Wednesday, January 29, 2025

The Itsy Bitsy Spider, Part Two

 

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David Rice continues his article series about how public-private partnerships serve to benefit wealthy donors, NGOs, and backdoor government implementation of progressive policies. Media entities like the Springfield Daily Citizen serve as the propaganda vehicle to gain buy-in from unsuspecting citizens.

For a powerful example from his article:

"The push for easy abortions is having an effect. Fewer and fewer individuals are coming up through the school system. You can see the immediate impact Roe V. Wade had on the age group about 50 years ago. There are far fewer people in the age group of 45-49 than in any other group. That’s my age group. We were aborted eagerly by our parent’s generation for their Free Love. We should be furious. Look at what’s happening to the youngest group under 5. They are being aborted, too. 

Why do politicians talk about it like it’s a childcare crisis then when fewer children need childcare? They see that the largest group is preparing to leave high school schools across the nation, which are going to look empty, and one of the largest unions in the country will have teachers who aren’t employed."

Folks, the childcare crisis that Gov. Kehoe, House Speaker Jon Patterson, and Sen. Cindy O'Laughlin are pushing is FAKE. It's all about organizational and government control of US and our CHILDREN. It is high time to wake up.

Read the whole thing HERE. Part One is linked there, too.

Monday, January 27, 2025

Ozark School Board Meeting at 4 p.m.

 

@righttowinozarks #ozarkmo #schoolsystem ♬ original sound - righttowinozarks

The Spider Web of Propaganda

 

David Rice has written a series on the propaganda web that surrounds our local communities in Missouri. It isn't just the national media--it's here and it's insidious.

I am pleased to introduce his series, "The Itsy Bitsy Spider" with an article published at Hick Christian, "How the Spider Web of Propaganda Affects You."

First in his series drops tomorrow HERE.


Saturday, January 25, 2025

Ozark School District Board in a Pickle

 By Gretchen Garrity

I have written previously about the vacancy on the Ozark School Board HERE, and spoke with Brian Rohlman (see HERE) about the Board's current intention to appoint a member to the vacancy left by Guy Calloway.

Instead of appointing someone until the election in April, the Board is determined to appoint someone to fill the position until April 2026, when Calloway's position would have been up for election.

Citizens have investigated the circumstances surrounding the timing of Calloway's resignation. Calloway moved to Florida and established residency some time in 2024, certainly before his resignation in December. He did not attend the November meeting, nor the December meeting.

The Board, with counsel from their St. Louis attorney, Celynda Brasher, believes they are justified in appointing someone to fill the unexpired term left by Calloway. However, state statute tells another story. Ozark Board Member Christina Tonsing has just published her investigation of the law, as well as a letter she sent to the Board with her findings (see below). Read Tonsing's whole article HERE.


 The Ozark Board is in a pickle at this point. It looks as if they have decided to thwart the voters and choose a individual of their choice to fill the unexpired term. Hopefully, the publication of new information about the situation will give them time to rethink their position, and allow citizens to elect a board member this April.

There is a meeting to appoint a replacement for Calloway on Monday, January 27 at 4pm in the OIC conference room. The meeting is open to the public.

Friday, January 24, 2025

The Book Ban Hoax is Coming to an End

 From The U.S. Department of Education:

"The U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) today announced that it has dismissed 11 complaints related to so-called “book bans.” The complaints alleged that local school districts’ removal of age-inappropriate, sexually explicit, or obscene materials from their school libraries created a hostile environment for students – a meritless claim premised upon a dubious legal theory. Effective Jan. 24, 2025, OCR has rescinded all department guidance issued under the theory that a school district’s removal of age-inappropriate books from its libraries may violate civil rights laws. OCR is also dismissing six additional pending allegations of book banning and will no longer employ a “book ban coordinator” to investigate local school districts and parents working to protect students from obscene content.

“By dismissing these complaints and eliminating the position and authorities of a so-called ‘book ban coordinator,’ the department is beginning the process of restoring the fundamental rights of parents to direct their children’s education,” said Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Craig Trainor. “The department adheres to the deeply rooted American principle that local control over public education best allows parents and teachers alike to assess the educational needs of their children and communities. Parents and school boards have broad discretion to fulfill that important responsibility. These decisions will no longer be second-guessed by the Office for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education.”

Read it all HERE.

Dan Kleinman of Safe Libraries:

Public Meeting at the Christian County Library Today at 4 p.m.


 Agenda HERE. Springfield News-Leader covers the search for an executive director HERE (Paywall).

Thursday, January 23, 2025

An Open Letter to Nixa SABR

Dear Nixa SABR Students,

It has been brought to my attention that your group has commented on the recent appointment of Mary Hernandez de Carl to the Christian County Library Board of Trustees. See screenshots below:

From: Nixa SABR Facebook

While I understand you might be concerned about censorship and book banning, you can be assured that no books have been banned or censored. How can I be so sure of that? Well, let me link to a well-researched article written by Professor Rita Koganzon. Professor Koganzon earned a PhD in Government from Harvard and is currently an associate professor at the University of North Carolina.

In an interview with the Jack Miller Center, Koganzon gives a brief explanation of her article, "There Is No Such Thing as a Banned Book: Censorship, Authority, and the School Book Controversies of the 1970s."  

