FFRF to Cobb County, Ga.: Ban the bible, too

The Freedom From Religion Foundation is insisting that Cobb County School District in Georgia include the bible in its current book-banning campaign.

The district recently started banning books from its schools based on ā€œhighly inappropriate, sexually explicitā€ content, removing Flamer, by Mike Curato, and Me and Earl and the Dying Girl, by Jesse Andrews, from all of its schools ā€” supposedly because of their sexual content. John Floresta, the districtā€™s chief strategy and accountability officer, exclaimed: ā€œProtecting our students from sexually explicit content isnā€™t controversial, itā€™s what our parents expect.ā€ And he continued, ā€œOur board and superintendent are clear ā€” any book, video or lesson which contains sexually explicit content is entirely unacceptable and has no place in our schools.ā€

The bible certainly fits the bill, FFRF points out.

ā€œThe bible contains sexually explicit content, and thus based on the districtā€™s ā€˜clearā€™ policy, it is ā€˜entirely unacceptable and has no place in [your] schools,ā€™ā€ FFRF Staff Attorney Chris Line writes to Cobb County School Board Chair Brad Wheeler. ā€œThe district cannot ban books because it disagrees with the viewpoint expressed while allowing other sexually explicit books to remain because it supports their viewpoint.ā€

As FFRFā€™s letter documents, many bible verses display a lewd, depraved, pornographic view of sex and women, with sexual violence often ordered or countenanced by the biblical deity. These include sordid tales of victims forced to marry their rapists, graphic sexual depictions, and countless references to sperm, intercourse, menstruation, homosexuality, bestiality, adultery and ā€œharlots and whores.ā€

FFRF has compiled a list of nearly 150 bible verses displaying a ā€œpornographic view of sex and women, lewdness, depravity and sexual violence often ordered or countenanced by the biblical deityā€ titled An X-Rated Book: Sex & Obscenity in the Bible. FFRF Co-President Dan Barker has written an entire book on the evils of the bible, GOD: The Most Unpleasant Character in All Fiction. Chapters document ā€œdivinelyā€ ordered genocide, infanticide and filicide, among many other atrocities, as well as the biblical deityā€™s racism, sexism, slavemongering and sadomasochism. These verses are one reason why FFRF makes available bible warning stickers to place on hotel bibles stating, ā€œWarning: Literal belief in this book may endanger your health and life.ā€ 

And the bible historically  has been responsible for unjust wars, genocide, antisemitism, violent extremism, subjugation of women and pervasive racism. Throughout the Crusades, the Inquisition, the witch hunts, chattel slavery, the Holocaust and the history of homophobia, the bible looms large.

ā€œWhile FFRF abhors book banning, these school districts canā€™t engage in viewpoint discrimination,ā€ points out FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. ā€œSince the district has started this dangerous folly of banning books, it must evaluate books on a content-neutral basis. And if it does so, the district will see that the bible must be banned under its new policy.ā€

FFRF advocates, above all, for freedom of thought and opposes the concept of banning books from school libraries. The best solution is to leave a diversity of viewpoints in school libraries, and trust students to explore complex topics themselves. However, the bible may not be given special treatment.

ā€œSo long as you plan to ban other books, and the books you have already banned remain unavailable, you must be even-handed about your purge and immediately remove the bible as well,ā€ FFRFā€™s letter concludes. ā€œIf you find that the vast amount of sexually explicit material in the bible does not warrant its removal from district schools, then this same lower standard must be applied to all books with similar content.ā€

The Freedom From Religion Foundation is a national nonprofit organization with more than 40,000 members and several chapters across the country, including over 600 members and a local chapter in Georgia. Our purposes are to protect the constitutional principle of separation between state and church, and to educate the public on matters relating to nontheism.

Freedom From Religion Foundation

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