Monday, August 14, 2023
Christian County Health Department Meeting
The Christian County Health Department is holding its monthly public meeting Tuesday, August 15, at 8:30 a.m., at the CCHD conference room, located at 301 E. Brick St., in Ozark.
A new position, "Social Media and Outreach Specialist," has been added, and will be advertised when a final job description is formulated. Discussion of the job description will be part of tomorrow's meeting.
For more information about the Christian County Health Department and its services, click here.
Sunday, August 13, 2023
The Librarian's Dilemma
https://twitter.com/SexHarassed/status/1690501789156560898?s=20
Via Dan Kleinman of Safe Libraries:
LGBT Children’s Books Drove Me From My Dream Job As A Librarian
From the article, but do read the whole thing:
"All caregivers of children who adore their library as much as I do should know that the LGBT agenda has infiltrated even books for babies, and therefore, public library children’s story times in some areas. Books for children do this now even without explicitly mentioning sex, such as this 2022 Christmas picture book about a dog owned by homosexual men. Books such as the Kitty-Corn series subtly encourage the ideology underlying transgenderism, even without mentioning sex or gender, like many other newer books libraries are buying for very young children.Apparently aware of public disapproval of sexually themed books aimed at small children, industry book reviewers who are highly influential in library purchasing decisions are getting more deceptive in spelling this out in their book reviews. It is also getting harder for librarians to tiptoe around this topic when using these reviews (scroll down to “Editorial Reviews”) when selecting children’s books to put on the library’s shelves. This is true whether you go into a small public library like mine or into a big-city library.
This deceptiveness in both children’s book publishing and in the public library system for buying new books was making it more difficult for me to do my job confidently for my conservative rural community. It was also violating the principles upon which my faith is built, and therefore, my conscience. I cannot in good conscience use my public position and the public funds formerly entrusted to me to put books supporting gender dysphoria and sexuality on shelves where very small children browse."
Friday, August 11, 2023
Manufactured News
By Gretchen Garrity
We tend to think that news on the local level is pretty clean. Agendas don't seem to be much of a thing.
Or are they? Let's take a look.
The Springfield News-Leader published an article on August 7, 2023 (keep that date in mind) titled "Ozark school board issues 'rebuke' of member who hosted solo 'town hall' meetings," by reporter Claudette Riley. In Riley's defense, reporters do not usually write the headlines.
Knowing that people often read only the headline--especially those who are online and don't subscribe to either the digital or physical edition of the paper--the impression overall is a negative one.
While Riley quoted part of the public letter the Ozark School Board issued in response to School Board Member Christina Tonsing's community chat, she left out some important points that bring clarity to the issue.
Link |
The actual meat of the Board's letter was this ill-advised statement:
"However, under Missouri Law individual Board members have no authority outside official Board meetings or unless a majority of the Board votes, to provide specific authority to an individual Board member regarding a matter. The Missouri Court of Appeals has stated as follows: 'Unless otherwise authorized by the board, individual members are not empowered to act and cannot govern.' Colombo V. Buford. 935 S. W. 2d 690, 698 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996)."
Tonsing responded publicly by pointing out the cited court case actually supported school board members meeting with the public:
"The quoted sentence, which IS indeed found written in the opinion on the case (seventh paragraph under "Discussion" part C, found at https://law.justia.com/cases/missouri/court-of-appeals/1996/wd51723-2.html, does not AT ALL reference one board member holding listening sessions or anything else like that. It instead is used to support the next sentence's conclusion (note the use of the word 'thus') that groups of less than a quorum do NOT violate the Sunshine Law, so they CAN talk together with each other (and as the entirety of that point in the court case addresses, with the public) without worry of violation. Ironically enough, the very quote attempted to use to quell individual "meetings" with the public, was instead intended by the Appeals Court to support them:
This court previously addressed the issue of what constituted a "public governmental body" in Tribune Pub. Co. v. Curators of Univ. of Mo., 661 S.W.2d 575, 584 (Mo.App.1983). There we recognized the power to govern as being a factor in determining what constitutes a "public governmental body", stating that "the quintessence of a `public governmental body' is the power to govern.... It defies semantics to believe that the legislature intended inclusion of bodies or entities barren of the power to govern in the definition of `public governmental body'." Id. Unless otherwise authorized by the Board, individual members are not empowered to act and cannot govern. Thus, because members of a body cannot act individually. Groups of less than a quorum of the board would not logically fall within the definition of a "public governmental body" subject to the Sunshine Law."
