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Let’s see if it was “banned”…
Here’s me with my daughter Sequoia’s copy of “Your Favorite Seuss,” which includes–and features at the top of the outer book jacket–“And to Think That I Saw it on Mulberry Street.” Will the police come for me? Will the internet ban it? Let’s take the risk!
A business deciding they no longer want to publish racist shit is not censorship. It’s the family’s right. It’s the business’ right. It’s capitalism. That’s what we want, right?
Right?
About Post Author
Kari Martindale
Kari Martindale likes words, so she uses them a lot. Kari sits on the Board of Maryland Writers' Association and is involved with various nonprofits. She writes spoken word poetry, children's books, and other stuff, like whatever blog post you just read. Kari has visited over 35 countries and all 50 States, and is always planning her next road trip. She likes her family a lot; they tolerate her just fine.
The debate isn’t about the company’s right to stop printing. But please keep amusing us.