Leftist Midwits And Their Media Allies Redefine ‘Banned’ Books
When the corporate media use a trigger word, like 'banned,' look for the historical understanding of the term.
Liberal news outlets and leftist organizations joined poet Amanda Gorman in falsely claiming that a Florida school had banned her book.
The school and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis were roundly denounced. The Biden White House rolled out a declaration of solidarity with the poet. Gorman's book sales skyrocketed.
Only, as TheBlaze previously indicated, there was no ban. At no point has anyone come forward with any evidence that a single student attempted to access the book and was denied.
The school had in fact deemed the book valuable and historically significant. It has made clear that, while the book was moved from one shelf to another shelf in the library, it remains available to access for all students, regardless of grade level.
Furthermore, contrary to insinuations by the liberal media, Gov. Ron DeSantis had nothing to do with the relocation of the book, the complaint, or the school's decision — a fact that Snopes has acknowledged.
While the Bob Graham Education Center in Miami Lakes and representatives from Miami-Dade County Public Schools confirmed the initial reports were malicious fabrications earlier this week, many publications, including the Daily Beast, the Associated Press, Variety, the Guardian, Rolling Stone, and People magazine, have yet to issue corrections or account for their misleading claims.
TheBlaze previously reported that various liberal publications claimed that Amanda Gorman's book — "The Hill We Climb," which contains the poem she read at Biden's inauguration — was banned from a school library in Miami.
While Daily Salinas, a mother of two children at the school, had filed a complaint about "The Hill We Climb" and administrators had responded, the book was neither banned nor removed from the library, but instead moved to a different section of the school's media center.
"No literature (books or poem) has been banned or removed," said Miami-Dade County Public Schools spokesperson Elmo Lugo.
"It was determined at the school that ‘The Hill We Climb’ is better suited for middle school students and, it was shelved in the middle school section of the media center," he explained. "The book remains available in the media center."
\u201cIn order to ensure accurate information, @MDCPS is compelled to clarify that the book titled, \u201cThe Hill We Climb\u201d by @TheAmandaGorman was never banned or removed from one of our schools. The book is available in the media center as part of the middle grades collection.\u201d— Miami-Dade Schools (@Miami-Dade Schools) 1684894666
According to the minutes of the School Materials Review Committee's April 5 meeting, the committee had determined that Gorman's book "has educational value because of its historical significance. The vocabulary used in the poem was determined to be of value for middle school students."
In case there was any doubt, the school district clarified further on Wednesday that access to the book is NOT restricted to middle grade students, but "remains accessible to all students."
Snopes stressed there was "no indication that an elementary-age child would meet resistance from a librarian should they want to walk over to the middle school section of the library to read the works."
Notwithstanding the facts of the matter, the liberal media rushed to claim that Gorman's book had been banned, with a number of outlets intimating DeSantis was responsible.
The poet similarly appeared keen to amplify this claim, saying in a statement that her book had been "banned."
"I'm gutted," she said in a statement. "Robbing children of the chance to find their voices in literature is a violation of their right to free thought and free speech."
Gorman still had her original false allegation pinned to her Twitter page at the time of publication.
As it became clear there was in fact no ban, Gorman engaged in more political wordplay, suggesting that a "school book ban is any action taken against a book that leaves access to a book restricted or diminished."
PEN America similarly decided to redefine what is meant by "ban," stating, "The book may remain available to middle-school students, but when you restrict or diminish access to a book, that’s a ban."
Stephana Ferrell, the director of research and insight at Florida Freedom to Read Project, performed some comparable mental gymnastics, telling the Miami Herald that the books weren't being banned from the district, "but they’re banned for the students they were intended for." Of course, even if Ferrell's point were valid, the underlying facts remain untrue; the book has not at any point been restricted to any grade level.
The Daily Beast still has an article by so-called reporter-researcher Decca Muldowney on its site entitled, "Florida Mom Behind Amanda Gorman Book Ban Has Proud Boy Links," which continues to bat around the term "ban."
