Update on the Ban on Magical Practices: What You Need to Know

By admin

Dear Citizens, We hope this message finds you well. We are writing to provide an update on the recent ban on magical practices within our community. After much consideration and deliberation, the governing body has made the decision to **lift the ban on magical practices**, effective immediately. This decision comes as a result of a thorough review of the existing laws and regulations surrounding magic and the feedback received from various stakeholders. Over the past few months, we have witnessed a significant shift in societal attitudes towards magic, with a growing recognition of its positive contributions to our community. Magic has been found to enhance creativity, foster innovation, and provide unique solutions to complex problems.


About the ban: This book was challenged for “divisive language” and because it was thought to promote anti-police views

Much more than the facts of life or the birds and the bees, Sex Is a Funny Word opens up conversations between young people and their caregivers in a way that allows adults to convey their values and beliefs while providing information about boundaries, safety, and joy. Next, this additional mana will often slow the companion down by a turn, allowing the opponent to interact with it while in the companion player s hand or otherwise giving the opponent an additional turn to plan ahead before the companion hits the battlefield.

Update regarding the ban on magical practices

Magic has been found to enhance creativity, foster innovation, and provide unique solutions to complex problems. Moreover, it has played a crucial role in promoting cultural diversity and preserving our heritage. However, it is important to note that the lifting of the ban does not mean a complete removal of regulations.

Shhhh! These Kid’s Books Have Been Banned (or Challenged)

About the book: Callie rides an emotional roller coaster while serving on the stage crew for a middle school production of Moon over Mississippi as various relationships start and end, and others never quite get going.

About the ban: This book has been banned several times in Texas schools and libraries for its inclusion of LGBTQIA+ content and concerns that it goes against “family values/morals.”

Ages: 7-12
Call number: JGraphic Telge.R

Title: Worm Loves Worm
By: J.J Austrian
Published: 2014

About the book: Two worms in love decide to get married, and with help from Cricket, Beetle, Spider, and the Bees they have everything they need and more, but which one will be the bride and which the groom?

About the ban: This book has been challenged for LGBTQIA+ content.

Ages: 4-8
Call number: JPicture Austr.J

Title: The Adventures of Captain Underpants (series)
By: Dav Pilkey
Published: 1997

About the book: When George and Harold hypnotize their principal into thinking that he is the superhero Captain Underpants, he leads them to the lair of the nefarious Dr. Diaper, where they must defeat his evil robot henchmen.

About the ban: The series overall was challenged for encouraging disruptive behavior, while Captain Underpants and the Sensational Saga of Sir Stinks-A-Lot was challenged for featuring a same-sex married couple.

Ages: 7-11
Call number: JChapter Pilke.D

Title: The Watsons go to Burmingham
By: Christopher Paul Curtis
Published: 1995

About the book: The ordinary interactions and everyday routines of the Watsons, an African American family living in Flint, Michigan, are drastically changed after they go to visit Grandma in Alabama in the summer of 1963.

About the ban: This book has been challenged for "inappropriate language and violence."

Ages: 11 and up
Call number: J Curti.C

Title: This Day in June
By: Gayle Pitman
Published: 2014

About the book: A picture book illustrating a Pride parade. The endmatter serves as a primer on LGBT history and culture and explains the references made in the story.

About the ban: This book has been challenged for its inclusion of LGBTQIA+ content. In 2019, a local religious activist checked out four copies of the book from the Orange City Public Library and burned them live over Facebook. However, not only did people send in donations to help replace the books, a GoFundMe and several Facebook fundraisers were set up, raising thousands of dollars to replace damaged materials.

Ages: 4-8
Call number: JPicture Pitma.G

Title: Melissa
By: Alex Gino
Published: 2015

About the book: When people look at Melissa, they think they see a boy. But she knows she's not a boy. She knows she's a girl. Melissa thinks she'll have to keep this a secret forever. Then her teacher announces that their class play is going to be Charlotte's Web. Melissa really, really, REALLY wants to play Charlotte. But the teacher says she can't even try out for the part . because she's a boy. With the help of her best friend, Kelly, Melissa comes up with a plan. Not just so she can be Charlotte -- but so everyone can know who she is, once and for all.

About the ban: This book has been challenged, restricted and banned for LGBTQIA+ content, conflicting with a religious viewpoint, and not reflecting “the values of our community.” In 2017, author, Alex Gino even raised money to purchase copies of the book when administration for Wichita, Kansas school district restricted school librarians from using system funds to purchase the book.

Ages: 8-12
Call number: J Gino.A

Title: Prince & Knight
By: Daniel Haack
Published: 2018

About the book: A prince and a knight in shining armor find true love in each other's embrace after fighting a dragon together.

About the ban: This book was challenged and restricted for featuring a gay marriage and LGBTQIA+ content.

