An appellate court has ruled that Texas cannot ban books from libraries simply because they mention âbutt and fartâ and other content which some state officials may dislike.
The fifth US circuit court of appeals issued its decision on Thursday in a 76-page majority opinion, which was written by Judge Jacques Wiener Jr and opened with a quote from American poet Walt Whitman: âThe dirtiest book in all the world is the expurgated book.â
In its decision, the appellate court declared that âgovernment actors may not remove books from a public library with the intent to deprive patrons of access to ideas with which they disagreeâ.
It added: âThis court has declared that officials may not âremove books from school library shelves simply because they dislike the idea contained in those books and seek by their removal to prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion or other matters of opinion.ââ
The appellate courtâs latest decision follows a federal lawsuit filed in 2022 by seven Llano county residents against county and library officials for restricting and removing books from its public circulation.
The residents argued that the defendants violated their constitutional right to âaccess information and ideasâ by removing 17 books based on their content and messages.
Those books include seven âbutt and fartâ books with titles including I Broke My Butt! and Larry the Farting Leprechaun, four young adult books on sexuality, gender identity and dysphoria â including Being Jazz: My Life As a (Transgender) Teen â and two books on the history of racism in the US, among them Caste and They Called Themselves the KKK.
Other books targeted by the ban were In the Night Kitchen, which contains cartoons of a naked child, as well as Itâs Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex and Sexual Health, according to court documents.
The books were removed after parents complained, with library officials referring to the books as âpornographic filthâ.
In its majority decision, the overwhelmingly conservative appellate court ordered eight of the 17 books to be returned, including Being Jazz: My Life As a (Transgender) Teen, Caste and They Called Themselves the KKK.
Wiener wrote how a dissenting opinion from the Donald Trump appointee Kyle Duncan âaccuses us of becoming the âLibrary Police,â citing a story by author Stephen Kingâ.
âBut King, a well-known free speech activist, would surely be horrified to see how his words are being twisted in service of censorship,â wrote Wiener, whop was appointed during George HW Bushâs presidency.
âPer King: âAs a nation, weâve been through too many fights to preserve our rights of free thought to let them go just because some prude with a highlighter doesnât approve of them.â Defendants and their highlighters are the true library police.â
Wiener also said that âlibraries must continuously review their collection to ensure that it is up to dateâ and engage in âremoving outdated or duplicated materials ⦠according to objective, neutral criteriaâ.
In a report released last October, the American Library Association found that Texas made the most attempts in the US to ban or restrict books in 2022. In total, the state made 93 attempts to restrict access to more than 2,300 books.
A wave of book banning has also emerged in Florida as part of the culture wars of the Republican governor, Ron DeSantis, on âwokeism,â a term meant to insult liberal values.
In January, a Florida school district removed dictionaries, encyclopedias and other books because the texts included descriptions of âsexual conductâ.
Meanwhile, in 2022, a Mississippi school district upheld the firing of an assistant principal after he read a humorous childrenâs book, I Need a New Butt, to his students.