Texas Can't Force Book Vendors To Rate Books According to Sexual Content, District Court Decides
Aspects of Texas' READER Act meant to keep sexual content out of school libraries have been judged First Amendment violations.
In a moral panic over allegedly damagingly filthy content in books that schoolchildren could access, Texas passed a law in 2023 known as the Restricting Explicit and Adult-Designated Educational Resources (READER) Act. Aspects of the law that compelled certain behaviors from vendors who sold books into the school system were overturned last week in a decision in Book People v. Wong from U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas Judge Alan D. Albright.
The law's purpose, as the decision summarized it, was "to regulate access to school library books deemed 'sexually explicit'" (which were to be barred entirely) "or 'sexually relevant'" (which were to require parental consent).
Albright found elements of the law plainly unconstitutional because they required booksellers who sold to Texas schools to "categorize any books they sell or have ever sold to schools" and to "issue a recall for any 'sexually explicit' materials that they sold to schools."
The Texas Education Agency (TEA) would "oversee the ratings, which includes the power to overrule a vendor's rating," and by law, "booksellers who do not comply with the rating system (or the overruled ratings)…[could] not sell any books at any of the schools."
A group of plaintiffs—including a Texas bookstore, the American Booksellers Association, and the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund—sued over the law in July 2023. Last week, the court granted their motion for summary judgment against those aspects of the READER Act that directly affected them.
Under READER, the booksellers would have to decide what material should be labeled "sexually explicit" or "sexually relevant," which included determining whether the work was "so offensive on its face as to affront current community standards of decency."
TEA's power to overrule the booksellers' ratings meant that the state agency had, as Albright put it, the "power to substitute its own speech for a vendor's…the vendors must forego their own determinations and allow the TEA to exercise its unilateral rating authority….To do business with public schools, vendors must accept that the TEA is allowed to publish its own determination as the vendor's own. Vendors have no mechanism to appeal the TEA's determination. They must simply accept the substituted speech, or lose their ability to sell library materials to public schools."
Since the law allowed TEA to attribute its own ratings to the booksellers, Albright concluded that "READER is compelling speech" by requiring booksellers "to rate books and adopt the governments' ratings as their own." The ratings that would be on public display per the law are presented, the court concluded, as "the vendor's speech, not the government's," but could be controlled by the government.
"READER imposes unconstitutional conditions on a party's ability to contract with the government, because it requires Plaintiffs to surrender their First Amendment rights in order to do any business with public schools," the decision concludes. "READER also compels Plaintiffs to assign ratings to books when they would prefer not to. The First Amendment protects against the government compelling a person to speak its message when he would prefer to remain silent or to include ideas within his speech that he would prefer not to include."
Albright's decision also found aspects of the sections of the law he overturned unconstitutionally vague. Those portions of READER require booksellers to "assign subjective, confusing, and unworkable Rating Requirements. Even the TEA could not clearly define how a book seller could determine whether a book is 'sexually relevant,' in 'active use,' 'directly related to the curriculum,' or which community standards apply."
The decision lays out the vexatious potential 16 steps that booksellers had faced under READER as originally passed in order to obey the rating requirements. "Looking for what would often be considered 'obscene' is not instructive—because READER's test is not like the normal 'obscenity' test standards" since the law's failure "to account for a work's literary, artistic, political, or scientific value encourages ad hoc judgments which can vary from bookseller to bookseller. READER therefore qualifies as void for vagueness."
Those aspects of the law had earlier been temporarily enjoined in an August 2023 decision and now have been quashed permanently.
This doesn't mean Texas is not still dedicated by law to imposing certain purity tests on the material available in its schools, and it will continue to do so. Albright's decision spells out that "the government has the power to do the contextual ratings for the books itself. The government has the power to restrict what books its school purchase, within the confines of the Constitution, and there is a meaningful interest in curating educational content for children. But those powers should be exercised by the state directly—not by compelling third parties to perform it or risk losing any opportunity to engage in commerce with school districts." By the letter of the law before this decision, if a publisher was selling directly to Texas schools and failed to rate according to the state's desires, per the now-enjoined Sec. 35.003(d), schools would be forbidden to buy any book from them.
