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Attack on Libraries Should Terrify Us All

27/10/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Attack On LibrariesAttack on Libraries – When I think about libraries, I think about freedom. Not the abstract, flag-waving kind—but the real, tangible freedom to walk into a room and discover ideas that might change your life. The freedom to read without someone looking over your shoulder, deciding what you’re allowed to know.

That freedom is under attack in America right now. And what’s happening there should be a wake-up call for the rest of us.

Book Banning Has Gone From Rare to Epidemic

Here’s a stat that should stop you in your tracks: between 2001 and 2020, an average of 273 book titles were challenged in US libraries each year. In 2023 alone? Over 9,000 titles were targeted. That’s not a trend—it’s an avalanche.

We’re not talking about obscure edge cases. Books by Maya Angelou, Toni Morrison, and Judy Blume are being pulled from shelves. A graphic novel about the Holocaust was banned in Tennessee. Even a children’s book about seahorses faced removal because—wait for it—it showed them mating.

The targets are predictable: anything involving LGBTQ+ themes (39% of challenged titles in 2024), books about race and racial justice, and materials related to sex education. But the scale is what’s new. This is no longer scattered local outrage. It’s organised, well-funded, and strategic.

It’s Not Grassroots—It’s Astroturfed

Groups like Moms for Liberty—which sounds wholesome enough—are actually connected to extremist organisations like the Proud Boys and QAnon conspiracy theorists. They’ve systematically taken over local library boards, using social media to manufacture outrage and fund candidates who’ll do their bidding.

One of the Proud Boys’ leaders literally called Moms for Liberty “the Gestapo with vaginas.” When fascists are giving you compliments, you might want to reconsider your strategy.

Librarians are facing death threats for doing their jobs. Amanda Jones, a Louisiana school librarian, spoke out against book banning at a board meeting. She was immediately accused of grooming children and received such terrifying threats that she now sleeps with a shotgun under her bed. Think about that—a school librarian needs weapons to feel safe because she defends books.

Trump’s Making It Official Policy

Things escalated dramatically when Trump returned to office. In February 2025, Dr. Colleen Shogan—the head of the US National Archives—was fired without explanation. In May, Dr Carla Hayden, the brilliant librarian of Congress, got an email: “Your position is terminated effective immediately.”

Her replacement? Todd Blanche—Trump’s lawyer from the Stormy Daniels case. That’s right: America replaced one of the world’s most accomplished librarians with a defence attorney. The symbolism couldn’t be clearer.

Meanwhile, government datasets are being scrubbed from websites. Environmental data, public health information, disease control statistics—all disappearing down the memory hole. Volunteer librarians are racing to save what they can, but established institutions need to step up and host this rescued data before it’s lost forever.

Why “Just Books” Matters More Than You Think

There’s a quote from philosopher Jacques Derrida that sums this up: “There is no political power without power over the archive.” Whoever controls what gets remembered—what gets preserved, what’s accessible—controls the narrative. They control history itself.

When a Florida judge ruled that public libraries are “government speech” and citizens have no First Amendment right to access books there, it wasn’t just about books anymore. It was about whether we’re allowed to think independently of what the government wants us to think.

It’s Already Crossing the Atlantic

Don’t think this is just an American problem. In Ireland, groups modelled directly on Moms for Liberty are targeting libraries with the same playbook. In the UK, 82% of librarians reported increased pressure to remove books in 2023, especially LGBTQ+ titles.

This August, a mob firebombed Spellow library in Liverpool because it served immigrant communities. A Reform UK councillor in Kent boasted about ordering the removal of “trans-ideological material” from children’s sections—material that didn’t even exist.

The tactics are spreading, and underfunded UK libraries are vulnerable.

What We Need to Do

Libraries have been the “pristine brand” of civic institutions for generations—universally trusted, politically neutral spaces. That brand is being deliberately tarnished, and we can’t let it happen.

We need to fund libraries properly, support librarians who face harassment, and push back loudly when books are targeted. We need to remember that free people read freely—and that freedom isn’t free if someone else decides what you’re allowed to know.

As Helen Keller wrote in 1933, when the Nazis were burning books: “You may burn my books and the books of the best minds in Europe, but the ideas those books contain have passed through millions of channels and will go on.”

Ideas are resilient. But they need defenders. Libraries aren’t just buildings with books—they’re the hidden infrastructure of democracy itself.

