A panic is sweeping the land — or at least something like it has unnerved CNN, Vox and other precincts of progressive sensibility. They are alarmed that millions of Americans are being misled by "fake news."
As someone whose inbox has lately bulged with items about Hillary Clinton's impending demise due to a concealed, terminal illness; who has shaken her head at "breaking news" that Turkish coup plotters had gotten their hands on NATO nuclear weapons at Incirlik air base; and who has sighed at the endless iterations of stories like "47 Clinton friends who mysteriously turned up dead," I don't deny that misinformation, disinformation, rumors and malicious gossip appear to have achieved new salience in the national conversation. I shun right-leaning publications and sites that traffic in this sort of drivel.
(CNSNews.com) – Accomack County Public Schools in Virginia has temporarily suspended study of the novels To Kill a Mockingbird and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn after a parent filed a complaint that the classic literature contained "racial slurs".
During a November 15 school board meeting, Marie Rothstein-Williams said that her biracial son, who is in high school, struggled to get through a page that contained multiple racial slurs.
"I keep hearing 'This is a classic, this is a classic,' she said. "I understand this is a literature classic, but at some point I feel the children will not or do not truly get the classic part, the literature part — which I'm not disputing, this is great literature — but there is so much racial slurs in there and offensive wording that you can't get past that.
"Right now, we are a nation divided as it is," she continued. "I teach my son he is the best of both worlds, and I do not want him to feel otherwise….It's not just even a black and white thing. …There's other literature they can use….
"So what are we teaching our children? We're validating that these words are acceptable, and they're not acceptable, by no means."
Rothstein-Williams' complaint will be filed as a "Request for Reconsideration of Learning Resources" under the school district's policy manual. "The material will then be reviewed by a committee that will consist of the principal, the library media specialist, the classroom teacher (if involved), a parent and/or student, and the complainant."
The committee will then make a final recommendation to the principal and superintendent to either continue to use or withdraw the novels in question from the curriculum.
The Accomack County School's Policy Manual also states that all materials cited in the complaint must be suspended until a final determination is made. The complainant may appeal the committee's decision.
However, not all parents agreed with the school district's decision to suspend study of the classic novels, which explore issues surrounding race in America.
"Everybody's read it… it didn't change a difference in my views at all," Catherine Glaser, a Accomack County resident, told WAVY-TV. "I'd like my son to read those books… my daughter's mixed, and I don't have a problem with it. I love those books."