Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

'Moms For Liberty' Rails Against TN School Librarian Over Book About Girl With Two Dads

librarian reading to students with excerpt of librarian's note overlaid
M4L - Chattanooga, Tn/Facebook; Peter Cade/Getty Images

A Tennessee chapter of the conservative group took to Facebook to complain about a Hamilton County School librarian's plan to read 'Stella Brings the Family' to highlight family differences ahead of Mother's Day.

The Moms for Liberty are at it again.

A Tennessee chapter of the far-right conservative group is raising a ruckus in Hamilton County, Tennessee over the local library's planned Mother's Day story time for kids.


Sounds harmless enough right? But school librarian Caroline Mickey announced her event would be “sensitive to the fact that not all students live with a mother"--and the Moms for Liberty weren't having any of that, especially since the books chosen for the story time included one about a little girl with two dads.

So, the Moms for Liberty did what they do best--promoting liberty by trying to ban books from being read to kids and calling a librarian a pedophile in the process.

In a note sent home to parents of students at Alpine Crest Elementary School outside Chattanooga, Mickey describe the story time event and why it would be inclusive of stories about kids who don't live with a mother, or at least what we traditionally define as one.

In her note, she wrote:

"I'm planning a lesson that celebrates those who fill the motherly roles in our lives: those who make our lunches, kiss away our hurts, and who teach us how to fly."

This of course includes children whose mothers are simply dead. And accordingly, Mickey's book choices not only included the book about a little girl with two dads, Stella Brings The Family, but also one called Mother Bruce, about a bear who adopts a group of motherless goslings.

The fact that children are often motherless for myriad reasons beyond the fact that gay men exist seemed to escape Moms for Liberty's notice. Even after Mickey specifically stipulated that parents are free to opt their kids out of the lesson, the group went full-on combative, first taking to Facebook to register their outrage.

In its Facebook post on the matter, they demanded to know:

"Why do children with traditional family values have to opt out and be sent to an alternative place for alternative lesson? Aren’t these children too young for this?"

In a local newspaper, they were even more pointed and bigoted about it, writing:

“Men are not mothers. Men are fathers. Fathers are men. Mothers are women. If the primary caregiver is a man, he is a father.”

And in emails, they were even worse, accusing Mickey of being a "groomer" and "an enemy of traditional birth mothers," whatever that means. Mickey herself called the uproar "overwhelming."

In the end, Mickey's boss, Hamilton County Schools Superintendent Justin Robertson, capitulated to the group and canceled the event, despite its nationwide membership representing a vanishingly small minority of 95,000 parents in a country with a population of 331 million people.

On social media, people were appalled by Mothers for Liberty's response.







Hopefully the next school system Moms for Liberty attacks will have more courage to stand up to them than Hamilton County Schools Superintendent Justin Robertson.

Bullies only get stronger when you back down, as many of us learned in elementary school.

More from Trending

Jennifer Aniston; Bella Ramsey as Ellie
Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images; HBO

Jennifer Aniston Has Classic Reaction To Her 2003 Magazine Cover Popping Up On 'The Last Of Us'

Jennifer Aniston may not appear in The Last of Us, but according to the series’ season 2 premiere, she’s one of the few celebrities to survive the apocalypse—at least in magazine form.

In the April 13 episode, Bella Ramsey’s Ellie and Isabela Merced’s Dina patrol a ransacked store, where Ellie falls through the floor into a basement. There, she discovers a weathered 2003 issue of People magazine featuring Aniston on the cover of a “Best & Worst Dressed” edition.

Keep Reading Show less
Larry David; Bill Maher
Tommaso Boddi/Variety via Getty Images; Christopher Polk/Variety via Getty Images

Larry David Epically Trolls Bill Maher's Dinner With Trump In Satirical 'My Dinner With Adolf' Essay

Curb Your Enthusiasm actor Larry David had social media users cackling after he penned a satirical essay for the New York Times about an imagined dinner with Adolf Hitler to jab comedian Bill Maher over Maher's recent White House dinner with President Donald Trump.

Earlier this month, Maher said on his show that Trump was “gracious and measured" during their late March meeting. Maher, who has a history of criticizing Trump, stressed that he did not turn “MAGA” and “to the president’s credit, there was no pressure to” do so.

Keep Reading Show less
Rob Lowe; Chris Pratt
Steve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images; Mindy Small/WireImage/Getty Images

Rob Lowe Easter Bunny Fail

Rob Lowe just proved he's willing to help out his friends in whatever way he can—even if that means dressing up as the Easter Bunny.

Lowe is known for many roles—Sodapop from The Outsiders, Sam from The West Wing, and more recently, he made a memorable appearance as the Easter Bunny for Chris Pratt’s kids.

Keep Reading Show less
Kristi Noem
Rebecca Noble/Getty Images

Kristi Noem's Purse Was Stolen At A D.C. Restaurant—And Everyone's Thinking The Same Thing

Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was widely mocked after a man reportedly stole her purse, which contained her government ID, passport, medication, and around $3,000 in cash, on Easter Sunday as she enjoyed a meal with her family—all while she was being protected by the Secret Service.

The Secret Service reviewed surveillance footage from Capital Burger and saw an unidentified white male in a medical mask steal Noem’s bag and exit the restaurant, a law enforcement source said. An investigation is now underway to track any attempted use of her financial accounts.

Keep Reading Show less