Ages: 4-8
Call number: JPicture Haack.D

Title: Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry
By: Mildred D. Taylor
Published: 1976

About the book: A black family living in Mississippi during the Depression of the 1930s is faced with prejudice and discrimination which its children do not understand.

About the ban: This book has been banned and challenged to be removed from many school libraries for its "harsh depictions of racism and its use of racial slurs."

Ages: 11 and up
Call number: J Taylo.M

Title: The Lorax
By: Dr. Seuss
Published: 1971

About the book: The Once-ler describes the results of the local pollution problem.

About the ban: In 1989, a parent who owned a logging company tried to have the Dr. Seuss book The Lorax banned from the Laytonville Elementary School reading list on grounds that it was “anti-logging."

Ages: 4-8
Call number: JPicture Seuss.D

Title: The Giving Tree
By: Shel Silverstein
Published: 1964

About the book: A young boy grows to manhood and old age experiencing the love and generosity of a tree which gives to him without thought of return.

About the ban: In 1988, the book was banned from a Colorado public library, who argued that the book was sexist.

Ages: 6-8
Call number: JPicture Silve.S

Title: Something Happened in our Town: A Child's Story about Racial Injustice
By: Jessica Herthel
Published: 2014

About the book: After discussing the police shooting of a local Black man with their families, Emma and Josh know how to treat a new student who looks and speaks differently than his classmates. It It includes an extensive Note to Parents and Caregivers that provides general guidance about addressing racism with children, child-friendly vocabulary definitions, conversation guides, and a link to additional online resources for parents and teachers.

About the ban: This book was challenged for “divisive language” and because it was thought to promote anti-police views

Ages: 4-8
Call number: JPicture Celan.M (Children's Parenting)

Title: Walter the Farting Dog: Banned from the Beach
By: William Kotzwinkle
Published: 2007

About the Book: Although confined to a hotel room after his flatuence offends the patrons of a beach resort, Walter the farting dog makes an explosive sea rescue to save little Billy and Betty.

About the Ban: This book was challenged for ‘using the words “fart” and farting” twenty-four times’

Ages: 4-8
JPicture Kotzw.W

Title: I Am Jazz
By: Jessica Herthel
Published: 2018

About the book: This book is the true-life story of Jazz Jennings, a child who, in her own words, was born with “a girl’s brain and a boy’s body" and follows the gradual acceptance by Jazz’s parents and teachers of her transgender reality.

About the ban: This book was banned, restricted, or challenged for LGBTQIA+ content, for a transgender character, and for confronting a topic that is 'sensitive, controversial, and politically charged.'

Ages: 5-11
Call number: xBiog Jenni.J Herth.J

Title: A Wrinkle in Time
By: Madeleine L'engle
Published: 1962

About the book: Meg Murry and her friends become involved with unearthly strangers and a search for Meg's father, who has disappeared while engaged in secret work for the government.

About the ban: This book was challenged to be removed from a Florida elementary school library for “opposing Christian beliefs and teaches occult practices,”

Ages: 10 and up
Call number: J Lengl.M

Title: And Tango Makes Three
By: Justin Richardson
Published: 2005

About the book: At the New York City's Central Park Zoo, two male penguins fall in love and start a family by taking turns sitting on an abandoned egg until it hatches.

About the ban: This book was challenged and restricted for including LGBTQIA+ content.

Ages: 4-8
Call number: JPicture Richa.J

Title: Sex is a Funny Word: A Book About Bodies, Feelings and YOU!
By: Cory Silverberg
Published: 2015

About the book: A comic book for kids that includes children and families of all makeups, orientations, and gender identities, Sex Is a Funny Word is an essential resource about bodies, gender, and sexuality for children ages 8 to 10 as well as their parents and caregivers. Much more than the "facts of life" or "the birds and the bees, " Sex Is a Funny Word opens up conversations between young people and their caregivers in a way that allows adults to convey their values and beliefs while providing information about boundaries, safety, and joy.

About the ban: This book was challenged banned, and relocated for LGBTQIA+ content; for discussing gender identity and sex education; and for concerns that the title and illustrations were “inappropriate”

Ages: 8 -10
Call number: x612.6 Silve.C

Title: The Family Book
By: Todd Parr
Published: 2003

About the book: Represents a variety of families, some big and some small, some with only one parent and some with two moms or dads, some quiet and some noisy, but all alike in some ways and special no matter what.

About the ban: This book was banned from an Illinois school district because of a reference to same-sex parents.

Ages: 3-5
Call number: JPicture Parr.T

Title: A Day in the Life of Marlon Bundo
By: Marlon Bundo
Published: 2018

About the book: Meet Marlon Bundo, a lonely bunny who lives at the Naval Observatory with his Grampa, the Vice President of the United States. But on this Very Special Day, Marlon's life is about to change forever.

