Texas Public Library Can't Remove Books About 'Butts and Farts,' Federal Judge Says
The court ruled that it is unconstitutional for officials to remove library books with the "intent to deprive patrons of access to ideas with which they disagree."

A Texas public library can't remove books simply because they discuss topics like "butts and farts," a federal judge wrote last week in a majority opinion of a lawsuit over controversial library books. Because of disagreement between a panel of federal judges, however, the books will remain removed, while other challenged books on race and sexuality will be returned to library shelves.*
The case is one of the more bizarre instances of library censorship in recent years, but it nonetheless led to a decisive option from the majority, who found that it is unconstitutional to remove library books out of a "desire to limit access to ideas with which they [disagree]."
The legal battle began after Llano County Judge Ron Cunningham received complaints in 2021 concerning "pornographic and overtly sexual books in the library's children's section." The complainants were particularly upset about children's books about "butts and farts."
One of the aggrieved citizens, Llano resident Rochelle Wells, "had been checking out those books continuously for months to prevent others from accessing them."
Following the complaint, Cunningham told the library's director, Amber Milum, to remove the books from library shelves. After more complaints were lodged, Cunningham told the library director to also remove several other books that "depict any type of sexual activity or questionable nudity."
Milum later testified that she would not have removed the books as part of typical curation activities—she only removed them because of directions from county officials.
Making matters worse, in January 2022, the county's library board was dissolved and replaced with new board members. Two of the complainers who successfully pressured Cunningham to order books removed were placed on the new board.
According to the opinion, the new board "implemented several policy changes, including prohibiting Milum from attending their meetings and requiring her to seek approval before purchasing any new books."
Seven library patrons brought a suit in 2022, arguing that the removal of the book was unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination. Eventually, a lower court agreed, granting a preliminary injunction requiring defendants to return the removed books. However, the county appealed. Just this week, a panel of judges from the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals sided with the plaintiffs.
Referencing other cases surrounding attempted library censorship, the majority opinion constructed a series of "rules" about how books can be removed from library collections. "Librarians may consider books' contents in making curation decisions," Judge Jaques Weiner Jr. wrote in the majority opinion. "Their discretion, however, must be balanced against patrons' First Amendment rights…a book may not be removed for the sole—or a substantial—reason that the decision-maker does not wish patrons to be able to access the book's viewpoint or message."
The motivation for removing targeted books from Llamo public libraries doesn't meet this test. The opinion notes that censors wanted the books gone simply because they didn't like their content.
"Government actors may not remove books from a public library with the intent to deprive patrons of access to ideas with which they disagree," the opinion concludes. "Because that is apparently what occurred in Llano County, Plaintiffs have demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their First Amendment claim."
*CORRECTION: A previous version of this story misstated the content of the federal court's ruling.
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Hey Beavis, she said "Butts." Hehehehehehehe.
Gee, I never knew removing a book from a public library automatically removed it from Amazon, BN, and every other book store on the planet.
Good to know.
(Come the revolution, federal courts will not rule on state political subdivision acts)
Eh, this is a public library. This isn't a school library. This seems like a reasonable ruling.
"pornographic and overtly sexual books in the library's children's section."
I would hope parents monitor their children's reading selections but it doesn't seem like anybody was complaining about the adult section.
As always, pornographic and overly sexual by whose standards. I suspect human biology books that contain accurate information on the human reproductive system are likely hated by a wide variety of meddlesome busy bodies.
Between parents who phone in their job and religious nuts who demand everyone share their ideology it's a shock we can still find any books in a public library.
Democrats always say it is illegal to stop / prevent old men from inserting their penises into the rectums of little boys.
Why do democrats say this???
Why???
Ok, I've never heard a Democrat say that. At least not where a microphone was active. I know they have some bad positions but I doubt the majority of Democrats are pro pedophile. Methinks you are seeing things.
The majority of democrats are radical racists decended from the democrat plantation owners defeated by Lincoln.
But you are sure they are not pedophiles?
Even though they scream their support for pedophilia???
Dude, when democrats aren't calling for the elimination of all Jews, they are screaming support for pedophilia.... and socialism.
Open your damn ears.