Koganzon says:

"In the article, I argue that the “right to read” (like most students’ rights, as it happens) is a mirage and a strategic invention by educators who wanted to evade parental and community oversight for their curricular choices – in this case, the books they selected for school curricula and school libraries. Appeals to the “right to read” have made our subsequent book removal and censorship debates impossible to resolve because they allow one side – mostly the side that wants to shelve controversial books that parents and boards disapprove of – to hide behind “student rights” instead of making the positive case for their selections and being accountable to the ordinary governance structure of schools for them.

These ordinary forms of democratic school governance – oversight by elected boards – have come to be maligned as censorship and “book banning,” which only empowers unelected and unrepresentative educators to govern local schools."

It should not be surprising to high school students such as yourselves, that you do not yet enjoy full rights of citizens who have attained majority age. For instance, you cannot drink alcohol in a restaurant, or buy cigarettes. You cannot legally access pornographic materials, and so on. These restrictions are reasonably imposed not only for your own good, but for the good of society.

The moral and emotional degradation of children is a scandal. Minor children are rightfully under the protection of their parents, and most parents abide by societal restrictions for them until such time as they are able to reasonably assume the rights of adulthood.

I recommend reading all of Professor Koganzon's article, which you can find HERE. Her article is 26 pages in length, but she makes a very persuasive argument against the political agenda of groups like the American Library Association, while properly defining "book banning" and "censorship." 

The article is scholarly in nature and well-referenced, so I hope you will read it with open minds and hearts, seeking to understand.

Regarding the Nixa SABR comments about the appointment of Mary Hernandez de Carl, I believe you are mistaken in several points. 

First, our county commission is composed of officials elected to represent the will of the voters. As our representatives, they are tasked with making sure our county library is governed in such a manner as carries out the will of the voters who elected them. Over the past two years, citizens have approached the commission with their concerns over the many age-inappropriate books in our county library system. 

Presiding Commissioner Lynn Morris held several town hall meetings in which citizens overwhelmingly requested a change at the library. In accordance with the will of the citizens, the commissioners appointed individuals whose perspective was in concert with the majority of the voting public.

That Sheila Michaels was not elected as Western Commissioner (she was a recent candidate), or appointed as a library trustee has more to do with the will of citizens than with a curriculum vitae. Qualifications of educational experience are not the only qualifications that tax-paying citizens seek when choosing candidates.

Hernandez de Carl is also well educated and more than qualified to serve as a trustee for the library district. Governing a Library District includes much more than librarian skills. Business management, people management, facilities management, financial management are all aspects of a growing library system. Those who have been appointed in the last year, including Hernandez de Carl bring decades of business experience among other qualifications. 

Additionally, Hernandez de Carl's dedication to the library and children has been amply proven over the last two years. That SABR would attack her with inflammatory words like "notoriously," and suggest she advocated widely for book removals or restrictions is a mischaracterization, and there are news articles that attest to dozens of parents fighting to properly curate books for the Nixa School Library. Hernandez de Carl spoke one time to the Nixa School Board.

Like most of the individuals fighting for parents' rights and the safety of children, Hernandez de Carl sought to compromise with the library staff and board. That the staff and former board refused to budge is the reason there is now a new board, but for one (Trustee Janis Hagen). It became clear there was a political agenda that took precedence over parents' rights and children's emotional and mental safety.

Perhaps you do not know yet, but kudos, awards, certificates, and publicity are often handed out as a way of legitimizing persons and ideas. While Michaels may have received several awards, these are meaningless to an electorate who is seeking to protect the rights of parents and the safety of children. Hernandez de Carl's advocacy of both made her a natural choice for a county commission that is responsive to the will of citizens.

From: Nixa SABR Facebook
 

Additionally, you may want to revisit taking a reporter's words as gospel, especially regarding Commissioner Morris' statement about flipping a coin. There is video HERE (the appointment part begins at the 1:00:00 mark) to which I hope you will give a listen. Morris was simply expressing that it was a difficult decision between his choice of Michaels and Hernandez de Carl. It was a bit of hyperbole, and most likely intended to acknowledge the competency of both candidates.

What should we notice here? Sheila Michaels did not receive one vote for the appointment. Commissioner Hosea Bilyeu's choice was candidate Ruth Maynard, not Michaels.

SABR is mistaken to make Hernandez de Carl's appointment an attack on Michaels, when it was Ruth Maynard who received one of three votes. Commissioner Morris addressed Michaels because she was present at the commission meeting when Hernandez de Carl was chosen by two of the three commissioners. He spoke well of her and indicated his decision was between her and Hernandez de Carl. Even if Morris had chosen Michaels, the vote would have had to be retaken as there would not have been a majority of any candidate.

Additionally, the reporter mischaracterized the words of Commissioner Morris, and you--the students of Nixa SABR--took as gospel her words without fact-checking. His kindness was used against him. Context matters. Perhaps this is the moment for SABR students to understand the nature of our media. Unfortunately, the press is mostly a propaganda endeavor, and often fails to represent a fair and balanced perspective.

In closing, I hope the students who comprise Nixa SABR will examine how and why they posted such sentiments on Facebook. If it came from emotion or from friendly relationships, it should be self-scrutinized for bias. You all are certainly entitled to publish your opinions--thank goodness for free speech--but informed opinions garner more respect.

Kind regards,

Gretchen Garrity