The Biden Administration Pressured Amazon To Censor Two Of My Books On Vaccines

Most of the authors on the Biden administration's censored book list have lengthy experience studying how medicine has been corrupted.

Biden's Amazon book ban and more times the left accused the right of doing what it's doing



One of those on the left’s favorite pastimes is accusing those on the right of doing exactly what they themselves are doing.

Which is why it’s no surprise that after yelling from the rooftops that conservatives are trying to ban books, Rep. Jim Jordan has revealed an alleged attempt by the White House to pressure Amazon into censoring books that don’t fit the left’s COVID-19 agenda.

Glenn Beck believes this calls for a lesson on fascism, which the left often accuses the right of perpetrating.

“People, when they hear fascist, they think concentration camps, and that usually is the way they end,” Glenn begins. “You have to get rid of the political people that disagree with you, because unless you’re in a free state, you can’t have people who disagree with you speaking out.”

“Everything they say we’re up to, they’re doing,” he adds, before backing his statement up with some undeniable truths.

“They said Donald Trump was just killing us overseas and none of our allies had any respect for us,” Glenn says, noting that meanwhile, Joe Biden couldn’t garner less respect.

While the left claims the right is full of religious zealots who want to force their religion on school children, parents are facing arrest in Montana for refusing to go along with their daughter's sex change.

Glenn believes the LGBTQ+ agenda is a religion in itself, and that religion is clearly being targeted at children in schools.

“They say that we’re going to have a dictator, well, public-private partnerships silencing opposition, environmental and social regulations, medical tyranny — we’ve got that,” Glenn says.

The list of the left’s hypocrisy is endless.

“They say that I’m responsible for misinformation and propaganda,” he continues, “I will correct anything that I get wrong. You show me where I’m wrong.”


Want more from Glenn Beck?

To enjoy more of Glenn’s masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis, and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.

Third-grade book about transgender boy prompts school district to suspend its 'equity' book program



A Utah school district suspended its program on books about equity after a third-grade teacher read a story about a transgender boy to students without parent permission.

What are the details?

On Monday, Newsweek reported that the reading of the book "Call Me Max" — which tells the story of a young transgender boy who embarks on a "journey" as he "makes new friends and reveals his feelings about his identity to his parents" — prompted heavy criticism against administrators of Horizon Elementary School in Murray, Utah.

According to the Salt Lake Tribune, "The uproar started when a student at Horizon Elementary brought a copy of 'Call Me Max' from home and asked the teacher to read it aloud during story time. The book is an illustrated account of a young transgender boy who educates his own teacher and classmates about his identity."

"But Murray School District is taking its response a step further, now reviewing all of the literature in its 'equity book bundles' program — even though 'Call Me Max' is not part of that initiative and is not in any of the district's libraries," the Tribune added. "It was only in the classroom because the student had a copy."

"The retelling of the story prompted students to ask the teacher question, one of which was specifically about puberty," Murray School District spokesman Doug Perry told the outlet in a statement about the controversy.

The reading sparked anger and concern from some district parents, which prompted the district to at least temporarily yank the program.

Perry also told the Tribune that the teacher "made a mistake" in sharing the book with the class.

"That book is not appropriate at the grade level it was being shared," Perry added.

Newsweek reported that the school district issued an apology to parents in a letter last week and informed families that it's books program would be put on hold "as a review of the literature is undertaken in order to determine if any of the books are similar in topic or may cause concern."

The entire program is now under review, according to Perry, to ensure that no books are similar to "Call Me Max" or could approach a topic best left unaddressed at current grade levels.

"Call Me Max" author Kyle Lukoff — a transgender former librarian — told the outlet that the book is simply an introduction into what it means for children to be transgender.

On Twitter, Lukoff wrote, "I still can't get over that the Utah school district has stopped sending kids books like FRY BREAD, YOU MATTER, STAMPED, and GHOST BOYS because a kid asked a teacher to read MAX. I know it's not my fault but I have this urge to apologize to my friends/colleagues."

He later added, "I only want my career to be in conversation/solidarity/support of others, and this feels awful."

I only want my career to be in conversation/solidarity/support of others, and this feels awful.
— Kyle Lukoff (@Kyle Lukoff)1613133578.0

Lukoff also told Newsweek that it's "upsetting" that the district is using his work "as an excuse to suspend the book program, since that list is made up of so many wonderful, important titles by friends and colleagues."

"It's also always upsetting when people treat transgender children and their friends as problems and controversies, rather than kids who deserve love, support, and understanding," he added.

Lukoff told the Tribune that the book is specifically tailored for kindergarten to third-grade ages and doesn't believe that the term "transgender" typically concerns kids of that age group.

"I find in my experience that adults think that term unlocks a lot of confusion in children when it really doesn't," Lukoff told the outlet. "It's only a problem if you think that being transgender itself is wrong. And it's not. That's something the parent then has to work through."

Reycraft Books Up Close: Call Me Maxwww.youtube.com