Stop being willfully ignorant.
Dude, you need to get out of the Beltway and into flyover country. Democrats out here would hang a pedophile from a lamp pole right along with their Republican neighbors. They don't tolerate that kind of crap.
prfd1 is clearly a troll looking for a reaction.
Comments like this qualify you to sit at the kids’ table over Thanksgiving since you cannot contribute at the adults’ table. If you want to get out of that, stop saying stupid shit you got from your Q Anon “sources”.
Fuck you groomer. Put a round in your skull
Wow, strait to groomer. Well, now I know when you use that term it's about as meaningful as "right wing extremist", I suspect the rest of your buddies who toss that term around are equally bombastic.
A federal courts gives special privileges to books about butts and farts.
This is right out of Idiocracy.
Why is it reasonable? I think it is overreach by the Federal Government. Why would a Federal Court have jurisdiction over a State or County matter?
Oh wait! The Federal Court in this case has Liberal Judges.
That notoriously liberal 5th Circuit, right?
Eh, so is there any way a librarian can refuse to shelve a book? Must every book requested be shelved, assuming the library can pay for it?
For example, there once was a popular book calls "The Anarchist's Cookbook" that showed how to build bombs, create tear gas, etc. - on what basis could a librarian refuse to shelve the book? This decision says it can't be declined due to its content...
This really looks like a court decision that doesn't account for any possibilities outside the realm of this very limited situation (books about "butts and farts").
The Anachists Cookbook shows you how to blow yourself up. The recipie for Nitroglycerine says to slowly stir the mixture keeping it below 32 degrees Celsius.
It's supposed to be kept below 32 degrees Farenheit. Over that temp the reaction gets a bit.. well.. explosive.
Most of the recipes will get you killed.
You mean a taxpayer funded library. since when should i have to find ideas I disagree with?
Libraries are government run facilities where the public can borrow books without purchasing them. Book stores are private businesses run for a profit where books are sold to people at market prices.
As Biden's run away inflation continues to increase the costs of everything, including books at book stores, the public run libraries become even more important for the public so they can access a variety of books.
Federal courts have been ruling on the actions of state agencies for quite some time. This isn't a new thing this only happened under leftist administrations. I'm fairly sure this kind of thing has hampered the attacks on the 2nd Amendment as well. But I may be wrong, I didn't study law in college but I did sleep in a Holiday Inn Express.
If anything this is an example of censorship in its purest sense. A public agency removing access to books based on the butt hurt of a few citizens who just can't stand the idea that somewhere, someplace, someone is doing something they don't like.
MrMxyzptlk,
I’ve read all your “reasonable” replies. You are quite willing to overlook the non libertarian library funding as you just being reasonable. It’s not that big a deal. Of all the things government funds libraries are pretty low on your list of auctioning off.
But then you get all macho about one very minor government interference in the children’s book section.
But your position doesn’t make any coherent sense.
If it is abhorrent censorship for a book to be removed… Isn’t it just as abhorrent for a book not to be put on the shelf in the first place? Or just the opposite – isn’t it abhorrent that a book is selected for shelving?
You can’t stock EVERY BOOK IN THE UNIVERSE. Someone decides what books are added and removed. How in the WORLD do you avoid some method for choosing? And I think choosing based on “what is good noble and true” is a fine standard. It’s an unavoidable standard. SOMEBODY is going to make that choice.
Should it be random?
Another question…. Is there ANY book or magazine that should be removed from the children’s section because it is offensive?
Anything at all that got stocked there that you think should be removed?
If you answer yes (as any sane person would), you're hypocritical. If you answer no, you’re a lunatic who shouldn’t be near children.
A politically run library is going to be run …. politically. It can’t be avoided. Getting the courts involved is just creating more winner take all conflict. (yes, the original politics is also winner take all but not as far reaching as a court mandated solution)
The, "you can't stock every book" argument tries to evade the real point. Removing a book because a few people complain that it is immoral or some other nonsense is wrong. Removing a book because no one has checked it out in a decade is reasonable. Chosing not to stock a new book because it is unlikely to be checked out based on it falling into a similar category or style as one that hasn't been checked out in a decade is reasonable.
