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Books The Internet

eBay To Remove Dr. Seuss Books From Sale Over Offensive Imagery (thehill.com) 473

Online retailer eBay has announced it is working to remove sales of some books from Dr. Seuss over offensive imagery. The Hill reports: A spokesperson for the company told The Wall Street Journal that it is "currently sweeping our marketplace to remove these items." The spokesperson further told the newspaper that it would take time to review seller listings, and the company was monitoring new listings.

The move comes after Dr. Seuss Enterprises announced on Tuesday, which was the late author's birthday, that it will stop the publication of 46 books over racially insensitive imagery. The company told the Associated Press that ending the publications was a move to "preserve the author's legacy." The books reportedly include "McElligot's Pool," "On Beyond Zebra!," "Scrambled Eggs Super!," "The Cat's Quizzer," "And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street" and "If I Ran the Zoo."

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eBay To Remove Dr. Seuss Books From Sale Over Offensive Imagery

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  • Because (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:29PM (#61125172)
    badly drawn asians are dangerous... Give me a break!!!
  • by bobstreo ( 1320787 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:32PM (#61125182)

    But they missed the Dr. Seuss classics: "Hitler was Right" and "The KKK took my baby away" /s

  • by haunebu ( 16326 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:33PM (#61125184) Homepage

    In all of history, when were the book burners the good guys? Never.

    • by StevenMaurer ( 115071 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:01PM (#61125274) Homepage

      Mind you, Dr. Seuss was very much a liberal of his day, and these works clearly just victim of changing societal standards, but surely you can tell the difference between government thugs emptying libraries (both public and - at the point of a gun - private) of all "wrong think" and a website deciding that they don't want to carry a certain product.

      Far more dangerous to my mind is the willingness of people to invent random "alternative facts" to support their beliefs when their ideology conflicts with actual facts. Screaming "fake news" at the truth because you don't want it to be, is the true intellectual descendant of book burning.

      Need I also point out that the original decision made by his estate, was done last year? When a different man was President? I need to point this out because of all the partisan bullshitting, like Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy lying about "the Democrats outlawing Dr. Seuss" when they did no such thing. [newsweek.com]. To borrow from another classic, that's Orwellian Doublethink in action.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by gizmo2199 ( 458329 )

        "like Republican House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy lying about "the Democrats outlawing Dr. Seuss" when they did no such thing."

        "President Biden removed mentions of Dr. Seuss from Read Across America Day amid accusations of “racial undertones” in the classic, whimsical tales for children. Read Across America Day, started by the National Educational Association in 1998 as a way to promote children’s reading, is even celebrated on the author’s March 2 birthday. In his presidential p

      • by ufgrat ( 6245202 ) on Friday March 05, 2021 @12:40AM (#61125728)

        As the publisher, they have the right to do whatever they want. It's their intellectual property-- if you don't believe it, consider the hue and cry over George Lucas personally breaking into every house that owned a copy of the Star Wars Christmas Special (Any statement that George Lucas was personally responsible for the near total extermination of all existing copies of said TV Special are entirely theoretical).

        However, this isn't about the publisher any longer, this story is about eBay blacklisting those books-- surely, a well-meaning act, but getting much closer to banning. And immediately after banning, comes burning.

        Any time a society decides collectively to ban a book, a statue, a person (and no, I don't mean Trump, who was given every opportunity to admit he lost, instead of trying to ignite a civil war, or Gina Carano who didn't understand that when you work for Disney, and you speak, you are held accountable to Disney standards, for better or worse), or an idea, serious concern is warranted, because this is the metaphorical precipice of a very slippery slope.

        The Right has done everything in it's power to shame, humiliate, ostracize, belittle and in all other ways render irrelevant any idea or truth that they deem inconvenient-- but even they are careful about calling for something to be outright banned (aside from voting rights, minorities and the 50% of America that identifies with the Left).

        The problem is, Dr. Seuss books (and only 6, not 46, who the #$@%* edits these submissions?!?) are being effectively banned for "good" reasons-- but you can't claim to have free speech as a society, and support banning of books. Doing the wrong thing for the right reason, is still doing the wrong thing. Next, we should ban any book that contains the "N" word-- because it's insensitive. Except that includes Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, and Uncle Tom's Cabin, and I don't know how many other classics. If you include "Negro", then you're pretty much wiping out every book from the 19th and early 20th century that had any form of diversity in it's characters.