For now, booksellers are no longer dragooned into being part of a rating regime, but the state still has the power to set its own restrictive standards in ways that will likely reflect the judgments, tastes, and opinions of only a portion of the public whom school libraries are supposed to serve. Jeff Trexler, the interim director of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, notes that the sort of branding associated with a state barring or pulling books from libraries can stigmatize a book such that many other parties "might have a tendency to not want to buy it, or bookstores to carry it, and that stigma can have a devastating effect on the graphic novel market." (Trexler's group has a special interest in the current wave of states targeting books since comics' visual nature, and even the fact that comics in book form are often called "graphic novels," lead many to assume that the way they deal with any issue in any way intersecting human sexuality or other political hot-button topics is unacceptably "graphic" in a sexual sense.)
The state's side has already filed an appeal in Book People v. Wong.
Another case involving book curation decisions in Texas public libraries, Little v. Llano County, is currently seeking consideration from the U.S. Supreme Court, which has not yet decided whether to take it on. The issues and background are explained in Publishers Weekly this week, which sums up:
At stake in Little v. Llano County are fundamental First Amendment protections that apply in public libraries, including the right to receive information, and whether or not library collections are a form of "government speech," as a plurality in the Fifth Circuit contended. The case would determine how much control public officials exert over library collection decisions, from book removals to approved selections, and would set precedent for not only public libraries but public school classrooms, public K–12 libraries, and higher education.
The last time the Supreme Court considered the question of conflicts between school library decisions and First Amendment rights was Island Trees School District v. Pico (1982). The justices split 4–4 on the First Amendment question and established no clear precedent, though in an opinion from Justice William Brennan joined by two other judges, Brennan posited that "whether petitioners' removal of books from the libraries denied respondents their First Amendment rights depends upon the motivation behind petitioners' actions. Local school boards may not remove books from school libraries simply because they dislike the ideas contained in those books and seek by their removal to 'prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion.'"
To highlight the culture-war passions underlying Book People v. Wong, Texas state Rep. Jared Patterson (R–Frisco) said in response to an earlier iteration of the case that any court deciding to restrict READER's vendor rating requirements was siding "with book vendors who push pornography on unsuspecting children in our public schools."
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How will I know what to buy without ratings?
End all taxpayer coerced funding of the educational industrial complex.
Agreed! We need state-and-schools separation to match state-and-religious-institutions separation, truly! I vote in favor of that! (Doing away with stupid MANDATES for credentials, permits, and licenses, for workers to perform honest work for willing customers, would help immensely, by the way.)
Sad to sad, the path from here to there is nearly non-existent, speaking practically. Why? Because of Pervfected-in-their-own-so-called-“minds” assholes and power pigs! These assholes and power pigs are all about “who” and not “what”! If they meet a person named “JS”, for a hypothetical example… If “JS” writes about some FACTS that put gun-grabbers and abusive police in a BAD light, for examples, certain self-righteous power pigs will denounce “JS”, because (apparently) “JS” does SNOT agree with self-righteous power pigs about some tiny nit-noid details about how nice or snot-nice Spermy Daniels’s tits are, or how many Orange DickTators can dance on my obliviously VERY large penis-head, or other meaningless stupid shit! Even though said hypothetical self-righteous asshole generally opposes abuse police and gun-grabbers, for a hypothetical example.
For their pig-headed, udderly STUPID self-righteousness, SOME people… I could name some… Will NEVER get their way! Their unreasonableness and EVIL self-righteousness prevent ANY compromises, and ANY acknowledgments that “The PervFected is the enema of the good”, and so ALL of their efforts are pissed away, in pig-headed self-defeat!
Shit’s a shame! I cry for them every night… Accompanied by music that I play on the Universe’s tiniest violin!
+1000000... Well said!
I wanted to post a video of two dogs barking on Youtube. The lengthy quiz asked if any adult content was contemplated. Taking this to maybe include High School math on a future vid I checked yes. An algo then churned out a list of gerunds like pegging, whipping, whip-creaming, and on and on... It dawned on me that to Google censors THAT, not math, was grownup stuff. So I meekly confessed THAT video was for kids. Pretty weird kinks these Beatles-album-burning Comstock censorship experts...
If the dogs were adult dogs, then the cuntent was adult!
Glad that I could be of help!
(Us SQRLSY Ones do SNOT generally LIKE dogs, for fairly oblivious reasons, anyway!)