About the ban: This book was challenged and vandalized for LGBTQIA+ content and political viewpoints,

Ages: 4-9
Call number: JPicture Bundo.M

Title: Harry Potter (series)
By: J.K Rowling
Published: 1998

About the book: Rescued from the outrageous neglect of his aunt and uncle, a young boy with a great destiny proves his worth while attending Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

About the ban: This book was banned banned and forbidden from discussion for referring to magic and witchcraft, for containing actual cursed and spells, and for characters that use “nefarious means” to attain goals.

Ages: 9-12
Call number: J Rowli.J

Title: Hop on Pop
By: Dr. Seuss
Published: 1991

About the book: Pairs of rhyming words are introduced and used in simple sentences, such as "Day. Play. We play all day. Night. Fight. We fight all night."

About the ban: In 2014 formal complaint was sent to Toronto Public Library claiming that the book “encourages children to use violence against their fathers” by hopping on them.

Ages: 3-8
Call number: JBegin Seuss.D

Title: The Stupids Step Out
By: Harry Allard
Published: 1972

About the book: The Stupid family and their dog Kitty have a fun-filled day doing ridiculous things.

About the ban: This book was challenged for reinforcing negative behavior, promoting low self-esteem, encouraging disrespect for authority, use of the word "stupid."

Ages: 4-7
Call number: JPicture Allar.H

Title: Jacob's New Dress
By: Sarah Hoffman
Published: 2014

About the book: Jacob, who likes to wear dresses at home, convinces his parents to let him wear a dress to school, too.

About the ban: This book was banned from a North Carolina school district on the grounds it was “a tool of indoctrination to normalize transgender behavior.”

Ages: 4-7
Call number: JPicture Allar.H

Title: Harriet the Spy
By: Louise Fitzhugh
Published: 1964

About the book: Harriet M. Welsch is a spy. She's staked out a spy route, and she writes down everything about everyone she sees -- including her classmates and her best friends -- in her notebook. Then Harriet loses track of her notebook, and it ends up in the wrong hands. Before Harriet can stop them, her friends have read the always truthful, sometimes awful things she's written about each of them. Will Harriet find a way to put her life and her friendships back together?

About the ban: In1983, the book was challenged during a school board meeting in Xenia, Ohio, where some argued the book encouraged bad behavior.

Ages: 8-12
Call number: J Fitzh.L

Today a reader, tomorrow a leader.

About the ban: This book has been challenged for "inappropriate language and violence."
Update regarding the ban on magical practices

To ensure the safety and well-being of our citizens, a new set of guidelines and procedures will be put in place to govern the practice of magic. These guidelines will outline the acceptable forms of magic, the responsible use of magical powers, and the consequences of any misuse. Additionally, efforts will be made to educate and raise awareness among our citizens about the responsible and ethical use of magic. **Training programs and workshops** will be organized to help individuals develop their magical abilities in a controlled and responsible manner. We understand that this decision may not be welcomed by everyone, as magic has long been a controversial topic. However, we want to emphasize that this step is taken in the best interest of our community, with the goal of fostering a more inclusive and harmonious environment. We urge all citizens to approach this new era of magic with an open mind and respectful curiosity. This is an opportunity for us to embrace our differences and celebrate the unique talents and abilities that magic provides. Let us move forward, hand in hand, as we embark on this exciting new chapter in our community's history. Thank you for your understanding and support. Yours respectfully, [Your Name].

Reviews for "Stay Up to Date on the Ban on Magical Practices with the Latest Update"

- Sarah - 1 star - I was extremely disappointed with the update regarding the ban on magical practices. It feels like the government is infringing on our rights and taking away a part of our culture. Magic has been a significant aspect of our lives for centuries, and now it's being snatched away from us without any logical explanation. I was hoping for a more open-minded and inclusive approach, but unfortunately, this update just brings more restrictions and limitations. I am deeply saddened by this decision and cannot support it.
- John - 2 stars - The update regarding the ban on magical practices is a step in the wrong direction. Instead of working towards understanding and acceptance, the government is choosing to suppress and stigmatize magical arts. This feels like a huge setback for our community and sends a message of discrimination and intolerance. I was hoping for more progressive laws that would protect magical practitioners and promote unity, but this update contradicts those ideals. It's disheartening to see our government resort to such measures, and it leaves me questioning their priorities and commitment to diversity.
- Emma - 3 stars - While I understand the concerns and reasoning behind the update regarding the ban on magical practices, I can't help but feel that it falls short of addressing the real issues. Magic has been an integral part of our heritage, and it's disappointing to see it being treated as a threat instead of something to be celebrated. I was hoping for a more nuanced and balanced approach that would consider the cultural significance and the positive aspects of magical practices. This update feels too restrictive and fails to acknowledge the contributions that magic has made to our society.

Latest Updates on the Ban on Magical Practices: Stay Informed

Update Regarding the Recent Ban on Magical Practices

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