Say a group of atheists and Satanists organized to get the Christian Bible and all of the books discussing that Bible removed from the shelves because it offended them.
Would you calmly sit back and argue that a librarian who did what they asked was being reasonable and making a simple choice on what to put on shelves and what not to put on the shelves?
That's fine. Just get rid of the gay porn from the LGBT pedo lobby.
Adores Trump is sounding more and more like Nambla Boy, the sex victim at The Intellectual Activist who alienated the entire board of directors into resigning. This must be the only place left that lets the girl-bullier screech.
Is this public library funded by coercing money from taxpayers?
Yes it is. Thomas Jefferson was a big fan of libraries open to the public as a promoter of the electorate being well educated. While the government theft of my hard earned money is an objectionable way to pay for anything the public library is one of those exceptions I reluctantly accept. Since they are typically funded at the city or county level by property taxes I don't have a huge problem overall. While some my botch about how their property taxes are spent I live in a city where they focus on keeping the streets in good shape and cleared of snow in good time. I've little to bitch about how my property taxes are spent. Aside of course from the expenditure on the government schools. Those seem wasted but we are working on changing that.
Just keep your tax money, if you are a net positive taxpayer, then donate to the not-for-profit library if you choose. If you are fine with porno in the children’s section, keep donating.
Mike the Sea Lion Plays Doctor
Sure, right after they make the rest of the public services voluntarily funded. Until then, I won't complain about libraries.
Fuck them all. Indoctrination centers and welfare can be at the top of the list.
All for it. If only we had a political movement that wanted to do exactly that...
Our local Library is pissed off at me. I convinced the Board of Officers at a Club I belong to, to vote down a donation. My reason was their sending me a $12 registered letter to tell me that I owed $0.45 in fines, instead of saying something when I was checking out books.
The court decision says a library can't decide not to shelve a book because of its content.
Let that sink in.
Aside from its cover, what else is a book but 'content'...
Therefore, no book can be banned, unless the librarian finds its cover objectionable...
Then again, "You can't judge a book by its cover," but I guess librarians will have to start doing just that.
If the past is any guide, we can expect the Texas and Alabama Klan to shift from burning books and Beatles albums to burning libraries.
I'll ask again. What year do you think it is, Hank?
Yeah those crazy Democrat KKKs.
To be fair today's clan is made up of 80% federal and state law enforcement agencies trying to get the 20% of pig ignorant rednecks to do something stupid instead of just sitting around drinking and bitching about Mexicans stealing their jobs.
Well, that and trying to get the recipes to the potato salads made by the wives of the actual rednecks. I've been told that potato salad is to die for.
what book are they referring to?
Butts and Farts? Maybe a Joe Biden autobiography?
Euro view of the Euro election.
https://www.spiked-online.com/2024/06/10/the-eu-has-been-shaken-to-its-core/
The EU has been shaken to its core
And here are some libertarian commenters to explain why the government banning books is good actually.
The descent of this place into a fascist shithole has been so incredibly drawn out. How ironic that you’re the gun nuts and you can’t figure out how to put yourself down long past the time it would have been decent to do so.
The libertarian position should be that government get out of the book business and tell people to buy their own damn books.
Except no one has advocated banning any books.
Oh, and the library not carrying a book =/= ban, no matter how you try and spin it.
Goddamn Tony, just wow.
No one said that.
“explain why the government banning books is good actually”
Sorry, could have sworn you wrote "burning books". I read it twice to make sure. Fuck.
No worries!
We are infested with what I am calling, "Republicitarians" who spent their time trying to get us to declare Donald Trump a national hero for some fucking reason and insulting us to try and make us give up all the planks of the Libertarian Party platform that conflict with Republican Party platform planks so we become the Republican Party JV squad. They seem to think if they call us "Leftists" often enough we will be so emotionally damaged that we will give in to their demands.
These days about the only thing the LP and the GOP have in common is support for the 2nd Amendment, but the GOP is even faltering on that.
The LP party potus candidate supported the current thing:
https://x.com/goddeketal/status/1795061027153035520
Not being in a public library is not a ban.
