Rick Scarborough—a self-described “Christocrat,” strident anti-LGBTQ activist, and longtime critic of public education—has his sights set on taking over public education in Texas this year. He intends to do so by taking over school boards and fearmongering about public school students “being groomed by homosexuals and the trans perverts [and] recruited into their evil lifestyles.”
Last week, Scarborough revealed another aspect of his strategy. Speaking about his intention to take over school boards at an event organized by the Texas Tea Party Republican Women, Scarborough admitted that he is trying to "take over America" for Jesus and is working to "expunge this entire state of every immoral book in the library."
Scarborough began his remarks by recounting how, earlier in his career, he had been portrayed in the media a right-wing theocrat intent on forcing his far-right Christian views on the nation. That was an accurate assessment, Scarborough now admits.
"They went after me as trying to take over the town, trying to take over America," Scarborough said. "And, in all honesty, I was, but I couldn't say that. I mean, why not take it over for Jesus?"
"Sixty-eight percent of the teachers in Texas, by poll ... now believe that the LGBTQ agenda should be taught and embraced," Scarborough complained later in his speech. "We're grooming our children for pedophiles. That's what's happening. Now, let me tell you what I'm going to spend the rest of my life doing—and by God's grace, if I can raise the budget and get people behind me: In four years, I want to expunge this entire state of every immoral book in the library. Call me a Nazi, call me a book-burner, I've been called worse."
Scarborough has plenty of company. Right-wing politicians and political groups are restricting the freedom to learn by demanding the removal of books they don’t like—often those featuring Black or LGBTQ characters—from schools and public libraries. In Texas, the author of the state’s anti-abortion bill is drafting local ordinances that would allow citizens to sue librarians over “immoral content.”
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