 

Links:

  • Gay Rights: From Revolution to Reflection
  • The Observer – ‘There is no political power without power over the archive’ -Richard Ovenden
  • The Linen Hall Library

#FreedomToRead
#StopBookBans
#DefendLibraries
#NoToCensorship
#ReadingIsResistance

Filed Under: Campaigns, Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: archive preservation, banned books, book banning, book challenges, censorship, cultural censorship, democracy, Donald Trump, First Amendment, free speech, Freedom of Information, government censorship, information access, information control, Intellectual freedom, LGBTQ+ rights, librarian attacks, libraries, library censorship, literary freedom, Moms for Liberty, public libraries, reading rights, school libraries, Trump administration

Book Bans in the UK: History Repeats Itself in the Fight for the Right to Read

15/08/2025 By ACOMSDave Leave a Comment

Book BansBook banning or Book Bans — a practice as old as the printed word — is making a troubling return in the UK. What was once thought of as a relic of history is back in the headlines, with queer literature often finding itself at the centre of the storm. The question is no longer “Could it happen here?” but “Why is it happening again?”

A Legacy of Censorship

Britain’s history of banning books is long and uneasy, often tied to sexual “obscenity” laws. Radclyffe Hall’s The Well of Loneliness (1928) — a sympathetic portrayal of lesbian love — was swiftly banned for daring to exist, despite containing no explicit content. Havelock Ellis’s Sexual Inversion faced a similar fate in 1897, vanishing from English shelves for nearly 40 years.

Even in modern memory, Section 28 (1988–2003) cast a long shadow, banning local authorities from “promoting homosexuality.” While it didn’t target specific titles, it gutted library shelves of anything queer-positive for an entire generation.

Other classics faced the censor’s hand too: D.H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover endured a public obscenity trial in 1960, while James Joyce’s Ulysses remained banned until 1936.

The New Wave of Bans

Fast forward to today, and the bans are back — often quietly, sometimes loudly — with LGBTQ+ books in the crosshairs. A survey by Index on Censorship found that over half of UK school librarians had been asked to remove books. In most cases, the request came from parents, and in far too many cases, the books vanished.

Among the most targeted:

  • This Book Is Gay — Juno Dawson

  • Julián is a Mermaid — Jessica Love

  • ABC Pride — Louie Stowell, Elly Barnes & Amy Phelps

  • Heartstopper series — Alice Oseman

  • Billy’s Bravery — Tom Percival

  • Tricks — Ellen Hopkins

Some librarians have faced intimidation, even threats to their jobs, for resisting. In extreme cases, every LGBTQ+ book in a library was purged after a single complaint.

Quiet Censorship: The Bans You Don’t See

The most insidious trend? “Quiet censorship” — where books never make it to the shelf (a clandestine form of censorship), and book bans. Some authors have been told not to bring their own LGBTQ+ books to school events. In 2025, Kent County Council took further action, ordering the removal of all transgender-related children’s books from its 99 libraries.

Following the US Playbook

Many of these UK cases mirror US campaigns, where book challenges have hit record highs. This transatlantic influence, coupled with political rhetoric framing trans existence as “ideological,” has created fertile ground for censorship.

Fighting Back

Book Bans - the fight Back

Banned Books Week UK returns in October 2025

There is resistance. Banned Books Week UK returns in October 2025, rallying libraries, bookshops, authors, and readers. Groups like Index on Censorship, Stonewall, and the Society of Authors continue to push back, reminding us that libraries are for everyone — and that children exploring sexuality and identity are safer with accurate books than with the unfiltered internet.

The fight isn’t just about shelves. It’s about empathy, understanding, and the refusal to let fear dictate what people can know. As author Simon James Green put it, book banners trade in “hate and fear” — but the counter is “love and acceptance,” which, in the end, will win.

If Britain’s past teaches us anything, it’s this: the freedom to read is never permanently won. It must be defended, again and again.

 

Links:

  • The Censorship Acceleration An Analysis of Book Ban Trends After 2020
  • The Belfast Anarchist Collection, Just books
  • Crescent Arts – Books Festival
  • School Is In: LGBTQ Picture Books
  • Firm apologises for saying it would not process LGBTQ+ payments 
  • Free speech row as National Library of Scotland bans book opposing gender self-ID after staff complained of ‘hate speech’

 

Filed Under: Campaigns, Editor to ACOMSDave Tagged With: banned books, banned books week, book banning UK, book bans 2025, book censorship history, censorship, freedom to read, Intellectual freedom, LGBTQ books, literary freedom, queer literature, right to read, Section 28, UK libraries

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