Somehow I think your definition of "ban" is much like the UN definition of "genocide".
The libertarian position is to ban taxpayer funded libraries.
The axiomatic libertarian position, yes. The pragmatic libertarian position is to start off with the premise that taxpayer funded libraries are likely to be a bad thing, but then investigates whether in practice there's an economic benefit. There just aren't many pragmatic libertarians. David Brin is one obvious example.
Maybe 'Guns' (Gov-Guns) weren't the right tool for education be it library books or commie-indoctrination camps.
It'll be really nice if the people actually *learn* from the obvious developing horrors of their communist/socialist mentalities though one would think history should've learned them along time ago.
Maybe Reason could take a moment to talk about Alvin Bragg's nastygram-strongly-worded-letter to Youtube on its gun policy which caused major changes in Youtube's TOS resulting in a whole bunch of *checks Reason style guide* good faith screening of offensive gun related content which is having far-ranging effects.
Alvin Bragg’s nastygram-strongly-worded-letter to Youtube on its gun policy which caused major changes in Youtube’s TOS
Even if only as the nth person in line. To say nothing of the sensibility:
Age-restricted content
Sometimes content doesn't violate our policies, but it may not be appropriate for viewers under 18.
Content showing use of a homemade firearm (e.g. 3D printed gun), an automatic firearm, or any of the below accessories:
Accessories that enable a firearm to simulate automatic fire
Accessories that convert a firearm to automatic fire, such as: bump stocks, gatling triggers, drop-in auto sears, or conversion kits
High capacity magazines
Homemade silencers/suppressors
Examples (non-exhaustive):
Firing a 3D printed firearm
Firing a fully automatic rifle
Firing a firearm with a high capacity magazine
These guidelines apply to real use of firearms and may not apply, for example, to use of firearms in artistic content such as a film. We may also make exceptions for public interest content such as military or police footage, news footage, or footage from warzones.
So, quite possibly, the modern/YouTube/shared/Maker/firearm/community/vlogger equivalent of Michelangelo's David (replete with "Michelangelo" lamenting that he can't show the sculpting in progress) is age restricted six ways to Sunday, but cinema so terrible that soulless, 90s-era Sundance Film Critics left halfway through for fear of suffering some manner of soulless husk, soul-sucking prolapse implosion isn't age restricted.
but... crap like... cinema so terrible
Actual art, with absolutely zero violence, presented by a self-motivated artist encouraging people to pursue their interests and/or STEM? Restricted.
Actual glorification/sensationlization of violence or actual violence that serves literally no purpose or, worse, divisive political purposes? Allowed.
No, it's far more urgent that sexually explicit materials remain in school libraries.
I suppose "Pedo Pete Stuck it in My BumBum" is a perfectly wholesome kids book? It is about the dangers of electing a geriatric Democrat as president.
I do find it a bit suspicious that none of the titles of these innocuous books only about “butts and farts” was listed in the article. There is a good debate about whether the public library (and not an elementary school library) should have certain books removed or not, and even if there should be a public library–or public schools. But Emma Camp has proven to frame issues dishonestly in her articles, so I wouldn’t be surprised if some of the book just about “butts” were about butts, but also penises going into those butts, and for children to read about.
I know it's hard for you to wrap your brain around this but people you disagree with still have rights and they don't loose those rights because you suspect them of some imagined plots and schemes.
At the public library we used when my son was young he could not get a library card and had to check out books under my name. I could at any time get a list of the books he had checked out.
I dont think this was unique to South Dakota, I suspect nationwide kids can't check out books without some parental involvement. If for no other reason than a child can't sign the agreement to pay any late fees.
So yet again, it comes down to parents doing g their jobs. If they don't there is no way you can make them.
But, without actual examples of the actual books in question, how can we judge this?
Are we talking Captain Underpants? Slightly absurd and uncouth, but utterly harmless? Is this a political book which acknowledged sexual minorities exist? Or we talking about comics that are literally pornographic?
Without facts, we are relying on the perspective of the author on a subject that we clearly cannot trust.
Somehow I suspect even with a full listing of all the titles along with a synopsis of the topics covered would not shut people up. No matter what the right has become obsessed with declaring everyone they disagree with leftist groomers who want to rape children. A detailed list won't stop that.