Read Tonsing's July 22, 2023 response for yourself. (Scroll down) It's quite good. While the Ozark School Board's letter was linked to in the article, Riley failed to link to Tonsing's public response, which frankly, is a devastating critique of the Board's action against her.
The real issue, that the School Board was somehow threatened by a board member meeting with the public which elected her, was entirely missing from the article. Does anyone else wonder why the article was just now published on August 7, when the Board's public letter was presented at the June 29, 2023 meeting? Timing is everything, as they say.
MOVING ON
"Wilson said the community wants transparency, good communication and fiscal accountability. She said all of those are high priorities."
It goes on:
"Board president Sarah Adams Orr," (the same gal who signed the Board letter rebuking Tonsing for meeting with citizens) "said the district has committed to hosting four town hall meetings this school year dedicated to hearing from the community...Orr said parents and taxpayers are also welcome to "email or call board members with questions, comments" before and after the meetings. She said public comment regarding agenda items will still be accepted at board meetings."
RECAP
1) August 7: article published about Christina Tonsing's June 29 public rebuke by Ozark School Board.
2) August 7: Springfield News-Leader's Claudette Riley interviews Interim Superintendent Lori Wilson and Board President Sarah Adams Orr.
3) August 8: Riley tweets out a thanks in response to a School District teaser tweet about the upcoming puff piece on Wilson.
4) August 10: Springfield News-leader publishes article about Lori Wilson.
Does anyone believe this is all just a coincidence?
There are many well-known issues with the Ozark School District. That is why two new board members were recently elected. It's why groups like Ozark Schools Support Team exists. The OSST has published an open letter to the School Board. It is worth reading. You will get a truer picture of the situation. And then attend one of their two town hall meetings scheduled for next week.
By all means attend everything the Ozark School District is offering and take advantage of the new spirit of transparency there. But don't rely on either the press or the school district to give you the whole picture.
Wednesday, August 9, 2023
Sometimes you just have to laugh
When making a Sunshine Law request, one of the expectations is that the information will be shared with the public in “usable electronic formats.” Here are the results of one request that was made to the Christian County Library. The scrolling went on for seven minutes, and that was just half of one file (of 60+ files). There’s the letter of the law, and then the spirit of the law. Happy warriors fight on!
“Public governmental bodies are strongly encouraged to make information available in usable electronic formats, and requests that records be provided in a particular format must be honored if the public governmental body is able to produce the record in the format requested.”
There is a list of recent Sunshine requests in the sidebar to the right. They will soon be available to view as well. You may be able to view them. Reading some of them is another thing. :-)
Tuesday, August 8, 2023
Ozark Schools Support Team Upcoming Meeting
For more information, visit the Ozark Schools Support Team Facebook page, or join their email list: OSST65721@gmail.com.
Sunday, August 6, 2023
Discovering Faithful Tales: Building a List of Children's Books for Your Local Public Library
Nixa's "See You at the Library" event |
Thursday, August 3, 2023
Last Call for "See You at the Library" Event
FOX News highlighted the nationwide Brave Books event for Saturday. Two Texas groups and citizens from Christian County were featured. From the article:
"The Right to Win Ozarks community group is also holding "grassroots events" in southwest Missouri on Saturday.
"These are citizen-led initiatives taking place this Saturday at all four branches of the Christian County Public Library, in Clever, Nixa, Ozark and Sparta. The times vary by location," said a spokesperson from the group to Fox News Digital on Wednesday.
"As passionate supporters of our public libraries, we believe in their fundamental role as knowledge repositories that spark imagination, learning and intellectual growth."
The Right to Win Ozarks spokesperson also said, "We are excited to be a part of the work happening under the library mission, priority No. 1 for access."
She also said, "We are striving to create a welcoming event and offer books and stories that reflect the community. It's about reigniting the community's love for reading and emphasizing the crucial role [that] libraries play in offering enlightenment and education to everyone."
