
The Military's K-12 Schools Are Banning Award-Winning Kids’ Books To Appease Trump
HuffPost
HuffPost obtained an internal list of books “quarantined” in Defense Department-run schools because they talk about transgender people and Black history.
WASHINGTON – A New York Times bestseller that chronicles the true story of a nonbinary teenager set on fire by another teen while riding a bus in Oakland, California.
A collection of stories and poems by a New York Times bestselling author about the feelings and experiences of teenagers in love.
An NPR “best book of the year” award winner featuring authors and illustrators sharing personal stories about their conversations with their kids about race in America today.
This is a small sampling of the kinds of books that have been marked for “quarantine” in school libraries run by the Defense Department’s Education Activity, or DoDEA. For months, officials atop this agency have been quietly flagging and banning dozens of books in response to President Donald Trump’s executive orders requiring federal agencies to eliminate programs or materials related to diversity, equity and inclusion.
The effect is that tens of thousands of kids in U.S. military families living on military bases worldwide no longer have access at their school libraries to celebrated and highly recommended books that happen to talk about LGBTQ+ people and people of color.