Why do you ask, Two Dogs Fucking?
https://www.reddit.com/r/Jokes/comments/2mt8rh/on_a_rainy_day_a_little_native_american_asks_his/
On A Rainy Day A little Native American Asks his Dad...
Why is my brother named Soaring Eagle? The Chief replies, "When your brother was born the first thing I did was take him outside, and saw a eagle soaring through the air." The boy then asks, "Why is my sister named Sitting Bull?" The boys father says, "When your sister was born I brought her outside and the first thing I saw was A bull sit down in the field. Why do you ask, Two Dogs Fucking?"
Were the dogs girlbulliers Hank? Maybe that's the problem.
For those that wisely didn't bother to read this, the only 1a issue is the compelled speech of the book vendors. The content of particular books is not addressed. And as an aside, I'd point out that the vague community standards invoked by the State of Texas is a creation of the Supreme Court, not the State of Texas.
For those WHO-that wisely didn't bother to read this, Gears Grimy & Stripped CUMMENDS Ye for being PERVFECTED in yer ignorance!
Ignorance is STRENGTH, Cumrades!!! Do SNOT becum UNCLEAN by reading and learning TOO MUCH!!!
PS, YOU will say shit about YOUR books, twat I TELL you to say about your books!!! THAT is "Free Speech", because I swill allow you to be FREE of my jails and other penalties, if'n ye speech ass I tell ye to speech, and I tell ye twat to say, for FREE!!!
In fairness, while SCOTUS started the vague "community standards" problem, Texas put it on steroids.
MORE blessings from Commie-Indoctrination camps for kids.
If there's a demand for book 'ratings' that demand can supply it.
Demand-side ONLY economics never works.
So is disclosing how much I make to the IRS unconstitutional compelled speech? According to the logic here it is. How about all the other covenants and disclosures that are required, are those out too? I could be behind this generally but you ONLY want to preserve degeneracy targeted at minors.
"Unless an increase in liberty directly affects me personally, I can't support it."
No. Your analogy is broken. If the booksellers had to disclose objectively factual information, there would be no problem. Likewise, if they had to disclose their opinion on certain points (like you have to do in an annual report), there would be few problems. And in certain circumstances, the government can compel you to publish it's own opinion. But in this case, the government said it substitute it's own opinion for the seller's opinion and still compel the seller to publish that opinion as its own.
The equivalent would be a rule compelling you to publish your favorite color but when you say 'I like blue', the government says 'no, you really like red' - and you now have to say to the world that you like red.
But in this case, the government said it substitute it's own opinion for the seller's opinion and still compel the seller to publish that opinion as its own.
Sounds pretty "blocking and screening for offensive material"-y.
One notable and pretty blatant misrepresentation on your part: this is all only an issue if the book is sold into the school system.
You're free to tell people you like blue all you like. Sell them all the blue paintings you like. You can even sell them in the school. What you can't do is sell the school an eggplant painting, say it's blue, and when they discover it's actually eggplant, go to the next school and try to sell them the same eggplant painting and say, "It's blue."
Even in the private sector this would generally be regarded as verging on fraud.
What if it's a book titled Let's Go Brandon?
Sarc would write a sternly worded and drunken letter protesting.
Here is a quick guide
1. Was it written in the last 15 years? If so then it's crap.
2. Was it written by a chick, a fag, or a Marxist? If so 99% sure to be crap
3. Has the left pilloried it as colonistic, mysogonist, western, old, and wrong? Guaranteed to be a good one! Edit : remember James Lindsey took me in kamph and changed jew to patriarchy and got it published by leftist
I’m all for keeping smut out of school libraries (I’m even more for getting rid of the governments near monopoly on education), but isn’t a rating system for books something the industry could set up on their own, like the MPAA or the RIAA?
Edit: It seems obvious you would have to leave it up to their discretion/judgement.
The American Library Association already does this generally.
Unfortunately, they're one of the early proto-clowders of infantalized, credentialed nitwits and sexually-frustrated cat ladies and largely the reason we have this problem in the first place.
Are we speaking about the sort of books directed at grade schoolers that cannot be quoted in School Board meetings because they are too raunchy?
Here's a thought: why don't we all just stop trying to give dirty books to kids? Then we can stay out of court about this. Is that so hard?
1200 words is a lot of effort to rationalize gay porn in public school libraries.