The spokesperson added, "Parents and volunteers are coming together to offer story hours, activities and more to teach kids about faith, hope and love. We invite everyone to join us in celebrating and sustaining the essential service our libraries provide."
The story hour will include crafts and refreshments. Click here for more information, or visit Brave Books.
NOTE: The event was also organized by other local citizens not involved with RTWO. Reporters don't always get things exactly right, even if they have the best of intentions.
Wednesday, August 2, 2023
World Library Association Enters the Fray
By Gretchen Garrity
Americans are fed up with public and school libraries that promote the early sexualization of children. There are a plethora of books in our public institutions that push gender ideology and the LGBTQ+ agenda from toddlers up through high school. The American Library Association (ALA) and its chapters around the nation are actively supporting and pushing these subversive political agendas, and have been for years.
Citizens are pushing back. Through exposing the political rot and the smut, they've been able to take back their school and library boards. It's an uphill battle, but places like Wyoming and Montana are hope-filled victories.
Dan Kleinman, of Safe Libraries, has paved the way for local citizens to take back their schools and libraries. And, as a counter to the ALA, Kleinman has founded the World Library Association.
According to a press release, "The WLA will foster safe environments for librarians, curate valuable reading materials for children, and maintain a public space that promotes information literacy and political neutrality. It will also provide a comprehensive database of laws and legal cases pertinent to libraries, with a focus on the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). The WLA will stand with parents in legal battles for defending their children in school libraries, offering financial support and active assistance.
The WLA is more than a new library association; it's a promise of a brighter future for libraries
across the nation. We're raising hopes, providing free memberships, trainings, and sample
policies that benefit communities nationwide."
The Daily Caller has taken note of the new organization. In the article, Kleinman states, “School policies right now recommend, basically that anything goes and that it’s literally age discrimination to keep a child from any material,” Kleinman told the DCNF. “New policy guidance from the World Library Association is going to recommend that schools follow laws or case laws like Board of Education vs. Pico, a 1982 U.S. Supreme Court case that allows schools to remove educationally unsuitable and pervasively vulgar materials and to do so immediately. So schools now can have books that are for children that comply with common sense, the law and community standards, instead of what’s going on in the news right now.”
The ALA is the head of the snake when it comes to the indoctrination of librarians around the nation. A constant stream of seminars, articles, and resources pour forth into the email boxes of teachers and librarians on a daily basis. A lot of it concentrates on LGBTQ+, gender ideology, Critical Race Theory (CRT), Social Emotional Learning (SEL) and Diversity Equity Inclusion (DEI).
Through a highly developed web of associated organizations, not least of which are the state chapters like the Missouri Library Association (MLA), librarians are trained in how to implement programs that push a political agenda often having little to do with a local community. The ALA runs a top-down organization, which means your local library is unduly influenced by a political agenda that is most likely the antithesis of the community's culture and values.
Barely out of the gates, activist librarians and their supporters are already attacking the WLA. In this article, which tries to sell the narrative that citizens who want to restrict books according to age are evil book banners, we see lawfare implemented. The political extremists are going to fight hard to keep that smut in front of children. They will attack parents and citizens who merely seek to prevent the sexualization of children at schools and libraries.
The Connecticut Centinal has this to say about the new WLA: "Library watchdog Dan Kleinman has just launched the much-needed World Library Association (WLA) to compete with the Marxist-led American Library Association (ALA), which has come under fire most recently for a potential First Amendment violation over its attempt to silence Brave Books, while at the same time promoting highly sexualized "Drag Queen Story Hours" at public libraries across the country."
BizPac Review has also covered the new WLA.
By providing an alternative to extremist organizations like the ALA, the World Library Association will help local libraries and schools to establish local control. You can follow the WLA on Twitter, and here at Dan Kleinman's Twitter, as well as the WLA website.
https://twitter.com/MassResistance/status/1686398987904184320?s=20
Monday, July 31, 2023
Brave Books Event this Saturday!
Brave Books has organized a nationwide library story time for children. See Kirk Cameron's video below the flyer for information on the August 5, See You At The Library event. Local citizens are hosting an event at all four Christian County Library branches. Children and parents can look forward to a story (or two!) of virtue, as well as a craft and snacks.
You can also find information on our Facebook page.