Would it not be best, though, to present the list and "prove" the naysayers wrong?
Why would we trust Emma's framing of anything?
Possibly, but that is not helped by outright support of said pornographic sections of books assigned to children. They may be rare, but they exist, and by lumping them into the same group as "minorities exist" books, it undermines everything.
This argument is also not helped by actual book bans like Johnny the Walrus, which was removed from Target and at least briefly delisted from Amazon due to mocking child transition. That is a book ban. Libraries not stocking the book, is not.
You are confusing private companies with public services.
And a library not providing a book for free is not a ban.
An organized campaign to remove a book from store shelves, IS a ban.
I don't want libraries funded by taxes. That's my position. And I don't give a fuck what adults read. For the most part, I don't care what kids read. I'm no social conservative. I do think it's rich how all the lefties here and elsewhere always seem to portray the issues dishonestly by using coded language to hide the reality of what's being discussed. Emma Camp has demonstrated this repeatedly. That's what I was questioning. She portrays it as simply books about "butts" and "farts." I suspect it's more than that. That's why I wonder why she wouldn't mention the titles of these books at least. I have seen some of the content that the left describes as harmless books about innocuous subjects being anything but innocuous. In some cases it's pornographic material (depictions of oral or anal sex involving children). Whether or not they should be stocked at school and/or public libraries is another issue. I just can't stand the dishonest framing of so many issues by particularly the left. (The right sometimes does this too, but, nowadays, the left are the masters of doing this.)
Another example is abortion. I'm largely pro-choice, but describing abortion as "reproductive care" is pure spin. Even "pro-choice" (the old moniker for not wanting abortion made illegal in all cases) is misleading, as it seems the left largely believes in choice when it comes to abortion, but not other issues like having a gas stove, Covid vax mandates, what kind of vehicle you can drive, etc.
"Gender affirming care" is the one I hate the most. What's wrong with "affirming care?" It sounds so benign. If adults want to mutilate their bodies, whether that's hormones, vaginoplasty, or chopping off an arm because they believe they should only have one, go for it. It's none of my business (and taxpayers shouldn't foot the bill). Children can't consent to these permanent decisions, so parents deciding for them is wrong, IMO.
How about another? "John Smith, 'assigned female at birth.'" If sex and gender are two separate things, how was this person "assigned female" at birth? By the left's logic, the person is of the female sex, even if (s)he identifies as a man or "is" a man. Because, allegedly, sex is biological and gender is a construct. If his/her sex is female, but his/her gender is that of a man, how was he/she "assigned" female at birth? Wouldn't the medical doctors be able to recognize the female sex characteristics, regardless of what gender he/she is?
It's the constant manipulation of language to hide what they are actually proposing that pisses me off.
Emma Camp has demonstrated this repeatedly. That’s what I was questioning. She portrays it as simply books about “butts” and “farts.” I suspect it’s more than that.
Not just Emma, not just books, not just "butts" and "farts".
The magazine has been as 100% anti-libertarian, anti-business, and clearly "It's just about public bathrooms."/Nobody's trying to sexualize children/"Don't say gay." as possible from the first time Nick, ENB, Scott or other typed the words "moral panic" about Raleigh's bill to regulate private bathrooms.
And, again, that doesn't even get into all the other "Unarmed black teen was shot in the back while fleeing"/'Bodycam video shows the adult running towards officers with a gun when he was shot' and "Sonograms detect electric currents" bullshit.
Parental involvement in their children's lives?
OK Boomer!
Funny. But I'm not that old. My parents were boomers and It was their generation that began the process of signing their parental responsibilities over to governments.
Referencing other cases surrounding attempted library censorship, the majority opinion constructed a series of "rules" about how books can be removed from library collections.
Holy Fuck! So the court "constructed a series of 'rules'" and then judged that the library didn't meet those "rules" and couldn't remove books simply because they didn't want "patrons" to read them?
Federal courts legislating from the bench seems as much an issue for the people of Llamo as one public library board among many.
Sorry, “constructed a series of ‘rules'” by referencing "other cases surrounding attempted library censorship" that we can, of course, just assume to be completely relevant.
