September 29, 2017

Let's take a closer look at that Cambridge, Massachusetts elementary school librarian who rejected the gift of Dr. Seuss books from Melania Trump.

You've seen the story, I'm sure. Here's Vanity Fair: "An Elementary School Librarian Doesn’t Want Dr. Seuss Books from Melania Trump/She wrote that Seuss is 'a bit of a cliché, a tired and worn ambassador for children’s literature.'" I've seen some abuse of this woman, Liz Phipps Soeiro, and here's something, in particular, that set me off:



I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great. This is a fabulous, beautiful librarian look, and if this says Rosa Klebb to you, I guess you're just not into the glory of librarians. I love the scarf, the bright-lipstick/no-eye-makeup look, the pinned-back hair, the glasses. It's utterly charming, well constructed and a lot of fun, like a character in a children's book. Perfection.

Now, let's read her words on the occasion of her school's getting selected — as one school in each state is selected — to receive a set of Dr. Seuss books:

Thank you for the ten Dr. Seuss titles that you sent my school library in recognition of this year’s National Read a Book Day. (Sent second-day air, no less! That must have been expensive.) I’m proud that you recognized my school as something special. It truly is. 
That's a friendly, nice thanks.
Our beautiful and diverse student body is made up of children from all over the world; from different socioeconomic statuses; with a spectrum of gender expressions and identities; with a range of abilities; and of varied racial, ethnic, and religious backgrounds.
She makes it clear what kind of a school this is, making it all the more interesting that this is the school Melania Trump chose to recognize.  
According to the White House website, you selected one school per state by “working with the Department of Education to identify schools with programs that have achieved high standards of excellence, recognized by State and National awards and Blue Ribbon Awards…” Each of those carefully vetted schools received ten books: Seuss-isms!; Because a Little Bug Went KaChoo; What Pet Should I Get?; The Cat in the Hat; I Can Read with My Eyes Shut!; One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish; The Foot Book; Wacky Wednesday; Green Eggs and Ham; and Oh, the Places You’ll Go!.

My students were interested in reading your enclosed letter and impressed with the beautiful bookplates with your name and the indelible White House stamp...
The gift is acknowledged, and we can see that the children were able to enjoy the recognition that their school received.
... however, we will not be keeping the titles for our collection. 
That's the kicker.
I’d like to respectfully offer my explanation.
Respectfully
My school and my library are indeed award-winning. I work in a district that has plenty of resources, which contributes directly to “excellence.” Cambridge, Massachusetts, is an amazing city with robust social programming, a responsive city government, free all-day kindergarten, and well-paid teachers (relatively speaking — many of us can’t afford to live in the city in which we teach). My students have access to a school library with over nine thousand volumes and a librarian with a graduate degree in library science. Multiple studies show that schools with professionally staffed libraries improve student performance. The American Association of School Librarians has a great infographic on these findings. Many schools around the state and country can’t compete.

Yearly per-pupil spending in Cambridge is well over $20,000; our city’s values are such that given a HUGE range in the socioeconomic status of our residents, we believe that each and every child deserves the best free education possible and are working hard to make that a reality (most classrooms maintain a 60/40 split between free/reduced lunch and paid lunch). This offers our Title I school and the district a lot of privilege and room for programming and pedagogy to foster “high standards of excellence.” Even so, we still struggle to close the achievement gap, retain teachers of color, and dismantle the systemic white supremacy in our institution. But hell, we test well! And in the end, it appears that data — and not children — are what matters.
The school is good because great resources have been invested in education in this place.
Meanwhile, school libraries around the country are being shuttered. Cities like Philadelphia, Chicago, and Detroit are suffering through expansion, privatization, and school “choice” with no interest in outcomes of children, their families, their teachers, and their schools. Are those kids any less deserving of books simply because of circumstances beyond their control? 
Why give gifts to those who have already received so much? The recognition that's embodied in the gift seems to presume that all the children and teachers started with the same quality of schools, and these students did more with what they had. But that's not true.
Why not go out of your way to gift books to underfunded and underprivileged communities that continue to be marginalized and maligned by policies put in place by Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos? Why not reflect on those “high standards of excellence” beyond only what the numbers suggest? Secretary DeVos would do well to scaffold and lift schools instead of punishing them with closures and slashed budgets.
Phipps Soeiro wants better schools for all children. If her school is the great example that's getting recognition, why not do more to help other schools be like this school, not act as if giving a few books to this school would help inspire kids and teachers at bad schools to compete and achieve more? It's a policy argument. Phipps Soeiro is using the act of declining the gift to draw attention to her disagreement with the administration's education policy.
So, my school doesn’t have a NEED for these books. And then there’s the matter of the books themselves. 
Now, we get to the part of the letter that's getting the most attention. The attack (or seeming attack) on Dr. Seuss:
You may not be aware of this, but Dr. Seuss is a bit of a cliché, a tired and worn ambassador for children’s literature. As First Lady of the United States, you have an incredible platform with world-class resources at your fingertips. Just down the street you have access to a phenomenal children’s librarian: Dr. Carla Hayden, the current Librarian of Congress. I have no doubt Dr. Hayden would have given you some stellar recommendations.
Instead of highlighting books that we all know, you could have chosen some newer, more obscure writers and brought attention and honor to them.  
Another fact that many people are unaware of is that Dr. Seuss’s illustrations are steeped in racist propaganda, caricatures, and harmful stereotypes. Open one of his books (If I Ran a Zoo or And to Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street, for example), and you’ll see the racist mockery in his art. Grace Hwang Lynch’s School Library Journal article, “Is the Cat in the Hat Racist? Read Across America Shifts Away from Dr. Seuss and Toward Diverse Books,” reports on Katie Ishizuka’s work analyzing the minstrel characteristics and trope nature of Seuss’s characters. Scholar Philip Nel’s new book, Was the Cat in the Hat Black? The Hidden Racism of Children’s Literature, and the Need for Diverse Books, further explores and shines a spotlight on the systemic racism and oppression in education and literature.
Certainly, children's literature deserves analysis. It conveys values. It shapes young minds. Whether a particular book is actually racist (in some blatant or subtle ways) is a matter we will disagree about, but it's certainly a great topic of conversation, and it's a fine thing for Phipps Soeiro to use her moment in the spotlight to get the conversation started. I've had my suspicions about the Cat in the Hat myself (mostly that he seems to represent a child molester, bringing his special kind of fun to the house when the mother is away and successfully covering his traces and getting the kids to keep it all secret).
I am honored that you recognized my students and our school. 
Back to the niceness of paragraph #1. After a brief stimulation to conversation about education policy and the meaning in children's books, we're coming in for a landing.
I can think of no better gift for children than books; it was a wonderful gesture, if one that could have been better thought out. Books can be a powerful way to learn about and experience the world around us; they help build empathy and understanding. 
All very nice. The reservation about the books is repeated in a gentle, modest way.  
In return...
She's giving a gift.
... I’m attaching a list of ten books...
Her gift is a list.
... (it’s the librarian in me) that I hope will offer you a window into the lives of the many children affected by the policies of your husband’s administration. You and your husband have a direct impact on these children’s lives. Please make time to learn about and value them. I hope you share these books with your family and with kids around the country. And I encourage you to reach out to your local librarian for more recommendations.
Beautifully written. Delightful. What are the books? Here's the "Dear Mrs. Trump" booklist. What a wonderful response!

Dear Mrs. Trump — this is my advice to Melania — you should invite Liz Phipps Soeiro to the White House, along with all the authors and illustrators of the books on her list. Have a conversation, maybe bring in some additional authors. Phipps Soeiro's list is big on multi-culturalism, so perhaps there is a Slovenian children's writer that you could include.

481 comments:

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Matt Sablan said...

"or the Travels of Barbar, that imperialist elephant. "

-- I read a book of essays "Should We Burn Babar?"

I was dismayed that so many people thought: "You know, maybe burning books isn't totally bad."

Matt Sablan said...

"Phipps Soeiro is using the act of declining the gift to draw attention to her disagreement with the administration's education policy."

-- An act, by the way, that her bosses say she was in no way empowered to make.

Matt Sablan said...

Also: the Obamas had no problem with Seuss. I know history starts a-new each day for some people, but this is just silly.

