Stop the Madness at the Library: Protect Kids, Not Porn

Vote NO on A & B to End Taxpayer-Funded PORN for
minors in Huntington Beach

Sexual Content in Public Libraries:
What Parents Need to Know

Public libraries should be places of learning, discovery, and safety for all children—but across the country, including right here in California, that trust is being violated. Taxpayer-funded libraries are stocking books with sexually explicit content and making them accessible to minors without parental knowledge or consent. When parents raise concerns, they’re dismissed as “book banners” or accused of censorship. But this isn't about banning books—it’s about setting common-sense boundaries and protecting our kids from graphic, age-inappropriate material. This FAQ addresses the most common talking points used to defend explicit content in libraries—and explains why parents have every right to speak up and draw the line.

The sexually explicit materials are germane to the story.

No amount of so-called “literary merit” justifies exposing minors to sexually explicit material in taxpayer-funded public libraries. Period. There is no shortage of excellent, age-appropriate books that inspire, educate, and entertain—without graphic sexual content. That’s where our focus should be: uplifting young minds, not desensitizing them.

We’re often told, “It’s just a few books.” That’s false. The problem is widespread. Explicit, pornographic material has made its way onto library shelves—on the public dime. And that should concern every parent, taxpayer, and elected official paying attention.

It’s time to protect our students from tax-sponsored pornography. It’s time to say enough is enough—and draw the line.

Minors are already seeing porn on their phones and at home.

We’re told, “Don’t be naive—they already see this stuff on their phones.” But that’s no excuse to fund and promote yet another source of dangerous, addictive, and sexualized content—especially one endorsed by public libraries without parents ever knowing.

Let’s be clear: when trusted authority figures like librarians or government institutions make this material available, it sends a powerful message to kids that it’s not only acceptable—but encouraged. That kind of silent endorsement is dangerous.

Parents have the right to filter what comes into their home—and they should have the same right in the library. If we can put parental controls on smartphones, why not public bookshelves?

And here's the kicker: taxpayers aren’t footing the bill for kids’ phones or internet access—but they are funding the books in public libraries. And yes, the exposure starts early—some of this content is creeping in at toddlers through picture books, making early and repeated exposure a real and growing threat.

It’s time to draw the line. It’s time to protect our kids from tax-funded pornography—not enable it.

Don’t you think “grooming” is a bit of an exaggeration.

Some claim that calling this grooming is an exaggeration. But ask yourself—is it really? When adults continually expose children to books that push a progressive spectrum of sex and sexuality, it’s more than just “education”—it’s a calculated effort to desensitize young hearts and minds.

Over time, this steady drip of sexual content works to normalize what should remain private, prompting children to open up about intimate topics with adults they barely know, while quietly accepting the underlying ideologies being pushed. These are hallmarks of the grooming process, and we ignore them at our children’s peril.

The books you’ll hear about tonight are not harmless. They are part of a growing campaign to erode innocence and reshape values—without the consent or knowledge of parents.

It’s time to put a stop to taxpayer-funded pornography. It’s time to protect our children’s innocence—while we still can.

This isn’t really that bad?

Modern neuroscience reveals a startling truth: pornography doesn’t just entertain—it alters the brain, much like addictive drugs. When someone views porn, reads porn, their brain releases a powerful surge of dopamine, the same "feel-good" chemical triggered by substances like nicotine, cocaine, and meth. This flood of dopamine overstimulates the brain's reward system, creating a high that users begin to chase.

Over time, just like with drugs, the brain builds up a tolerance. What once stimulated excitement no longer satisfies, leading users to seek out more extreme and graphic material to achieve the same dopamine hit. This cycle hijacks natural sexual development, distorts reality, and severely damages the brain's ability to regulate self-control, make decisions, and form healthy relationships.

Porn should not be introduced to minors through our libraries. Porn changes how minors think, feel, and function. And like any addiction, it demands more and gives less, leaving destruction in its wake.

You are on the wrong side of history.

Let’s be clear: there is never a justifiable reason to expose children to pornography, erotic material, or sexually explicit content—especially behind the backs of their parents. History is not kind to those who blur the lines between education and exploitation.

Time and again, we’ve seen what happens when adults push inappropriate content onto kids—it leads to harm, confusion, and the erosion of innocence. Parental rights are not optional. They’re foundational. Any agenda that sidelines parents while slipping graphic material into the hands of children is not progressive—it’s predatory.

Mark this: those who normalize the sexualization of minors are not brave. They are not forward-thinking. They are on the wrong side of truth, the wrong side of morality, and the wrong side of history. And history always delivers a verdict.

If the material were truly obscene or pornographic, the librarian would be in handcuffs.

But in California, libraries are shockingly exempt from obscenity laws. That means librarians can legally stock and promote sexually explicit content—even to minors. It’s not just
outrageous, it’s a loophole big enough to drive a bookmobile through. That’s why it’s up to the community to step in—protect our children and demand that taxpayer dollars stop funding
this assault on innocence.

Stop Banning Books.

The term “Book Banner” is being weaponized to smear anyone who dares challenge the push to sexualize our kids. Let’s be clear: every book we’re talking about in the Huntington Beach libraries is freely available sold online, in bookstores, and accessible to adults and minors alike in public libraries. But here’s the catch: minors should only access them with parental permission—because parents, not unelected librarians and progressive activists should decide what’s appropriate for children. Parents need to be involved when talking about sexually inappropriate materials in a PUBLIC library.   This isn’t about banning books. It’s about protecting students from taxpayer-funded pornography. It’s time to draw the line.

Students need to see themselves in these books.

Supporters of exposing minors to sexually explicit books often argue that “students need to see themselves in books.” But here’s the reality: students who have experienced sexual abuse or trauma should not be retraumatized by stumbling upon graphic content in libraries. These deeply sensitive issues require professional counseling, not surprise exposure through explicit literature tucked between the shelves.

Even worse, some of these books push a sexually progressive agenda and are being used—without oversight—by unelected, unaccountable librarians to “affirm” a student’s self-declared identity. All of this is happening behind parents' backs, with zero consent or involvement from the very people who know their children best.

This isn’t inclusion—its indoctrination dressed up as empathy. It’s time to draw the line.