ABC News, which featured an image of Gov. DeSantis, changed its headline from "Amanda Gorman's poem for Biden's inauguration banned by Florida school" to "Amanda Gorman's poem for Biden's inauguration barred for younger children by Florida school," but continues to peddle the claim that the book has been "placed on a restricted list," despite there being no evidence of such a list existing, and despite the school's clear statement that the book remains accessible to students of all grade levels.
Politico, the New York Times, and NPR continue to falsely claim access to the book is restricted, with the latter suggesting Gorman's poem is "the latest casualty in the fight over library books."
The Associated Press has changed its headline from "Amanda Gorman’s poem for Biden’s inauguration banned by Florida school" to "Amanda Gorman’s poem for Biden’s inauguration barred for younger children by Florida school," but peddles the same false "restricted list" claim as ABC News and the San Diego Tribune.
While the Associated Press has changed its headline, the many publications that recycle its content continue to house the falsehood on their sites along with its suggestion that the debunked ban had something to do with DeSantis. For instance, PBS News Hour still had Freida Frisaro's initial false report on its site with the original AP title as of Friday morning.
Variety hasn't budged on its original headline, "Amanda Gorman’s Books Sky Rocket in Sales Despite Florida Book Ban" and continues to falsely claim both that "A Florida school has banned its elementary students from reading Amanda Gorman's poem" and "The poem was one of several works banned at the Miami-Dade County school."
Variety did, however, provide an update to its piece — not to correct the record, but to announce the result of these and other false reports: "Thanks to this new round of press, Gorman's books are currently best sellers on Amazon."
The Guardian has kept its original headline, "Amanda Gorman ‘gutted’ after Florida school bans Biden inauguration poem," stating that the poem was "removed for reading by elementary school children" and suggesting even still that the book has indeed been banned.
Rolling Stone, which recently got caught smearing Michael Knowles of the Daily Wire and has paid out millions in the past for false reporting, changed its headline from "Florida School Bans Amanda Gorman’s Inaugural ‘The Hill We Climb’ Poem" to another false headline: "Florida School Restricts Amanda Gorman’s Inaugural ‘The Hill We Climb’ Poem."
Despite a correction note highlighting that the book was not banned, Rolling Stone's revised article still contains the false claim that Gorman's book was removed from circulation and opens with the false claim that that "elementary-aged students" have been restricted from reading Gorman's book.
Teen Vogue and Glamour are evidently unshaken by the truth. The article run by the two publications, entitled "Amanda Gorman Speaks Out After a Florida School Bans Her Poem," remains on both sites with Elizabeth Logan's original title and false claims.
People magazine, another bastion of journalistic integrity, has not amended its report entitled, "Amanda Gorman's Inauguration Poem Banned — Along with 3 Race-Related Books — at a Miami-Area School," which states, "A Florida school has banned four books for elementary students after one parent objected to the titles and argued they were inappropriate."
The article falsely claims Gorman's work was "removed from the library" and will no longer be available to students.
Ironically, the article in People attempts to cast doubt on Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' March claim that book bans are a "hoax."
Harper's Bazaar's article, "Amanda Gorman fundraises to protest against Florida book ban," has not been corrected. It claims the book was altogether removed from the school.
The Los Angeles Times framed the relocation of the book as a matter of restriction, but still suggests it was a ban in the title of its report, "Amanda Gorman on her inauguration poem being banned at Miami school: ‘I am gutted.'"
TheBlaze reached out to the following publications about their misleading or outright false reports: the Daily Beast; PBS; Variety; the Guardian; the Associated Press; Rolling Stone; NPR; the New York Times; Teen Vogue; Harper's Bazaar; Politico; the Los Angeles Times; and People magazine. At the time of publication, none have yet commented on their advancement of a false narrative or explained why they have refused to correct the record. None have responded to an inquiry regarding what evidence, if any, they uncovered to support the assertion that even a single student attempted to check out the book but was unable to do so.