Hmm. Do references to "butts and farts" really communicate a "viewpoint"? I normally oppose any kind of censorship, including by libraries, but saying that the library cannot remove these books, especially from a children's section, does seem a step too far. On the other hand, saying that the lower court cannot order the library to remove them makes sense.
From the opinion:
Larry the Farting Leprechaun actually sounds like a fun song to sing at the pub. But, yeah, "Being Jazz" isn't exactly just a book about butts and farts.
Books about the KKK. Seriously? We're those books offensive to members of the KKK? Gee, I feel so sorry for them.
"Caste and They Called Themselves the K.K.K., two books about the history of racism in the United States;"
Books on the history of the Democratic party? Boooooring.
Fortunately the KKK left the Democratic party or were booted out in the 1960s, so only an idiot would think to connect them today.
Citation, or just a hard-held belief?
Emma focused on perhaps the most innocuous of the offerings? Say it isn’t so.
So . . . you are saying the citizens of this town have no say in how the libraries are run?
Also, is it possible that the librarian wouldn't have removed those books *in error*? Ie, that they're age inappropriate but the librarian is deep into groomer-culture?
Or do you not believe in age inappropriateness and so are fine with *everything* being stocked in a taxpayer-funded facility?
With that said - what is the purpose of a taxpayer-funded library that isn't duplicated online?
The Bill of Rigjts is all.about protecting the minority from the tyranny of the majority. It draws lines that government may not cross no matter how many people vote to cross them.
Except what right is being infringed? Please provide me with a direct quotation. After all, I don't recall the right to be provided with free books of my political persuasion to be part of the constitution.
Someone must chose the books that are purchased.
Someone must have criteria.
That someone is a government employee.
As an employee, they report to the elected officials who report to the people via elections.
You sound just like a leftist justifying their "reasonable" restrictions on the Second Amendment. You try to sound all reasonable and well meaning while quibbling over minutia. All the while your goal of stamping out the rights of others lurks close behind.
A person's first amendment rights are not and have never been contingent on government provision *of someone else's speech.
Here is Ed Whelan.
https://www.nationalreview.com/bench-memos/federal-judges-as-library-police/
But on the premise that the majority’s ruling is required by circuit precedent, the ruling screams for en banc overruling. The rule that the majority propounds is that a library patron’s First Amendment rights are violated when a librarian removes a book “with the substantial motivation to prevent access to particular points of view.” At the same time, the majority says that a librarian may remove a book based on a belief that it is “pervasively vulgar” or “on grounds of educational suitability” or out of concerns over “accuracy of the content.”
Gotta love when their rulings completely contradict themselves.
End all public funding of libraries. Problem solved.
Meaning: end libraries.
You are not a smart person.
So to be consistent, does this library carry the Holy Bible and the Koran?
The Turner Diaries, Camp of the Saints, Protocols of the Elders of Zion?
Hustler magazine?
So, if someone donates a cartoon illustrated kid's version of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, the library must put it on the shelves?
Libraries make decisions of what to buy and what not to buy all the time. If liberal courts agree with the decisions, then it is a fundamental right. If not, then that is something else entirely. The court decided on bias, not a legal principle.
"Content can only be part of a decision to remove a book." What would other considerations for the decision be? Number of books on same topic? Accuracy of the information in the book? The book is already purchased, so cost would not be an issue.
What about the other side of the issue - When a librarian is DECIDING which books to purchase for the collection? Any rules on that?
Whoever finds it has a say in the decisions it makes. If something is funded by a community, the community gets a say in the decisions that entity makes.
I know the common libertarian position is anti-collective projects, but that removes community funded efforts of choice. Public libraries and public schools are largely considered goods by the communities they exist in and are collaborative efforts to improve their community, therefore the community has a say in its running and function. If a community doesn’t want butts and farts in the public library, they can make that decision… a state or federal court has no right to come in an overrule the choices of that community, because the state isn’t funding it. Someone outside the community can publicize it, but they have no rights there. It’s not their business.
Libertarianism has a massive problem with voluntary community identity and subsidiarity. Maybe get over that.