Remember when the REPUGNANTCAN PARTY MANTRA was to “get the government out of our lives”?
Yeah, I remember, too, even if the party of the rich and powerful has forgotten.
Take Opinion 25-0069 by the Louisiana Attorney General’s office, for example.
The opinion, requested by State Rep. Beryl Amadee (R-Houma), was authored by Assistant Attorney General Amanda LaGroue, attempts to further restrict access to objectionable material in public libraries, a thinly-disguised effort at censorship, a favorite ploy of authoritative governments throughout history.
Basically, LaGroue’s opinion pretends to safeguard the “fundamental rights of parents to direct the reading, listening and viewing choices of their minor children,” when in fact, it is intended as little more than a means to keep “objectionable” material away from everyone, no matter that some of us never asked for “protection.”
The primary reason for alarm is not that we won’t be able to read racy material with sexual content—we can get a bellyful of that off the Internet any time we wish—but that it opens the door to far more widespread censorship. It’s a slippery slope to the government’s being able to silence criticism such as already being experienced by STEPHEN COLBERT at CBS, which earlier KNUCKLED UNDER to Cankle Ankles Trump.
Louisiana Citizens Against Censorship, an all-volunteer 501(C)(4) organization, however, has been quick to challenge the legal opinion (it should be pointed out here that AG opinions are just that—opinions—and are not legally binding).
In a two-page response to the opinion, the organization said, “Louisiana Citizens Against Censorship (LA-CAC) strongly disagrees with the Attorney General’s expansive interpretation of the term “access” in La. R.S. 25:225 as including a minor’s mere ability to “physically encounter” library materials.”
- Parents have the right to guide their own children’s reading — not everyone else’s. Public libraries should empower parental choice through opt-in tools, not impose blanket restrictions that affect all families.
- Public libraries serve the entire community. They are not instruments of ideological enforcement but institutions committed to intellectual freedom and diverse viewpoints.
- Professional librarians, not political bodies, are trained to curate collections. Decisions about acquisitions should rely on established professional standards, not fluctuating political pressures or vague community standards.
- Book restriction policies disproportionately target marginalized voices. Across the country, books challenged as “sexually explicit” frequently include works by or about LGBTQ+ individuals, people of color, and survivors of abuse.
- There is a constitutional difference between obscenity and content some find uncomfortable. The Supreme Court’s obscenity standard in Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973) is narrow. Most materials targeted in library disputes do not meet this definition and are fully protected speech.
- Libraries are spaces of voluntary engagement. Simply being able to “physically encounter” a book on a shelf does not compel reading it. Families remain free to supervise, restrict, or guide their children’s selections.
- Overbroad restrictions invite litigation and waste taxpayer resources. Policies that chill access to constitutionally protected materials are likely to face costly legal challenges. The response cited three legal precedents in which the U.S. Supreme Court has upheld unfettered access to material from libraries.
“The Attorney General’s opinion effectively equates ‘access’ with passive exposure and opens the door to segregating or cordoning off lawful materials based on subjective determinations of ‘sexually explicit’ content,” LA-CAC said. “Such an approach raises serious constitutional concerns:
- It risks viewpoint discrimination, which is presumptively unconstitutional.
- It substitutes political pressure for professional library standards.
- It chills the freedom of minors—who do possess First Amendment rights—to explore ideas.
- It burdens families who do not wish to have government gatekeepers substitute their judgment for parental discretion.”
The organization further asserted:
- Parents have the right to guide their own children’s reading — not everyone else’s. Public libraries should empower parental choice through opt-in tools, not impose blanket restrictions that affect all families.
- Public libraries serve the entire community. They are not instruments of ideological enforcement but institutions committed to intellectual freedom and diverse viewpoints.
- Professional librarians, not political bodies, are trained to curate collections. Decisions about acquisitions should rely on established professional standards, not fluctuating political pressures or vague community standards.
- Book restriction policies disproportionately target marginalized voices. Across the country, books challenged as “sexually explicit” frequently include works by or about LGBTQ+ individuals, people of color, and survivors of abuse.
- There is a constitutional difference between obscenity and content some find uncomfortable.
- The Supreme Court’s obscenity standard in Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973) is narrow. Most materials targeted in library disputes do not meet this definition and are fully protected speech.
- Libraries are spaces of voluntary engagement. Simply being able to “physically encounter” a book on a shelf does not compel reading it. Families remain free to supervise, restrict, or guide their children’s selections.
- Overbroad restrictions invite litigation and waste taxpayer resources. Policies that chill access to constitutionally protected materials are likely to face costly legal challenges.
Urging lawmakers and library boards to interpret La. R.S. 25:225 “narrowly and in harmony with constitutional protections,” LA-CAC said the protection of parental rights “should not come at the expense of other parents’ rights, minor’s First Amendment freedoms, or the long-standing role of public libraries as bastions of intellectual freedom.
“Ultimately, the freedom to read is not a partisan issue—it is a fundamental constitutional right.”
Accordingly, the organization called for policies that:
- Respect constitutional limits
- Preserve professional collection standards, and
- Protect the freedom to read for all Louisiana families.