The media claimed that a Miami-area school banned a book containing the famous poem read at President Joe Biden's inauguration.
But Miami-Dade County Public Schools said it's not true.
Numerous headlines from national outlets outright claimed that Amanda Gorman's book — "The Hill We Climb," which contains the poem she read at Biden's inauguration — was banned from a school library in Miami.
It's true that a parent filed a complaint about "The Hill We Climb." And it's true that officials at Bob Graham Education Center, a K-8 school in Miami Lakes, took action in response to that complaint.
But the book was not banned, neither was it removed from the library. Instead, the book was merely moved to a different section of the school's media center.
"No literature (books or poem) has been banned or removed," said Miami-Dade County Public Schools spokesperson Elmo Lugo.
"It was determined at the school that ‘The Hill We Climb’ is better suited for middle school students and, it was shelved in the middle school section of the media center," he explained. "The book remains available in the media center."
The parent who initiated the complaint told the Miami Herald that she "is not for eliminating or censoring any books." She only wants library materials to be age appropriate.
That parent actually filed complaints about five titles: Gorman's poem and four other books. Officials then convened a review committee — "composed of three teachers, a library media specialist, a guidance counselor and the school’s principal," according to the Herald — who agreed that the poem and three of the other books should be moved to a different area of the library because they are "better suited" or "more appropriate" for middle school students.
Gorman also repeated the false claim that her book has been "banned."
"I'm gutted," she said in a statement. "Robbing children of the chance to find their voices in literature is a violation of their right to free thought and free speech."
To be fair, Gorman posted the statement on Tuesday afternoon hours before Miami-Dade County Public Schools confirmed that her book has not been banned.
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Amanda Gorman wowed the world Jan. 20 when she delivered her original poem for President Joe Biden's Inauguration. With her growing fame, international demand for her works has steadily grown.
With that in mind, Dutch publisher Meulenhoff tapped Marieke Lucas Rijneveld to translate Gorman's collection, "The Hill We Climb," the New York Post reported.
In fact, Gorman, 22, hand-picked Rijneveld — who won the 2020 International Booker Prize at the age of 29, making her the youngest recipient of the award — to translate her work because they had a similar experience of coming to fame early, the Guardian said.
But there was a problem for the woke crowd: Rijneveld is not black.
Which, of course, means that, despite Gorman's wishes, Rijneveld will no longer serve as the poet's translator.
Rijneveld announced Feb. 23 that she would translate Gorman's work, then just a few days later announced she was pulling out of the deal, CNN reported. Her announcement followed blowback the publisher suffered when the left declared that she was not the right race for the job.
Janice Deul, a Dutch cultural activist, the Guardian said, called out the move to hire Rijneveld in an op-ed for De Volkskrant in late February.
"An incomprehensible choice, in my view and that of many others who expressed their pain, frustration, anger and disappointment via social media," Deul wrote, according to the Guardian. "Isn't it — to say the least — a missed opportunity to [have hired] Marieke Lucas Rijneveld for this job? They are white, nonbinary, have no experience in this field, but according to Meulenhoff are still the 'dream translator'?"
Deul's efforts were successful. Rijneveld resigned the opportunity to work with the young up-and-coming poet.
"I am shocked by the uproar around my involvement in the spread of the Amanda Gorman's message, and I understand the people who feel hurt by Meulenhoff's decision to ask me," Rijneveld wrote, the Guardian reported. "I had happily devoted myself to translating Amanda's work, seeing it as the greatest task to keep her strength, tone and style. However, I realise that I am in a position to think and feel that way, where many are not. I still wish that her ideas reach as many readers as possible and open hearts."
Meulenhoff insisted that it was Rijneveld's decision to back out of the project, the Post said.
"We want to learn from this by talking and we will walk a different path with the new insights," Meulenhoff's general director Maaike le Noble said in a statement translated by the Post. "We will be looking for a team to work with to bring Amanda's words and message of hope and inspiration into translation as well as possible and in her spirit."
Gorman has yet to comment on the controversy, the Post said.