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GOP Representative grills witness on whether banning pornographic magazines for first graders is ‘censorship’

(Daily Caller) – Republican Rep. Harriet Hageman of Wyoming grilled a witness during a Thursday hearing, asking if she believed preventing teachers from showing first graders pornographic…

(Daily Caller) – Republican Rep. Harriet Hageman of Wyoming grilled a witness during a Thursday hearing, asking if she believed preventing teachers from showing first graders pornographic magazines was “censorship.” “Miss Johnson, I just have a real, quick question for you: Do you believe it is censorship to prohibit teachers from exposing first graders to Penthouse magazine?” Hageman asked Nadine Farid Johnson, the managing director for Washington and Free Expression Programs at PEN America, during a 

hearing

held by the House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Limited Government and the Constitution. “Do I believe it is censorship? I’m sorry, ma’am, do I believe it’s censorship to–” Johnson said.

Johnson, who claimed that recent parental rights and education reform legislation in Florida promoted censorship in her initial 

testimony

, deflected Hageman’s question two more times. Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida 

signed

that state’s version of legislation into law in March 2022 to address parental complaints about explicit materials.

“I believe it is important to have parents, teachers and educators involved and understanding what… is being presented to a student,” Johnson said.

Florida 

pulled

 multiple books on the grounds of having explicit content, including “Gender Queer,” “Let’s Talk About It” and “It’s Perfectly Normal. “Do you believe it is appropriate to present Penthouse to first-graders?” Hageman asked after accusing Johnson of refusing to answer the question.

“Of course not,” Johnson said after previously dodging the question.

Parents 

across

 the 

country

 have raised objections to books with 

sexually explicit content

 in recent years, prompting some states to act to 

remove

 them from schools. Oklahoma 

announced

 a rule Feb. 10 that would allow the state to strip schools of certification if they make “pornographic materials or sexualized content” available in school libraries.