Matt Sablan said...

I see no reason to invite someone who was spiteful, mean and effectively stole from her school by turning away the gift.

Smilin' Jack said...

I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great.

She looks good to me, too--I wouldn't mind getting those glasses steamed up.

Phipps Soeiro wants better schools for all children. If her school is the great example that's getting recognition, why not do more to help other schools be like this school....

By, for example, working at one of them instead of this one.

DKWalser said...

I'm bothered by two things in Soeiro's letter:

First, a minor point, she wrote: "Why not go out of your way to gift books...". Why did she use the noun 'gift' in place of the verb 'give'? She knew or had to have known her letter would receive a lot of scrutiny. It's obvious she put a lot of effort into drafting it. So, why not use a verb where a verb is called for?

Second, I'm offended by the condescension. If she were a woman, she'd be called out for mansplaining. I'm sure she's very bright (they don't give out advanced degrees in library science in Cracker Jack boxes). But, it takes an awful lot of education to see Dr. Seuss' books as part of a white-supremacist power structure that's keeping children from diverse backgrounds from achieving their full potential. Sometimes a book is just a book. Kids should be allowed to enjoy reading before being burdened with the deeper political meanings lurking inside every sentence, phrase, picture, or object.

And gifts to a library are not invitations to start a national conversation. Was she hired by the taxpayers in her district to make political statements? Was she empowered to use the school's resources to further her private political aims? No. As school librarian, she has lots of legitimate roles, but making political statements are not numbered among them. Even the children of the lone Republican family in her district should feel welcome in her school.

It would have been perfectly appropriate for her to write an op-ed that expressed her views about the deficiencies of Dr. Seuss and what other books might be better for today's children. In such a piece, she could have cited her training, experience, and the fact her library was praised by the White House to lend weight to her views. But, so secure is she in the correctness of her views, so sure is she that she knows more than her reader, that it doesn't even occur to her that views of Seuss and appropriate children's literature are not universally shared by others of equal ability, training, and experience.

samsondale said...

On the fashion front, I think people may be reacting to the glasses - which are either the Jean-Paul Sartre model or the Leon Trotsky model. That and the lipstick modeled on that worn by the Vogue editor (Lynn Yaeger) who criticized Melania for wearing heels while walking to a helicopter at the White House. If you haven't seen her, you owe it to yourself to do an image search.

buwaya said...

"Barbar, that imperialist elephant."

Babar. I read them all to the kids.
It is actually a very interesting commentary on the third-world in the 20th century, or rather, given that it dates from before all these places were independent, a bit of a prophecy.

There were many ex-colonial "Babars" - colonized peoples who went "west", and then returned to become leaders. Nearly everyone really, from Gandhi to Ho Chi Minh, and thousands more. And once home, all had the problem of how to modernize the old place. What actually happened, how these people thought, and think, does not match the US left-liberal dogma. Babar is more correct.

We also gave them full sets of Tin Tin and Asterix & Obelix

They would toss/burn those over there too.

James K said...

On the fashion front, I think people may be reacting to the glasses

That and the Keffiyeh head scarf.

SDaly said...

I thought "Horton Hears a Who" was about abortion. "A person's a person no matter how small" (even if you can't see him!)

Man in PA said...

Let's take an even closer look that Cambridge, Massachusetts elementary school librarian who rejected the Dr. Seuss books. It appears that, just two years ago, she was a big Dr. Seuss fan.
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/anti-dr-seuss-librarian-wasnt-always-so-opposed-to-the-supposedly-racist-childrens-author/article/2636093

exhelodrvr1 said...

Of course, there are plenty of examples available of Pres and Mrs Obama reading Dr Suess, proclaiming his excellence, etc.

matism said...

I bet that the books would have been enthusiastically accepted if they had been given by Moochelle and if they included Mao's Red Book and Marx's Das Kapital...

William said...

I think The Notorious RBG is her personal hero, and that was the look she was trying to pull off. It's a very difficult look to successfully manage, especially if you're under seventy. But the important thing is that she made the effort, and she should not be mocked for an honorable failure........I don't think you can just flatly state that Dr. Seuss is racist and not document that statement without substantial supporting evidence. I'd expect a children's librarian to be respectful towards Dr. Seuss, if not Melania.

Gahrie said...

I thought "Horton Hears a Who" was about abortion. "A person's a person no matter how small" (even if you can't see him!)

All the more reason for the Left to ban it.

Curious George said...

"and well-paid teachers (relatively speaking — many of us can’t afford to live in the city in which we teach)"

This is odd, since she then says this:

"our city’s values are such that given a HUGE range in the socioeconomic status of our residents, we believe that each and every child deserves the best free education possible and are working hard to make that a reality (most classrooms maintain a 60/40 split between free/reduced lunch and paid lunch)."

exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

Matthew Sablan said...
"or the Travels of Barbar, that imperialist elephant. "

-- I read a book of essays "Should We Burn Babar?"

I was dismayed that so many people thought: "You know, maybe burning books isn't totally bad."

9/29/17, 2:56 PM

Don't forget Madeleine. She lived in an orphanage run by nuns.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

Meanwhile, Jamaal can't read.

Birches said...

The books she chose are terrible! No child will sit still for them! Those books are made for adults to purchase so that they can feel "woke." There are some good children's books that can encourage diversity. Leo: A Ghost Story comes to mind because lots of reviewers praised it's "wokeness." And maybe it is, I don't know, all I know is that when I read it with my kids I don't feel like I'm getting hit over the head with an oak oar.

This librarian has nothing to offer children if she can't see that books have to be entertaining.

Ken B said...

"I thought "Horton Hears a Who" was about abortion. "A person's a person no matter how small" (even if you can't see him!)"

It's even worse. That sure sounds like all lives matter!

buwaya said...

"Mao's Red Book and Marx's Das Kapital."

Mao is more interesting. Its very worthwhile, I recommend it.
You can, after all, learn something from anyone.
And Mao would not pass muster today. The ideas in it are not congruent with the current left.
Among other things, peasants are icky now.

" A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture, or doing embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another."

Consider in light of the complaints about Trumpian boorishness.

Rick said...

Bushman of the Kohlrabi said...
Before this, her social circle probably consisted mostly of feminist/LGTB book club. Now she gets a shot at being invited over to the cool kids table. Not a bad move on her part.


I'm not sure what kind of people you know to believe the cool kids are impressed by this, but I think the prescription is to get out more.

More likely she's always been the self-conscious underachiever at her table. At the head of the table is someone getting men kicked out of school for not calling women they sleep with the next day, while others are calling conservatives white supremacists regularly. These are high status activities she can't compete with given her day is teaching 5 year olds Dr Seuss is racist. But now she gets her name in the paper for insulting the President's wife showing even librarians oppose fascism. That's got to move her up a few chairs. Maybe the Title IX girls will personally invite her to the next hoax protest.

Gahrie said...

most classrooms maintain a 60/40 split between free/reduced lunch and paid lunch)."

At my school, 85% of students qualify for free breakfast, lunch and supper...so everyone gets all three for free.

Biff said...

Johnny Sokko said..."This librarian is a resister. If Michelle Obama sent the same books, she wouldn't react this way. No fucking way. The photo of her, the letter, and the books would be on her Pinterest Account and Instagram."

Bingo! This is all about mocking anything related to the Trumps using passive aggressive techniques very common to folks in and around Cambridge. (I spend a lot of time there, and I see this kind of behavior often. The librarian's missive was anything but respectful.)

mockturtle said...

No, the most important parts are the Ed school and those others, the various BA-granting departments, that mainly educate K-12 teachers and associated personnel. These schools don't teach the best and brightest (ed school students not generally being the best), but they have immensely more influence on the next generation than anyone else.


Very well stated, buwaya!

vanderleun said...

"I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great

Must be an academic feminist thing.

I think she looks like an activist with a stick up her ass."

It is and that is proved here daily at schoolmarm.com

Curious George said...

"I'm sure she's very bright (they don't give out advanced degrees in library science in Cracker Jack boxes)"

Yeah, hence the expression "It's not library science!"

Enlighten-NewJersey said...

