Does the first amendment protect obscene materials in schools?

1 year ago
587

It is incredibly important that when passing legislation to solve a problem that we do not create new ones by making the wrong argument. Upon review of some laws that were passed this year, we found just that.

This then led us to take a closer look at a school board meeting in Williamson County regarding objectionable materials in public schools and a vote to keep or remove certain books from school libraries. School board members agreed they had a duty per state law to review and potentially remove the books in question. School board members agreed that the books contained questionable, or at least age-inappropriate material. And then proceeded to keep the books in the library.

We continue to be astounded at the actions of elected officials and courts in perverting the First Amendment in such a way that would protect child predators and continue to expose minors to obscene and mature content.

Loading 5 comments...