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Show-Me state censorship: Proposed new rule threatens Missouriâs public libraries
On Nov. 15, Missouri began accepting public comments on a , proposed by the Missouri Secretary of Stateâs office, that seeks to keep books out of libraries rather than welcoming would-be readers in. The proposed rule will impose sharp limits and heavy burdens on what books Missourians can access â and what events they may host â in their community libraries.
If enacted, the new rule would:
Bar state libraries from purchasing books intended for grown-ups.
Sounds unbelievable, but itâs true. The new rule would restrict public libraries from using state funds to âpurchase or acquire materials in any form that appeal to the prurient interest of any minor.â Practically speaking, this would bar public libraries from acquiring any book that discusses sex.
Thatâs a First Amendment problem. The Supreme Court of the United States made clear more than 60 years ago that the government canât reduce adults to âreading only what is fit for children.â In that case, Butler v. Michigan, the Court struck down a Michigan law that prohibited the distribution of publications that contributed âto the corruption of the morals of youth.â The Court found that the law âcurtails one of those liberties of the individual . . . that history has attested as the indispensable conditions for the maintenance and progress of a free society.â The proposed new rule would do the same thing.
Require librarians to check ID â and parental permission slips â at the door.
Is that a library or a nightclub? Because under the proposed rule, thereâs a bouncer at the door checking IDs.
The new rule would prohibit librarians from âknowingly grant[ing] access to any minor any material in any form not approved by the minorâs parent or guardian.â Perhaps the rule was intended to allow parents to instruct librarians to limit their own childâs access to certain materials, but the rule as written can be read as requiring positive consent. It doesnât require, for example, that librarians refuse access to materials disapproved by the parent.
A public library at the mercy of state censorship loses its power as âthe quintessential locus of the receipt of information.â
The proposed language means that a library that grants anyone under the age of eighteen âaccessâ to âmaterialâ â that is, the ability to pick a book up off of a shelf, or read a flier on a bulletin board â has to have a parentâs consent in advance. And because the rule is unclear, at least some librarians, with funding on the line, will rationally choose the stricter interpretation.
Yet even if the rule only meant that parents could instruct librarians not to give their teenager âaccessâ to certain âmaterialâ in the library, that leaves librarians at the mercy of any vague instruction a parent gives. And it means that parents can dictate what books even a teenager on the cusp of turning eighteen may read.
Given that the age of consent in Missouri is as low as , that means that high schoolers can consent to sex â but they canât read about it.
Require state libraries to impose ratings on all events, even outside events.
Coming soon to a dictionary, book signing, or class at your local library: mandatory, state-imposed . Under the proposed rule, any âevent or presentationâ must be given an âage-appropriate designationâ that must be âaffixedâ to any âpublication, website, or advertisement forâ the event. Because of the provisionâs grammar, the word âpublicationâ could even be read to require that every copy of a book (a âpublicationâ) at a book signing have a warning attached to it. Regardless, the government cannot compel private actors to affix these labels to their materials or websites. Accordingly, this provision should be cut in its entirety.
Notably, the policy implies that it applies to books in the library: it says that any person can challenge the âdesignationâ affixed to any âmaterialâ in the library. But the rule doesnât actually require âmaterialâ to have a designation at all, unless itâs part of an âevent or presentation.â
Allow would-be censors to dispute any library determination or event.
And if âany personâ disagrees with your warning, they can formally challenge it â even if their own children donât attend the event, and even if they donât have children at all. Itâs all too easy to imagine this provision being abused by would-be censors and trolls of all types.
Donât like the library hosting a meeting organized by people who donât share your politics or faith? Challenging their designation is an easy, cost-free way to tangle it up in red tape and review. Donât want the library lending out copies of a book that disputes your beliefs? Challenge it and see how long it lasts on the shelves.
The bottom line: The proposed rule threatens Missouri libraries.
The law is clear that libraries, literature, and speech canât be child-proofed. âEven where the protection of children is the object, the constitutional limits on governmental action apply.â Thatâs the Supreme Court in 2011 in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association. Nearly 50 years ago, in Erznoznik v. Jacksonville (1975), the Court concluded that expression âthat is neither obscene as to youths nor subject to some other legitimate proscription cannot be suppressed solely to protect the young from ideas or images that a legislative body thinks unsuitable for them.â
ERZNOZNIK v. CITY OF JACKSONVILLE
Supreme Court Cases
Whether a Florida ordinance making it a public nuisance and a punishable offense for a drive-in movie theater to exhibit films containing nudity, when the screen is visible from a public street or place, violates the First Amendment guarantee to freedom of speech and expression.
Courts have likewise governmental attempts to prevent adults from accessing information in public libraries on the basis that the information is unsuitable for children. Nor does the government have an in ârestricting access to non-obscene, fully-protected library books solely on the basis of the majorityâs disagreement with their perceived message.â A public library at the mercy of state censorship loses its as âthe quintessential locus of the receipt of information.â
The new rule may be less than a blanket ban reaching even private ownership, but that doesnât remedy the threat. The rule advances a soft ban by making it more difficult for librarians to justify even having certain books available. âWhen the purpose and design of a statute is to regulate speech by reason of its content,â the Supreme Court has observed, âspecial consideration or latitude is not afforded to the Government merely because the law can somehow be described as a burden rather than outright suppression.â
The public has the right to comment on this proposal until Dec. 15. Comments may be submitted by mailing the Office of the Missouri Secretary of State at PO Box 1767, Jefferson City, MO 65102 or by email to comments@sos.mo.gov.
Take action now. Submit a comment.
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