The books were not a gift to the librarian and she had no right to reject the books or to send the letter in her capacity as a school librarian. Here is what her employer had to say about the matter:

"The employee was not authorized to accept or reject donated books on behalf of the school or school district," an official said in a statement. "We have counseled the employee on all relevant policies, including the policy against public resources being used for political purposes."

tcrosse said...

BTW, you can still obtain a copy of Little Black Sambo from you-know-who's Amazon Portal.

Rocketeer said...

want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great.

I want to say that Phipps Soeiro looks like the grudging end product of mechanical lovemaking between Nathan Leopold and Frida Kahlo.

Sprezzatura said...

"I'd really like to know, Ann, if you have EVER responded to a gift by lecturing the giver as to the gift's inappropriateness and then sent it back with your opinions about everything under the sun."

Rather than the homely gal, how about Althouse as Melania:

If Althouse had leant her name to some phony political gift thing-y associated w/ a professional field where she's no expert, and then an expert in this field who received the flim-flam-ery sent back a letter noting that resources could be better direct and better considered = maybe AltMelania would have given serious consideration re the info, in fact maybe she'd appreciate the detailed response as a substantial jumping off point for her own learning and exploration of the issues of which she's not an expert.

Of course, it goes w/o saying that any one who tries to school Althouse re an area of her expertise will definitely be out of line. So, nobody better tell her how to lawprof. Likewise, for Melania no models, gold diggers and anti-cyber bully people better try to tell her what's goin' down.

mockturtle said...

Ann, with all due respect for your personal opinion, an unborn baby has no choice.

buwaya said...

"A dangerous tendency has shown itself of late among many of our personnel - an unwillingness to share the joys and hardships of the masses, a concern for personal fame and gain. This is very bad. One way of overcoming it is to simplify our organizations in the course of our campaign to increase production and practise economy, and to transfer cadres to lower levels so that a considerable number will return to productive work."

" Thrift should be the guiding principle in our government expenditure. It should be made clear to all government workers that corruption and waste are very great crimes. Our campaigns against corruption and waste have already achieved some results, but further efforts are required. Our system of accounting must be guided by the principle of saving every copper for the war effort, for the revolutionary cause and for our economic construction."

- Mao, Red Book, Chap 20

Very appropriate for the inhabitants of Cambridge MA, and those working in its various institutions. Or for that matter Washington DC.

TestTube said...

You know what would be funny?

Getting a bunch of people to go in to her library -- one or two people a day -- and asking for help finding a book.

Then asking for a book by Dr. Seuss.

You could rattle off a whole list of those books -- the ones she rejected -- one title at a time, waiting each time for her response. Playing innocent all the time.

That would be hilarious. Especially after about the hundredth time.

Anonymous said...

"That would be rejecting individual choice."

Begs the question - as would be obvious if one were to suggest it's just as valid a way to end a marriage as a pregnancy. (Hey, a man's house is his castle, right?)

MaxedOutMama said...

Given the first picture, it should surprise absolutely no one that this Church Lady of the Left (fantastic comment by I Have Misplaced My Pants), got caught out striking a pose. By that I mean to be generous, because only one of two things can be true: either she is insincere in her sentiments in this letter, or she is a closet racist who enjoys camping around in what she privately considers to be a low-key rendition of a KKK outfit.

I am rolling around laughing. Thank you to the commenters for a nice ride on yet another PC bus as driver error runs it off the road due to the stress of Trump's presence in the WH. This whole thing is bleeping hilarious.

I think this Vogue! Strike a Pose! lady should start a correspondence with Reality Winner, who confided to her interrogators that she was driven to leak the document due to Fox News exposure. Eventually they could publish a book of it. It would be a collectors piece.

Martin said...

That letter was an amazing, passive-aggressive thumb in the eye to both Donald and Melania Trump... and Betsy DeVos without even mentioning her by name.

Inga...Allie Oop said...

Hoorah for Phipps Soeiro! Not only beautiful but highly intelligent and has an excellent understanding of the glaring differences in our country's successful schools and those that are floundering. Yes, why didn't Mrs. Trump make a point of visiting, gifting books and showing interest in schools in districts that aren't affluent and or aren't already doing well. And I agree on the Dr Suess books. I always thought they had a creep factor to them. Suess books were not a first choice for my children, the only Dr.Suess books they had were gifted to them and rarely read.

Michael said...

What, exactly, is the science part of library science?

Sprezzatura said...

"...and Betsy DeVos without even mentioning her by name."

Errr.....okay.

If ya say so.

Jim at said...

"I've seen some abuse of this woman, Liz Phipps Soeiro..."

Calling her out for her sanctimonious hypocrisy is abuse?

Nope.

Her completely unhinged of everything Trump brought it all on herself.

She can go to hell.

Sebastian said...

"looks great" Trolling, right? If so, well done.

""I hope will offer you a window into the lives of the many children affected by the policies of your husband’s administration. You and your husband have a direct impact on these children’s lives. Please make time to learn about and value them. I hope you share these books with your family and with kids around the country. And I encourage you to reach out to your local librarian for more recommendations." Beautifully written. Delightful."

A window into the lives: delightful! Make time: beautiful! I encourage you to reach out: beautiful and delightful!

This really is expert trolling. We know what you are up to. No better way to take down that prog prig.

Jon Burack said...

Unknown, did you send them back to the givers with a little lecture?

BDNYC. Your comment on immigration and Americanism is one of the best here. Agree totally.

Anonymous said...

"Likewise, for Melania no models, gold diggers and anti-cyber bully people better try to tell her what's goin' down."

Thanks for acknowledging the truth of what this is really about.

We mustn't normalize the Trumps. We must use our behavior to keep up the denial, the illusion that there is something illegitimate about their current status.

Even if that means breaking rules that are ordinarily not the least bit controversial, like how one accepts a gift graciously, and pretending that there's something classy about behaving with passive-aggressive nastiness in rejecting what was intended as a compliment from the First Lady of the United States of America.

mikeski said...

Ann Althouse said...
In fact, she's inviting conversation


She's not keeping the books. She's only "inviting conversation" if you're willing to say what she wants to hear.

Sprezzatura said...

"Her completely unhinged of everything Trump brought it all on herself.

She can go to hell."

Right, thanks for demonstrating ununhinged. For contrast.


Carry on.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

"Apparently on the left, it's all too easy to wear out your welcome"

The rejection of the books had nothing to do with Geisel/Seuess and everything to do with Trump.

Drago said...

Unknown: "Hoorah for Phipps Soeiro! Not only beautiful but highly intelligent and has an excellent understanding of the glaring differences in our country's successful schools and those that are floundering."

Which is why it was so very very very brave and courageous and cutting edge for Hillary and Bill and Michelle and Barack to send their kids to the best private schools while fighting to deny that very option to poor and working class parents.

Well played Unknown. Well played.

Drago said...

My favorite part of all this is that just 2 years ago this Librarian was dressing up like the Cat in the Hat and promoting Seuss' books.

Just like Hitler.

Paco Wové said...

dismantle the systemic white supremacy

Ms. Soeiro is one doubleplusgood duckspeaker.

Sprezzatura said...

Reading is for nerds, therefore people in charge of books are double nerd.

Snatch.


Jim at said...

"And I agree on the Dr Suess books. I always thought they had a creep factor to them." - Ms. Patriot

I'm just sure you said the exact, same thing when Barack and Michelle Obama read them countless times - in public - to adoring school children. Why, of course you did. How silly of me.

Your nonstop hatred of everything Trump is driving you further insane.

Good. You deserve it.

Matt Sablan said...

To be fair, two years ago, the president was also promoting Dr. Seuss. So, you can see why the librarian is confused.

Gahrie said...

Suess books were not a first choice for my children, the only Dr.Suess books they had were gifted to them and rarely read.

I bet your read Go the Fuck to Sleep to them instead......

Jim at said...

"Right, thanks for demonstrating ununhinged. For contrast."

Right back at you, boy.

Jon Burack said...

Michael,

I agree with everything you imagine about the perfect school and agree it would do little good. However, you left out two things that can do some good even in the face of the massive family and cultural disorders in the communities liberals say need better schools. First, a tight, consistent across grades, content rich uniform curriculum - a la the ideas of E.D. Hirsch. Second, very tough teachers who can impose complete order by modeling admirable leadership qualities such as sincere caring, tough love and passion for learning at all costs. See the film Conrack to find out what that might look like.

