Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Banned Books Week Interview

In 2011, Banned Books Week runs from September 24th through October 1st this year. Contrary to popular opinion, book banning and censorship is alive and well in the United States. The only thing that's changed is the language used to describe it. These days, books are "challenged," meaning that some group feels they should be banned from schools or libraries. The challenged books then undergo a review process, but often end up being removed without anyone ever saying that the book was banned.

Another tactic is to just ban part of the book. This can happen when those buying schools books tell the publisher that they won't accept a textbook or literature anthology for use in the classroom unless certain specific changes are made. This can result in rampant and heavy-handed editing of classic works of literature or even changing history itself to make it more politically correct.

I spoke with Joan DelFattore, professor of English and legal studies at the University of Delaware to discuss textbook adoption and classroom censorship that is taking place in high schools at the state level and some of the issues that creates when the kids affected by it reach college.

Here are the links to the three part series of interviews as published at Yahoo! News:
Read them to find out what's going on in the classroom and how three states can effectively dictate what gets included in textboks all across the country.

Friday, September 9, 2011

2001 Anthrax Attacks Remembered

This weekend marks the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. It was just a week after that that letters containing deadly highly purified anthrax spores were sent out to several media outlets in New York City. Those letters were followed up with similar letters to Senators Leahy and Daschle in Washington, DC.

The anthrax spores were so easily spread that postal workers employed in the post offices which handles the letters began contracting anthrax. One woman in Connecticut died after a letter she received from an unrelated source simply came into contact with one of the anthrax letters. In all 5 died, more than 30 were infected, and thousands were medicated as a precaution.

I recently spoke to one of the people responsible for sequencing the genome of the anthrax spores used in the attack to determine its origin for the FBI. I asked her to talk about the investigation and whether we are safer today because of new precautions put in place after those anthrax attacks in 2001. Read the interviews at the following links: