack Ryan put it, "we hope that our library will reexamine with fresh eyes its assistance in the distribution of pornography," something for which the American Library Association has been recognized by Morality in Media's Porn Harms as one of the nation's leaders:

Values

by Jack Ryan, Owner of 22nd Century Media
Orland Park Prairie
10 April 2014

We hope that the Orland Park Public Library will reexamine its decision to be an access point for pornography.  We also appreciate the people who bring these issues to the public's attention.

Anyone who speaks about values puts themselves at risk in two ways.  First, those who prefer a valueless society will claim that the person speaking up is hypocritical.  Because we are human and have all made mistakes, that statement will be true.

Second, that statement will possibly be supplemented by a specific assertion about that person that is contrary to an individual with a high moral standard.  They will therefore argue that the person asserting the moral standard should be ignored.  Then, the individual standing up for the value is maligned, not only with the accusation of hypocrisy, but also and possibly even worse, with some assertion about their life that he or she would prefer not to be made public.

In that way, anyone who would stand up for values is effectively bullied into silence or submission.  However, if no one who has ever made a mistake can speak to promote a moral value, then that of course bans any human from speaking about moral values.  And that outcome would be a bad result, because what kind of society will we have if no one can speak up about moral values in the public square?

If we would like to have a better society, then individuals must be able to assert publicly, without fear of character assassination, that there are some higher values or ideals that are worth aspiring to.  And we are grateful for all people, including the ones who have brought this issue to the public's attention, who speak about the better angels in our nature.

It is with that background that we suggest that the library board revisit its decision to allow access to pornography at its public library.  It may or may not be free speech to produce the material, but the First Amendment does not include that the government has to subsidize the distribution of it.

Citizens may have a point of view about many issues, and under the First Amendment are free to express them, but that does not mean everyone else has to pay money to make sure that point of view is disseminated.

It could be that our current culture has moved to such a place where we now have to start reproving the obvious, and we are willing to start doing so in future editorials if need be.  However, to save our readers that proof here, we hope that our library will reexamine with fresh eyes its assistance in the distribution of pornography.



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