Etienne said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Sprezzatura said...

Correct me if I'm wrong, but weren't there always rumors that Laura Bush may have had some lib leanings?

Librarians w/ all their sneaky, elitist book learnin' and lack of workin' class street smarts can't be trusted.

Guilty!!

Matt Sablan said...

"Yes, why didn't Mrs. Trump make a point of visiting, gifting books and showing interest in schools in districts that aren't affluent and or aren't already doing well."

-- These books were specifically a reward for well-run schools. Comparing this to charitable giving to schools or efforts to improve school performance is pleading ignorance of the issue.

Bushman of the Kohlrabi said...

I actually think she looks better in the picture Ace posted where she's sporting the Cat In The Hat look while hugging the Dr Seuss book.

Something tells me she would have been thrilled with shit on cardboard if it came from the Obamas.

Matt Sablan said...

"I always thought they had a creep factor to them."

-- Did you protest the new Grinch movie; the old Grinch movie; Seussical the Musical?

Sebastian said...

"it's certainly a great topic of conversation, and it's a fine thing for Phipps Soeiro to use her moment in the spotlight to get the conversation started" I didn't think you liked sarcasm as a rhetorical device, but this is excellent. Great, fine, conversation -- those are the tells.

"What a wonderful response" Excellent. As a takedown of the prog prig, it works well.

You did mean to take her down, right? You did, didn't you?

Roberta said...

I was a librarian for 27 years. After about 10 years, I let my membership in the American Library Association lapse. It became increasingly clear that the ALA was more interested in liberal-left political causes than in the working librarian. Most of the librarians I met or worked with thought that was just fine with them. Let's just say I increasingly felt out of place among them.

Meade said...

Man in PA said...

"Let's take an even closer look that Cambridge, Massachusetts elementary school librarian who rejected the Dr. Seuss books. It appears that, just two years ago, she was a big Dr. Seuss fan." LINK


"Don't post that. Do not post that."

Drago said...

Poor leftists.

Because history begins anew each day for them they often forget what they were saying/doing just a short time ago which completely and utterly negates every single thing they are saying now.

But only every single thing.

Sprezzatura said...

"-- These books were specifically a reward for well-run schools. Comparing this to charitable giving to schools or efforts to improve school performance is pleading ignorance of the issue."

Right, and this dumb librarian jabbered about the reasons why her school is successful. Who the F cares about that? Mentioning that in a letter to FLOTUS is horrible. FLOTUS gives zero Fs, she just wants you and your rich school to have even more than you already have.

Anywho, unlike this librarian dummy, at least the top 0.01% won't make such a fuss when they get their reward:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2017/09/29/gop-tax-plan-would-provide-major-gains-for-richest-1-percent-and-uneven-benefits-for-the-middle-class-report-says/?hpid=hp_hp-top-table-main_wb-taxplan-206pm%3Ahomepage%2Fstory&utm_term=.73487bfc34ff

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

"Why did she use the noun 'gift' in place of the verb 'give'? "

Using "gift" or "gifting" for "give" or "giving" is worse than using "garner", a perfectly acceptable word when used correctly.

Drago said...

Why would Michelle and Barack spend so much time reading creepy racist stuff to kids?

I can't wait for Unknown to explain that.

That kind of hypocrisy is going to require a "lifelong republican"-Herculean effort to mitigate.

whitney said...

So a picture of her dressed as the Cat in the Hat has emerged from 2015. The truly bizarre part about this is that that is the plot of this week's South Park episode. Beginning to think those guys are prophets

Bay Area Guy said...

Dear Ms. Trump,

Thank you for the Dr. Seuss books. I am sure the kids will enjoy reading them.

Sincerely,

Liz Phipps Soeiro

_____________________________

How difficult is that? For the Left, everything is politics. So the homely librarian got her 15 mins of fame on the internet for her snooty little letter to the Trumps. Big Deal.

Drago said...

The truly bizarre part about this is that that is the plot of this week's South Park episode,

The leftists are so far beyond caricature they are in another galaxy.

Even now Unknown is unable to process, internalize and adapt to this "new" information. Perhaps burning down a building or stealing some person's "MAGA" hat will help her get over it.

Drago said...

Does dressing up like a character from a book full of "creepiness" make the "dress-er-uper" a creep too?

We'll wait for Unknown to chime in on that.

walter said...

"she's inviting conversation, and that's not even so hard and opinion."
Bullshit. She takes this opportunity to turn a gift from the 1st lady to rag on her husband and his appointees..and really her.
It may be organized as a "sandwich".
But it's a shit sandwich.

As for her looks?
The lipstick is much needed if she wants to signal any sort of gender.

wbfjrr2 said...

AA's reactions are that this idiot looks great and that Melanie's signature is stabby.Superficial much??

Also to AA, any time a leftist calls racist, you can bet that person is the racist in the room.

Women being hard and opinionated is fine. Jeanne Kirkpatrick comes to mind, maybe Thatcher. But being ridiculously judgmental, rude and ignorant will get you criticized every time, except by people even worse at it than she is.

As for Trump being hard and opinionated, thanks for the gratuitous non sequitor, professor.

TWW said...

"I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great."

With that I agree. - Meade

Your the man Meade!!!!

I didn't read all of the comments, but I'm not sure everyone appreciated the take down. Do you have a soft couch?

Fernandinande said...

Laslo Spatula said...
@ReflectLibrary and blogs at reflectivelibrary.blogspot.com"
Went to check the blog. It has been removed.


Cached

Etienne said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

buwaya thinks that the contemporary Left would not approve of Mao because he wrote:

" A revolution is not a dinner party, or writing an essay, or painting a picture, or doing embroidery; it cannot be so refined, so leisurely and gentle, so temperate, kind, courteous, restrained and magnanimous. A revolution is an insurrection, an act of violence by which one class overthrows another."

Consider in light of the complaints about Trumpian boorishness.

9/29/17, 3:15 PM

Except, buwaya, you forget that only conservatives can be boorish in the eyes of the Left. It's OK for the DNC chair to use the f word in a speech, but not OK for Trump to call NFL players SOBs. It's OK for Leftists to hold Slut Marches and parade around in vagina outfits and use terms like "teabaggers" but it is not OK when someone perceived to be a non-Leftist says "boobs" on CNN. It's OK for this Leftist Church Lady (thanks, Pants!) to call Dr. Suess racist, but nobody, including dullard Inga, was complaining that his books were "creepy" when Michele Obama read them to kids.


"It's OK when we do it."

Michael K said...

underfunded and underprivileged communities that continue to be marginalized and maligned by policies put in place by Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos?

Did she by any chance attend West Point and was she mentored by Dr. Rasheed Hosein ?

Just curious.

Comanche Voter said...

A truly snotty scotty letter; our host likes the "look" of this wise librarian--says she looks like a character in a children's book. Indeed she does--like the sort of witch that shoves children in the oven. And of course she has "her" list which, not surprisingly, promotes her values. Which apparently tend to be multi culti and non assimilationist. I'm not certain that reading those books on her list to children are doing them any favors.

exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

Black hair, pale, pale skin and red lips. Rather doughy face though. Did Morticia have an affair with Fester?

Inga...Allie Oop said...

When I recall Senator Cruz reading Green Eggs and Ham during his infamous filibuster, the word that comes to mind is....creepy. Makes me wonder why his oldest daughter seems to recoil from him.

Matt Sablan said...

Obama read Green Eggs and Ham to children. Want to imply he's a pedophile too?

Matt said...

Is everyone required to get a professional headshot these days?

Jupiter said...

Curious George said...
"and well-paid teachers (relatively speaking — many of us can’t afford to live in the city in which we teach)"

This is odd, since she then says this:

"our city’s values are such that given a HUGE range in the socioeconomic status of our residents,"

What she means is, she makes so little money, that if she wanted to live in the city she teaches in, she would have to live where many of her school's students live. And she knows better than to try that. She's a small white chick, she wouldn't last half an hour in those neighborhoods.

Jupiter said...

And just for the record, she's hideous. I wouldn't fuck her with your dick.

exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

Unknown Inga just hates Dr. Suess because she finds his books far too challenging and difficult to get through. It took her 3 months to finish "Green Eggs and Ham" - and that was just last year.

