Idaho Senate Won't Vote on House Bill To Fine and Jail Librarians for Obscenity
In a win for liberty, Idaho's Senate will likely not vote on a bill that would punish librarians for failing to sufficiently protect minors from "harmful" content.

An Idaho bill that would have created legal penalties for librarians who provide minors with content deemed inappropriate is now dead in the water; it was announced on March 9 that it would not get a hearing in the state Senate.
Under current law, employees of schools, museums, colleges, universities, and public libraries can use their affiliation as an affirmative defense for any charges of "disseminating material harmful to minors." Idaho House Bill 666 would have changed that, allowing for librarians to face a $1,000 fine and a statutory maximum year in jail for "disseminating material harmful to minors."
Lawmakers in the Idaho House originally passed the bill on March 7. Supporters claimed that it would protect children from exposure to pornography. "For many years, I as a parent have been concerned about the obscene and pornographic materials that find their way into our schools and public libraries," Rep. Gayann DeMordaunt (R–Eagle) said during an Idaho House hearing, according to Idaho Ed News.
Librarians criticized the bill as being "extremely vague" and expressed concern that it would make them liable if a child checked out an "explicit" book or other "harmful materials."
"Does that mean only pornographic materials — materials with sexual content? Or does it mean materials about violence, guns, materials about mental health conditions? We walk down the slippery slope of censorship of constitutionally-protected speech when we have a bill like this," Librarian Erin Kennedy said.
The bill would also have restricted sexually explicit materials in the state's universities. As Reason has covered before, state legislatures do not have the power to restrict material taught in universities, and attempting to ban content on a college campus violates academic freedom.
After the bill sailed through the Idaho House, Idaho Senate Pro Tem Chuck Winder (R–Boise) told KTVB7, "I do not see the chamber picking this one up. I do not see it getting a hearing in committee. I think it's very appropriately numbered, 666."
As Reason's Scott Shackford reported earlier today, the Idaho Senate has also declined to take up the state House's anti-trans bill.
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So Das Kapital is still going to be made available to grade schoolers?
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Yay! Child porn is saved!
Buttplug will be thrilled.
So the deadly democrat party platform is still available to impressionable children?
What is this country coming to?
Can they check out a Bible?
"Can they check out a Bible?" ---- Or 'provide' minors (i.e. push) them onto suspecting children??? What what left-devils would have to say about that.
Right next to the NSDAP 25 Point Program. They are pretty much interchangeable anyway.
Not the only vote recently where the Idaho Senate was more sane than the Idaho House. The Senate also shot down a House bill that would outlaw hormone treatments for trans children, saying it interferes with parental rights.
Omg... You mean Republican politicians aren't the puritans you keep pretending they are??????
That is like bsnmong conversion therapy.
bsnmong?
when the state steps in and takes over the work of the parents, it is NEVER good. Yes some parents are deadbeats and abuse their children. That does NOT give the state license to take over for everyone.
Purchaisng porn to ut in libraries is NOT a good use of tax money, so stop that. Then there won't be so many girly mags and books for the kids to want to see.
As to librarians taking the burden of keeping "that tuff" out of the hands of minors..bad idea, It is NOT their job to pla Nannie and gieard what kids not their own can see. That's the job of the parents.
Words and ideas are dangerous.
I don't think public officials should be pushing obscenity onto children....... At the same time I don't the State should be involved.
So I praise the Senate for Liberating other communities from their dictates. But when my local library agrees to shun/block/fire leftards from teaching suspecting children butt-sex; I'll think that's GREAT....
Since these are public libraries, the state is involved.
And for some reason, it's OK for state employees to provide pornographic content to minors, at taxpayer expense. Odd, to say the least.
Maybe they should've never been put in the State's hands to begin with.
That's the way things have been evolving in the US for more than a century: postal service, roads, railroads, gas, electricity, water, education, security, currency, etc. all started out as privately provided services and all got taken over by local and state government. Ditto with libraries: they started out as charities and then turned into a government service.
One thing to point out is that private booksellers are subject to criminal penalties for selling such materials to minors. Being against such penalties for public librarians is another form of legal immunity for state agents.
In a staggering loss for liberty, Idaho continues to have government-financed librarians who can use government funds to promote their personal preferences and ideology.
And somehow "Reason" "libertarians" think this is a "win for liberty".
You're leaving out the real win. Not only are librarians free to use government funds to promote their personal preferences and ideologies, their tax-and-spend representatives are refusing to vote on the matter.
We walk down the slippery slope of censorship of constitutionally-protected speech when we have a bill like this," Librarian Erin Kennedy said.
Try adding a shot of bourbon to the copy of Hustler you give to a 14-year old and see how that works out.
This is all a desperate attempt by the progressives to gin up a moral panic and deflect attention from the wonderful place we now find ourselves thanks to their policies. Congratulations on your gig as lead bartender Shackford!
Whoops. Looks like Walker is barbacking on this one.
"For many years, I as a parent have been concerned about the obscene and pornographic materials that find their way into our schools and public libraries,"
Yeah, and we all know librarians are the ones giving access to these materials. It's not like kids have access to porn some other way, right?
I guess I should be grateful they're pushing this red herring instead of trying to China-up the internet.
Wow, just in time for "reason's" campaign to allow child pornography if you only look at it.
Wow, sanity. How refreshing. It is the parents’ job to monitor what their kids read, not the librarians’. Parents do have a right but also a responsibility to keep tabs on what their kids are exposed to. This is why I firmly agree with laws, like Florida’s recent statute, which keeps people other than parents from exposing (pun intended) children as young five to sexual content against the parents’ wishes. The issue with the schools is that the parents are not in the classroom so the state had to set reasonable limits. This is no way stops other parents from telling their own kids whatever they want.
Freedom of Association is one of the first Rights you liberals destroyed