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Arizona Schools Are Literally Ripping Pages on Contraception out of Biology Books

Well this is as stupid as [REDACTED].

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The Gilbert Public Schools Governing Board in Arizona became displeased with a section in a high school biology book that described how an abortion-inducing drug works after complaints from a Christian law organization called Freedom, so they advised school officials to redact it with extreme prejudice. I can’t wait until someone goes full-on Fahrenheit 451 on it.

For now, they’re going with the slightly tamer method of just ripping the page out of the Campbell Biology: Concepts and Connections books. Wusses. But that was the preferred method, along with marking it out or pasting something over it, recommended by the Board’s acting president, Daryl Colvin: “The cheapest, least disruptive way to solve the problem is to remove the page. It’s only a page.”

Yeah. It’s only a page… of facts about how birth control methods work. Take a look for yourself. The pages have been posted for everyone’s continued viewing on a website created by Rachel Maddow called ArizonaHonorsBiology.com, because the Internet is forever. io9 says Maddow made sure to let the students know where they could still find the information by sending them the following message:

Dear honors biology students of Gilbert, Arizona, I now address you directly. You may soon find yourself holding a biology textbook with a hole where some true facts used to be. Don’t despair. We here at ‘The Rachel Maddow Show’ have preserved the part of your biology textbook that the crusading religious group and the Republican State Senators and the conservative majority on your school board no longer wants to allow you to see. We’re going to keep it posted for you in perpetuity at arizonahonorsbiology.com. Which we bought today so that we could post the page that they’re cutting out of your textbook. You can get it there.

The drug in question, Mifepristone, can terminate a pregnancy up to the 7-week mark, is by prescription only, requires several visits to a doctor, and may cause significant side effects as explained in the textbook. How informing students of those not-altogether-reassuring facts doesn’t fit with the state law that all school materials and discussions give “preference, encouragement and support to childbirth and adoption as preferred options to elective abortion,” I’m unsure.

Maybe I missed the diagram of young girls dancing gleefully with giant cartoon abortion pills and only happened to see the part that simply explains medical facts? And the part about the drug is just one paragraph on the double-sided page about contraceptive methods and how fertilization works, which might be something you’d want teenagers to learn about if you were really so uncomfortable with the ramifications of unwanted pregnancy.

(image via Amy)

Previously in [REDACTED]

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Dan Van Winkle
Dan Van Winkle (he) is an editor and manager who has been working in digital media since 2013, first at now-defunct Geekosystem (RIP), and then at The Mary Sue starting in 2014, specializing in gaming, science, and technology. Outside of his professional experience, he has been active in video game modding and development as a hobby for many years. He lives in North Carolina with Lisa Brown (his wife) and Liz Lemon (their dog), both of whom are the best, and you will regret challenging him at Smash Bros.

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