Michael said...

"...underfunded and underprivileged communities that continue to be marginalized and maligned by policies put in place by Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos"

The District of Columbia has the highest dropout rate, the lowest math scores, the lowest reading scores ,the lowest median SAT scores, the fifth lowest student to teacher ration, and at $18,000 per pupil they are the third highest per pupil spending in the country. Go figure. Not sure these evil policies have yet marginalized DC

exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

Inga has a point. Look at these creeps and assholes celebrating Dr. Seuss. Makes your skin crawl.

http://whitehouse.blogs.cnn.com/2011/03/02/michelle-obama-happy-birthday-dr-seuss/

Darrell said...

And just for the record, she's hideous. I wouldn't fuck her with your dick.

Nah. That's "I would not fuck her with your dick. I would not fuck her with a stick.. ."

Darrell said...

One fish.
Two fish.
Red fish.
Fuck the Left.

Static Ping said...

Bravo, Ann, on the exquisite sarcasm.

Her look does nothing for me. Then again I have a significant dislike of the skull hugging hair style. The only women who look good with it are objectively beautiful to begin with and look good regardless of hair style, including shaving it all off. In addition, the earrings and the scarf go poorly together, and the glasses are not flattering. She basically looks like the before in the Hollywood movie before the makeover and we discover she was "beautiful all along."

From her letter, she could be the most beautiful woman in the world and I would stay far away. Living with that would not be fun at all.

Eleanor said...

Forty percent of kids in school in Cambridge have free or reduced lunch. Cambridge prides itself on distributing kids so every school has a 60/40 split. Forty percent of the kids in her school might have appreciated a book from the First Lady, especially if it was signed. It might have eventually paid for a few lunches.

dustbunny said...

I woke up in Japan so I just saw this post and I'm too tired to read all the comments but surely someone has pointed out the similarity to one of Roald Dahl's evil characters. This woman would terrify any small child and Althouse's appreciation for her extreme, somewhat sadistic style is just trolling, and it worked! Did anyone notice the earrings? Torture devices that blend in with the scarf, they can be removed and tossed like ninja weapons at any 7 year old too dumb to not know Dr Suess is a cliche.

Inga...Allie Oop said...

Just proves my point. People really should not read Dr. Suess books, especially aloud. Avoid them whenever possible, good call by the librarian.

Quaestor said...

Abby Someone wrote: When I recall Senator Cruz reading Green Eggs and Ham during his infamous filibuster, the word that comes to mind is....creepy.

The word that comes to our minds after reading every one of your comments since Abe left Ur is desperate, followed shortly by pathetic.

Get yourself a dictionary and learn a new word: calumny.

Quaestor said...

Stand by for Inga ad hominem... 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 — FLAME ON!

buwaya said...

I don't know the criteria used for performance for this particular award, but the usual case for this sort of stuff is some level of test score performance adjusted by some measure of SES (Socio-Economic Status) of the student body.

I.e., award-winning schools tend to be those with lots of poor minority kids who nevertheless do well in standardized testing.

How well funded the school is is not a factor; for that matter how well funded a school is is usually a negative factor - the better funded, the worse it does, or rather schools that are doing badly generally get more money given to them. That is the case in many states anyway, certainly California.

The best High School in SF, Lowell, for instance gets the least $/student for any HS in the district. Or that was the case in all the last budget breakdowns I have seen.

Contrarily, because of certain accidents in the history of school budgeting rules (whether local property taxes can be retained for a local school district or must be shared among all) a few small districts in CA are immensely well funded, notably Sausalito, which has a tremendous tax base but the public schools there enroll only the (few) poor minority kids in the county. Its performance was notably poor.

There was quite a comprehensive system in CA, with a fairly complex regression model, for identifying schools that were punching above their weight, that is yielding scores above what the makeup of their student body predicted. This was meant to dynamically identify best practices and to force the adoption of these. It did identify such schools, and indeed whole school districts with superior results. The schools (in general) did not however prove amenable to being reformed even when presented with proof of superior methods.

This evaluation system was a leftover of the last Republican administrations and has since been done away with.

Darrell said...

Can Unknown/Impostor Inga make 5 cents from Soros today?
Stay tuned.

walter said...

If you squint your brain, you can discern the evil side of Winnie the Pooh as well.

Quaestor said...

How well funded the school is not a factor; for that matter how well funded a school is is usually a negative factor - the better funded, the worse it does, or rather schools that are doing badly generally get more money given to them.

If you want more ethanol, subsidize corn. If you want more out-of-wedlock kids, subsidize single parenthood. If you want more kids poorly educated, subsidize academic incompetence.

No one but a madman would buy a used Trabant when the same money buys a new Mercedes-Benz. Nevertheless, this kind of thinking is normal among socialists.

Jaylat said...

I want to highlight this comment from the original post:

"As for Dr. Seuss being all those things you said he is…sorry, I’m not buying it. My late husband and I vetted books for the kids for just those things, and never was Dr. Seuss even considered. In his world. _nothing_ was sacred and _everything_ was ridiculous. That’s why the guys loved him. And now my granddaughter does.

It’s sad that you find hate where there is none to find, and that you must label, tag, and reduce that gentle man’s humor to rubble. Who’s next? Harry Potter?

I know much about your school from one of its teachers, and I have always admired the work done there. Tonight, however, I feel sorry for your students. They are being made afraid of reading by you, Ms Soeiro, and you, of all people, really shouldn’t do that to kids."

Wince said...

Meade said...
"I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great."

With that I agree.


If you ask me, Soeiro has a Hitler hairdo, and she's making me feel ill.

Karma police
Arrest this girl
Her Hitler hairdo
Is making me feel ill
And we have crashed her party


This is what you'll get
This is what you'll get
This is what you'll get
When you mess with us

Karma police
I've given all I can
It's not enough
I've given all I can
But we're still on the payroll

For a minute there
I lost myself, I lost myself
Phew, for a minute there
I lost myself, I lost myself

walter said...

mockturtle said...Kaos observes: https://www.weaselzippers.us/358894-librarian-who-rejected-racist-dr-seuss-book-donation-from-melania-trump-busted-wearing-cat-in-hat-outfit/ Hmmmmmm
Must have been before she was 'woke'.
--
Allegedly from wayyyy back..in 2015.

Darrell said...

One fish.
Two fish.
Red fish.
Resist!!!11!!

gadfly said...

The Dr.Suesse books donations sounds like an another over-simplified world-view ideas from the childish mind of Donald Trump. I would bet that all elementary school libraries in the United States have multiple copies of each of the books and I will grant that, in some cases, the new books might be useful in some places where wear and tear had overcome copies of "The Cat in the Hat."

But why was it necessary to raise a stink about the award of the Dr. Suesse books? If the school and/or Liz Phipps Soeiro, didn't want the books - for whatever reason - the local public library would have gladly accepted the books, no questions asked!

Now I read that despite the fact that 650 million Dr. Suesse books have sold, some people don't like them because Dr. Suesse doesn't teach language skills simply because the author makes up nonsensical words!

That mind of yours, I heard him say, Is frightfully ga-fluppted. Your mind is murky-mooshy!

policraticus said...

I struggled to figure out why the librarian looked so familiar.

Then I remembered... Strelnikov!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1f-jzGNpUmo

"I used to admire Dr. Seuss; I should do so now, though. The private life is dead in Cambridge."

Laslo Spatula said...

Those are NOT naughty Librarian eyeglasses.

I am Laslo.

walter said...

Tear them down!

Doug said...

"Yes, she was scalding hot. Those eyes...". What, did you miss that bodacious rack on her?

buwaya said...

"The Dr.Suess books donations sounds like an another over-simplified world-view ideas from the childish mind of Donald Trump."

Its not a brilliant idea, but believe me, there are much dumber and even more simplified ideas from education professionals, and even from generous tycoons who are honestly trying to do good. Bill and Melinda Gates have wasted a great deal of their money on this cause, with nothing to show for it.

And then there is Mark Zuckerberg who blew $100 million to no effect -

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/05/19/schooled

walter said...

Laslo, it's the knotty librarian look.

Darrell said...

https://www.customink.com/fundraising/lwb

buwaya said...

At least the Trumps gave some actual books to a bunch of schools, many of which probably didn't need them just now (but these kids books are actually best thought of as consumables, sometimes literally so).

Its better than Zuckerberg giving tens of millions to a lot of education consultants and New Jersey politicians.

Krumhorn said...

I was a librarian for 27 years. After about 10 years, I let my membership in the American Library Association lapse. It became increasingly clear that the ALA was more interested in liberal-left political causes than in the working librarian. Most of the librarians I met or worked with thought that was just fine with them. Let's just say I increasingly felt out of place among

Yes. It's part of the Gramscian march through the institutions. You see it everywhere you look among professional associations and societies. It's virtually impossible to name one that hasn't been taken over by lefties.

- Krumhorn

walter said...

"Through a prolific collection of stories, he made children see that reading is fun, and in the process, he emphasized respect for all; pushed us to accept ourselves for who we are; challenged preconceived notions and encouraged trying new things; and by example, taught us that we are limited by nothing but the range of our aspirations and the vibrancy of our imaginations. And for older lovers of literature, he reminded us not to take ourselves too seriously,"
Excerpt from Obama's READ ACROSS AMERICA DAY, 2016
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA A PROCLAMATION

Lydia said...

The librarian, with her Dr. Seuss being “a bit of a cliché” and a “tired and worn ambassador for children’s literature”, should be, if nothing else, just the tiniest bit embarrassed for not knowing that Pres. Obama said this in 2016:

"Theodor Seuss Geisel — or Dr. Seuss — used his incredible talent to instill in his most impressionable readers universal values we all hold dear. Through a prolific collection of stories, he made children see that reading is fun, and in the process, he emphasized respect for all; pushed us to accept ourselves for who we are; challenged preconceived notions and encouraged trying new things; and by example, taught us that we are limited by nothing but the range of our aspirations and the vibrancy of our imaginations. And for older lovers of literature, he reminded us not to take ourselves too seriously, creating wacky and wild characters and envisioning creative and colorful places."

Jaylat said...

Going to try one more time, posting this full comment from the original letter:

"I am about a left as they come, but I think the letter to Mrs. Trump was inappropriate and, quite frankly, mean-spirited.

A gift of books was made to your school. You don’t like them? Great. Give them to a school with less funding than yours that is in dire need of a printed page.

As for Dr. Seuss being all those things you said he is…sorry, I’m not buying it. My late husband and I vetted books for the kids for just those things, and never was Dr. Seuss even considered. In his world. _nothing_ was sacred and _everything_ was ridiculous. That’s why the guys loved him. And now my granddaughter does.

It’s sad that you find hate where there is none to find, and that you must label, tag, and reduce that gentle man’s humor to rubble. Who’s next? Harry Potter?

I know much about your school from one of its teachers, and I have always admired the work done there. Tonight, however, I feel sorry for your students. They are being made afraid of reading by you, Ms Soeiro, and you, of all people, really shouldn’t do that to kids."

Narayanan said...

What bothered me most ... it is wrong for The government to use standards to select a school in each state. Random picking would have been better.
Who came up with this scheme anyway?

Shane said...

Let's not.
This has to be one of your most inane posts ever.

wildswan said...

Kids won't get a love of reading from her. That I am sure of.

Alex said...

She's the first one I'd put in a concentration camp for liberals.

Ty said...

IRS audit in 3... 2... oh, I guess we're not doing that anymore. Darn.

JMW Turner said...

She is a rude, condescending, stereotypically leftist bitch, but, props for the severe, apparatchik pose...

Gospace said...

Gahrie said...
I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great

Must be an academic feminist thing.

I think she looks like an activist with a stick up her ass.

Now Laura Bush looks like a hot librarian.


Right off the bat first comment nails this aspect of the discussion.

Drago said...

Another lefty prog bus goes over the cliff due to anti-Trump dementia with Gadflys teeth firmly gripping the tailpipe.

Win-win.

The Vault Dweller said...

Based on her photo I do think she comes off as kind of schoolmarmish. I wouldn't say her look is terrible, but I'm not a fan of the circular framed glasses. Also I don't think the scarf does well. It is too bunched up, there is too much scarf there. It makes it look like her head is growing out the center of some slightly off colored cabbage. Also, it would help if she affected a slight, Mona Lisa-esque smile.

As far as her message goes I think it starts off very well. She notes how successful her school is, and how well funded it is. Suggesting that other less well funded schools could be better served by donations of books is a reasonable point to remind everyone of. Though I will note her bemoaning of schools being concerned about data and not children was undercut by her statement a little above that, when she noted how studies indicated well trained librarians improve student performance. I wonder how those studies determined that? Probably just anecdote and the collected gut reactions of teachers and parents.

Where she goes substantially wrong is when she talks about Dr. Seuss. She begins by noting that Dr. Seuss books are cliche. Which while probably true is the wrong tone I think. She should have instead stated something like Dr. Seuss books are charming, or wonderful and because of that are already widely known and read. School libraries would been better benefited, by getting other books to widen the options of children. Also it is worth noting books become cliche and widely read usually because they are good books. Plus a book that is a cliche usually becomes a cultural reference point. Those are things that help bind people together. This is especially important in a country like America where there is no American race or ethnicity, nor is there an official American religion. These shared cliches are important.

Where she goes substantially wrong is labeling Dr. Seuss books as racist propaganda. I skimmed through her other article that asks if Dr. Seuss is racist and it seems to stem from one or more one off political cartoons he created during WWII. The one depicted certainly does seem to have a racist caricature of Japanese people. But which books that the First Lady sent are inappropriate? It used to be that Librarians anywhere recoiled at the idea of banning or prohibiting books. Are we coming back to the point that Huck Finn is going to be banned again because it has the N-word in it?

Also I've never read any of the other books she is recommending. So I can't speak specifically about them. I will just note that the only thing guaranteed by introducing group identity politics to children is that group identity politics are perpetuated. Group Identity politics are destructive to America and ensure that divisiveness will exist along those group identity lines.

Unknown said...

"I want to say Phipps Soeiro looks great"

I don't judge or voice my opinion on a person's appearance, but since you've thrown out the troll line, Althouse, all I can say is that there isn't enough booze in the world, and I say that as someone that's had a lot of misadventures with alcohol.

Gospace said...

Without wading through the morass of comments, https://twitter.com/Cport_Special/status/572793892287991810/photo/1
is a photo of her pre-Trump. Also on Hot Air you're find lot's of pictures of the last first lady reading Dr. Seuss. No comments from librarians about that.
https://hotair.com/archives/2017/09/28/librarian-rejects-first-ladys-gift-dr-seuss-books-calling-racist-propaganda/

Liberals for some odd reason haven't yet figured out there is no more memory hole. The internet never forgets, and your previous behavior can be used to endlessly mock you.

JackWayne said...

If Melania really wanted to get this woman’s knickers in a twist, she should have sent The Little Red Hen.

RichAndSceptical said...

Most times, the best response is "Thank you".

Michael K said...

all I can say is that there isn't enough booze in the world, and I say that as someone that's had a lot of misadventures with alcohol.

Coyotes everywhere are worried. She reassures them.

tim in vermont said...

Burge nailed it. Maybe she is a bit younger, but Burge nailed it.

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

Whatsherbitch actually looks better in the pic of her holding up "The Cat in the Hat" in one hand and the rejection letter in the other, despite her nasty, snide, mocking frowny face. She's a hole.

tim in vermont said...

Fahrenheit 451, remember when they said it was about Bush? More projection by the left.

The Cracker Emcee Refulgent said...

"Yeah, hence the expression "It's not library science!""

Classic. I have a relative who actually is a rocket engineer and I'm using this one next Thanksgiving.

And "Phipps"? Seriously? If given names do to some degree portend character and destiny then this woman was doomed to be a Costco-sized box of douche from birth.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

Was it Zeus that senator Cruz chose to read on the floor of the senate while filibustering something?

It's all Ted Cruz fault.

Amadeus 48 said...

I always thought Sarah Palin had mastered (snowflake alert!) the naughty librarian look. I much prefer her to this Little Beast.

It is so unfortunate that Dr. Suess, who was a notorious fellow-traveler, is being thrown on the ash-heap here.

Horton's commitment to his duty in Horton Hatches an Egg has set a standard for us all.

Laura said...

From the librarian's cached blog comes a glowing review about a picture book that makes fun of a dictator thwarted by a child, which then can be juxtaposed with her admission from a previous post: "So first, I weeded the heck out of my library."

A cosy censorship committee of one. Also known as a dict....

Dibs on her throwaway pile.

Darrell said...

And "Phipps"? Seriously? If given names do to some degree portend character and destiny then this woman was doomed to be a Costco-sized box of douche from birth.

Her Christian name is "Liz." Elizabeth, I assume.

grackle said...

… the Cat in the Hat … seems to represent a child molester, bringing his special kind of fun to the house when the mother is away and successfully covering his traces and getting the kids to keep it all secret).

My take without having read the comments …

Never read the book but saw the movie and I was against it because of the dig at parental authority (the kids wrecking the house with their new friend while parents are absent). Another message I saw was that chaos is fun. Now, after seeing the above, I realize my analysis was too superficial.

The advice to Melania about the Whitehouse invitation is good at first glance. However, if the invitees would be anything like the librarian, I would have reservations about whether the invitees would use the occasion to virtue-signal or maybe even attack Trump’s policies.

And would Bannon approve? Could it split the GOP? The MSM would be certain to pounce on it in order to fuel another false narrative. The NYT would be sure to invent some fake leaks about such a meeting. You do realize, Althouse that anything Melania Trump did, does or will do is going to be used as a basis for some sort of criticism, don’t you?

If Melania had sent books to low-achieving schools the MSM and perhaps the librarians would paint the donation as a form of condescension or some other negative interpretation.

The librarian’s letter was too long and preachy in tone overall, notwithstanding a few polite phrases occasionally prefacing some paragraphs of sermon. I’m wondering why, if the librarian’s motive was to simply inform the First Lady about the danger of Dr. Seuss, that the librarian saw fit to publish the letter of rejection.

Melania was trying to reward excellence and the librarian published a letter of rejection filled with virtue-signals and sprinkled liberal-ly with humble-brags. That’s what I see that happened in this situation.

On the librarian’s looks: Sexy is as sexy does. Beyond a certain lower threshold (different for each person) looks don’t matter as far as sex or compatibility is concerned. I would call her looks “brainy sexy.”

wholelottasplainin said...

rehajm said...
She looks like the (INSERT YOUR COORDINATES ON THE GENDER SPECTRUM HERE) doppleganger of this guy.

https://i.pinimg.com/564x/80/f6/2d/80f62d831fb67152fd325137a0b3ff1f--google-images-indiana-jones.jpg

***********************************

Yes! I thought the same thing!!!

Great minds, etc.

Seeing Red said...

No one is forcing her to work there. She could Library at a poorer school and spend time soliciting for books that kids don't read.

Since they use computers.

dustbunny said...

Policraticus at 5:04pm. Yes, exactly!

Seeing Red said...

If She wants a fairer tax base, maybe she should start advocating for taxes on endowments from private universities, or advocTe for removing private universities tax exemptions.

Seeing Red said...


"The Dr.Suess books donations sounds like an another over-simplified world-view ideas from the childish mind of Donald Trump."


Nah, the Kansas City, MO judge got there first.

He actually thought raising taxes I think 4-fold to improve the schools would raise the scores.

He was wrong. A 16-ish year experiment and the schools lost accreditation.

The Cracker Emcee Refulgent said...

"Her Christian name is "Liz." Elizabeth, I assume."

Ah, so she embraced douchery. Run towards the roar, Phipps!

Megthered said...

I am a female and she is scary looking. If i were a child in that school i would be terrified of going to the library. As we have all Bern taught, if you cant say something nice, don't say anything at all. She should have just said thank you. But she is woke.

grackle said...

Liberals for some odd reason haven't yet figured out there is no more memory hole.

Wow! The librarian is busted! What a hypocrite!

Karma.

Darrell said...

Venezuela needs a new head librarian. They ate the last one.

mockturtle said...

Melania is casting pearl before swine here. No way should she invite this grotesque, insolent harridan to the White House.

Darrell said...

And she invited radical leaders of the anti-cop movement to come to the library and teach students how they can be an “ally”:

After another group of fifth graders read excerpts from Discovering Black America: From the Age of Exploration to the Twenty-First Century by Linda Tarrant-Reid, we invited one of the founders of our city’s Black Lives Matter chapter to come into the library to answer questions, teach us what an ally can be, and empower our students to be proud of who they are. The children wrote poetry, came up with rallying cries, learned to support each other, and made plans about how they could speak to younger students about the racism and prejudice that continue to plague our city and the world.

And for all her hard work checking her student’s privileges, she’s up for a Social Justice Warrior award. Not even kidding, that’s basically what the award is called:

The library’s collection reflects Phipps Soeiro’s commitment to social justice. Titles such as Margarita Engle’s Drum Dream Girl and Debbie Levy and Elizabeth Baddeley’s I Dissent: Ruth Bader Ginsburg Makes Her Mark spark discussions about government and fairness. During a field trip to city hall, students sat in council chambers and asked questions of city leaders.

Fernandinande said...

I've never seen any empirical evidence that Dr. Zeus even exists.

mockturtle said...

Jack Wayne suggests: If Melania really wanted to get this woman’s knickers in a twist, she should have sent The Little Red Hen.

Indeed, although I'm sure that one has been banned for decades.

mockturtle said...

How like the Chinese Cultural Revolution this leftist movement has become! Instead of Mao's Little Red Book children will be memorizing Saul Alinsky.

tcrosse said...

If she were invited to the White House, I am sure she would decline to attend. Plenty of precedents for that.

M Jordan said...

Been reading Althouse for, oh, I don't know, 10 years?, and this is the first time I've completely, 100% disagreed with her? This letter by Ms. Soerio struck me as completely obnoxious on every level, the top being it was dripping with both self-sanctimony and contempt towards M. Trump.

Sorry Ann but you whiffed big time this time.

Drago said...

Darrell: "Venezuela needs a new head librarian. They ate the last one."

But only because a US official under Trump told the Maduro cabal that the US had no particular interest in whether or not humans were being "cannibalistically" consumed in the leftist paradise of Venezuela, eh Cookie?

exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

"I Dissent: Ruth Bader Ginsberg Makes Her Mark".

Oh, what a fun read for the kiddies.

chickelit said...

The scarf looks ridiculous. It looks like a keffiyeh and she is obviously virtual signaling to Paleostinians. Is she a known sympathizer? Maybe an anti-Semite at heart?

MountainMan said...

I am surprised at Prof. Althouse's response to this. The letter was very inappropriate. She embarrassed her school, the administration, and the school district. I find nothing redeeming at all in the letter or in her. Counseling on her behavior from the school administration was appropriate but If it were in my power she would have been immediately terminated.

Matt Sablan said...

If a Republican librarian had declined a gift of books, illegally, might I add, we'd never hear an end to the meme of Republicans stealing books from children.

chickelit said...

Drudge has nailed her hypocrisy and it's obvious she has no real issue with Dr. Suess. Her real issue is with Melania Trump.

Jealousy? Looks envy? We need more facts for a proper armchair diagnosis.

tcrosse said...

I am surprised at Prof. Althouse's response to this.

Is it Class solidarity ?

Big Mike said...

Is Liz Phipps Soeiro attractive? Nope. Not to me. Her expression, her garb, all are turnoffs.

OTOH, if I, as a graduate student and Vietnam-era veteran, had met Professor Althouse during her "generic hippie chick" phase, I doubt I'd have asked her out, even though she was objectively pretty, clearly intelligent (ignore men who think intelligence in a woman is a turn-off because they don't know what they're missing), and I go nuts over red hair.

So there's a lot that contributes to attractiveness other than good looks. At least for this male.

And she's rude. She's right about her wealthy school district not needing the books, she's wrong about Theodor Geisel's implicit racism, and she's seriously, seriously rude.

And if she really, really cared about less well-funded schools, in Roxbury for instance, she could try sharing books with one of them. Naw. Too much like work for a left female.

Laslo Spatula said...

White Privilege.

Shouldn't a minority have that job?

I am Laslo.

HoodlumDoodlum said...

Speaking of things that are a bit of a cliche...

Eh, Dr gustibus, you know, but Iowahawk is (as usual) pretty close to the mark on this one.

I still don't give much of a fan about the wife of our President. I didn't care about our last Predident's wife's activities and I don't care about this one.

Last point: if this librarian was a guy this would definitely be considered mansplaining. There can be no doubt about it.

Big Mike said...

Next time Liz Phipps Soeiro decides to dress up as a Dr. Seuss character I hope she dresses up as one of The Seven Lady Godivas (available through the Althouse Amazon portal). No, it's not a children's book.

Daisygram said...

That is one of the better pictures of her. Better than the one with the constipated frown, anyway. Better than the one in the Resist t-shirt. I was struck by the photo where she is in front of her bulletin board full of leftie and/or commie heroes, holding a book about women A to Z, where the A represents commie Angela Davis. Also saw a YouTube lecture where she teaches how to turn 7 year old children into activists. How adorable. What she means is, this is how to use children. No, this was not a brilliant letter. It was smug and rude and full of contempt. She returned a gift meant for children and then published her work of art on a blog because she was so proud of herself. She is full of herself and she has nothing but disdain for a First Lady who did not grow up in this culture so that makes Ms Soreiro culturally insensitive, doesn't it? She is against Betsy deVos because if Cambridge had school choice maybe most of the parents would take their children out of her little School for Commies. Althouse was in academic life for years so this type of person looks normal to her but not to the rest of us. She was just living up to her Resist creds and she was applauded for it by them. How so many intelligent people still believe in communism is beyond me. I think she's despicable for being a communist sympathizer and for writing this contemptible letter hoping to embarrass Melania Trump. Ms Soreiro is who should be embarrassed but she's not capable of it.

Quaestor said...

it's the knotty librarian look.

If Liz doesn't mend her ways she'll end up with the gnarly librarian look.

pacwest said...

It's hard to get any outrage up about stuff like this. Pathetically funny but all too common. I feel embarrassed for her. Let's hope we can break this cycle of educational abuse.

Agree that Althouse's post was an odd one.

Breezy said...

It's a shame that the teacher takes herself more seriously than her teaching role. She is not a great role model for humility in receiving gifts. As am elementary school student, how cool to have received such recognition, nameplates and all. This could have been a lifelong positive memory for her students, it no dice. She got her 15 min of fame though. All good.

madAsHell said...

When did one side of a rubic's cube become ear rings?

I'll bet that scarf is covering more chins than a Chinese phone book.

Fustigator said...

maybe im just a violent asshole, but that bitch just needs to be punched in the face. So fucking smug I can hardly get through her bullshit.

dustbunny said...

Wow, Althouse said "Trump is hard and opinionated" too. Is anyone suggesting Trump would make a good children's librarian? This is Althouse's all time best trolling post.

Shane said...

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/09/29/librarian-who-rejected-melania-trumps-dr-seuss-books-dressed-as-cat-in-hat.html

MayBee said...

Come on. It's hilarious she wrote this open letter to Melanie Trump and while actually having celebrated Dr Seuss at her own school.

What a poseur.

Darrell said...

As Meade pointed out, this was the plot of last night's South Park, except with q guy trying to get rid of the Columbus Day holiday. His social media showed him dressing up like Columbus often.

President-Mom-Jeans said...

This bitch is so unattractive, Muhammad wouldn't even rape her.

LordSomber said...

I find the parallel... amusing.

Laslo Spatula said...

"I love the scarf, the bright-lipstick/no-eye-makeup look, the pinned-back hair, the glasses. It's utterly charming, well constructed and a lot of fun, like a character in a children's book. Perfection."

Finally put my finger on it.

She is meticulously styled like a character in a Wes Anderson movie.

I am Laslo.

rcocean said...

Its hilarious that Althouse made a Liz Phillips Serino tag. LOL.

Like we're EVER going to hear about this kids librarian again.

Clyde said...

After seeing the picture of her in the Cat In The Hat outfit, it's game over. Better luck next time. Thanks for playing.

rcocean said...

I think she looks awful.

In fact if my Kids school librarian had looked like that, I might have changed schools.

Spinsters and Lesbians have always been attracted to the Library, but they usually kept the weirdness under wraps.

Of course, if live in Madison, she probably looks normal.

rcocean said...

BTW, Dr. Seuss was a Commie, that's no joke.

If he were alive today, he'd be upset that he'd been labeled a "Counter revolutionary" and would try to make amends by re-writing his books.

That's the sad thing about old Lefties, they often can't keep up with the changes in the party line, and end up in the Gulag.

MayBee said...

As for Chicago Public Schools, the former CEO was just sentenced to prison for a kickback scheme. https://newsone.com/3708852/chicago-public-schools-barbara-byrd-bennett-sentenced/
And Rahm Emmanuel had to budget $80 Million for school security.

So there is a lot of money being spent not directly educating children. And its a shame.
But that is not under the control of Melania Trump or Betsey DeVos.

mockturtle said...

Public schools have CEOs? This is a new one on me. Shocking but not surprising. A few years ago [2013, I think] two Seattle school district officials were sentenced for kickbacks. Both were black and no doubt racism was to blame./s

Big Mike said...

BTW, Dr. Seuss was a Commie, that's no joke.

@rcocean, damned right. The Butter Battle Book. Based on that book one might imagine that the entire Cold War was over which side of your toast you buttered.

mockturtle said...

The Butter Battle Book. Based on that book one might imagine that the entire Cold War was over which side of your toast you buttered.

Sounds more like Swift than Seuss.

Guildofcannonballs said...

Hey, wouldn't it be really, really, really wild if like this chick had dressed up like a Dr. Seuss character and then like it was like posted online? That would be totally awesome!! We could share the link and all have a grand laugh. JUST THINK OF IT!!!

Swede said...

Jesus, I didn't even realize there were still elementary school librarians.

I mean, why?

If this shit heal is at all representative of the ilk, then I can understand why schools always cut them first.

What an absolute twat.

mandrewa said...

I agree that criticizing Liz Phipps Soeiro for her appearance is uncalled far and is a low blow.

But I do think there is something appropriate about the words "totalitarian" and "children's reeducation camp schoolmarm" if we are talking about her ideas. Maybe those words are not quite justified or maybe the right words but it isn't that from the situation.

I don't see anything honest about her letter. It's not an attempt to start a conversation and don't imagine she'd have any interest in participating in a genuine exchange of ideas.

She is in a position of power over children and they are not even remotely in a position to disagree with her.

PeterK said...

"Dear Mrs. Trump — this is my advice to Melania — you should invite Liz Phipps Soeiro to the White House, along with all the authors and illustrators of the books on her list. Have a conversation, maybe bring in some additional authors. "

Seriously Ann? Ms. Phipps-Soeiro would rather die than attend a meeting with Mrs. Trump at the White House, but i bet if Michelle Obama had invited she couldn't get down to DC fast enough, and I bet that if her school had received a donation of books from Mrs. Obama she would not have rejected the gift nor offered a condescending list of books that Ms. Phipps-Soeiro approved of.

this librarian lacks class. and apparently has not been taking her TDS medications

Ralph L said...

She made the local news here in NC

Theranter said...

Didn't wade through all the comments, but has anyone mentioned the MassLive article that uncovered this dumb broad celebrating Dr. Seuss not long ago--including dressing up as The Cat in the Hat?

Stupid, hypocritical, hateful, liberals.

Theranter said...

Oops, I now see Grackle at 7:17 was on it!

Flat Tire said...

I'm the breakfast cook (among other jobs) on my family's guest ranch in northern California. If that woman walked by the kitchen window on her way to breakfast my first thought would be "Oh, shit...here comes a big list special dietary requests". I know you're not supposed to judge a book by it's cover but my guess is she's a gluten-free, lactose intolerant pescatarian, whatever is the hardest and most attention grabbing request at breakfast.

PaoloP said...

Hmm, no, she doesn't look great.
Also, I saw her photos around (dressed as Seuss' The Cat) and she doesn't look great even on the moral side.
What is this, an irresistible bout of feminine solidarity?

Gahrie said...

She is meticulously styled like a character in a Wes Anderson movie.

I was thinking more Wes Craven myself....

Big Mike said...

@mockturtle, it was Seuss.

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