        So where do we stop? Do we add Mein Kampf? The Little Red Book? Should Ivanhoe be banned for containing too much Saxon violence (say it out loud)? If society deems "socialism" bad (without understanding what the word actually means), does that mean Bernie Sanders should be barred from public speaking? Who decides what is offensive? Fox News? MSNBC? CNN? Congress? A Gallup poll? Religious fundamentalists? All are equally terrifying.

        As a society, we have a choice. We can decide whether to buy, or watch, or read any given book or tv show, or movie. We can face our past (and present), reasonably, and rationally. We can discuss with our peers and our children the differences between what was acceptable then and now-- we can talk about inequality, and what makes us all unique, and how to better understand each other-- or we can continue to stick our fingers in our ears and hum really loudly while pretending there's nothing wrong, and that we never made mistakes.

        Telling someone they're racist because of the color of their skin, is ironic. Telling someone to not be who they are, lest they offend, is offensive. Neither is a solution.

        I have been on this planet for 5 full decades now, and I can honestly say, at no time during my life, have racial tensions been higher-- and I was born long enough ago that segregated schools were still a thing. I remember the race riots in Miami. I attended a school system that had been forcibly integrated 2 years earlier-- and during the next decade, never encountered racism in that school system. As kids, we made fun of each others differences-- but we didn't hate each other. We knew we were different, but equal, and when possible, tried to learn from each other. When we disliked each other, it was for petty (or real) reasons that had nothing to do with skin color.

        When I saw Song of the South as a child, or read Mark Twain's books, or read my all

    • by BlackBilly ( 7624958 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:14PM (#61125324)
      I first became aware of this wokeness cancer about 12 years ago when talking to HR about one of my staff. He had been accused of 'offensive behaviour' which meant he'd get a warning. I questioned how that is defined or decided, and the response was that offensive behaviour is anything that anyone finds offensive. And the penalty for that is a warning.
      I paused to see if she would work out the glaring flaw in that logic, but no, she thought that was a tight argument.
      So I ask, what if I find the word 'the' offensive, do you get a warning for saying it? She laughed and brushed it off, 'Don't be silly'. What if I find your shoes offensive? If I don't like someone I can find something about them offensive and then you have to issue them a warning? It simply didn't click to her at all that an offence has to have some level of objectivity about it.
      At the time I didn't think that much about it, but I slowly started to see this crazy logic creep into mainstream conscience. Some people simply lack the ability to grasp the concept of subjectivity.
      Wokeness is a cancer on society. It will only lead to tears.
      • by vix86 ( 592763 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:35PM (#61125414)

        "If you give an inch, they'll take a mile."

        The "take offense" thing can swing in two directions, its not just in the woke direction. The problem is the quote I gave though. No one has wanted to sit down and try and draw lines in the sand. Instead it's functioning under an insane warped sense of "I know it when I see it," which is how I think most people operated with the "Take offense" stuff prior to the 00's, but when you have HRs staffed with idiots out of say, liberal arts schools, their reality isn't the same as most people's.

        Hence why you get people getting distraught because you used a "Master/Slave design pattern" and "that's offensive!"

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Personally, I find taking offense where none was given to be deeply offensive.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:39PM (#61125426)

      "Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience."

      C.S. Lewis

    • Who's burning any books?
    • They don't need to answer that question because they've already started rewriting the history books. They just have to hold out until history has been politically corrected.
  • by bonedonut ( 4687707 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:34PM (#61125186)

    Seriously, political correctness and cancel culture is going to be the downfall of western society.

    • *Exactly* Why NOW? These books have been around for decades. Hell, even political correctness has been around for over 30 years and NOW the Seuss estate is getting their panties in a twist over some of Seuss's books, even the more obscure ones? Why the wait?
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 )

        I know! That's what I said when they force me to give up all the slaves I owned. We had them for ages. This changing times and changing norms insanity has to stop. Next they're going to tell me I'm not allowed to beat my wife. It's insane!

    • Yeah but this is the world young people want to live in. We'll all be dead soon enough. I only get annoyed when it happens to something I like, and I never even heard of these books.
  • by shubus ( 1382007 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:36PM (#61125192)
    Yes, it's almost past time light the torches, purge libraries of all woke imagery and get those bonfires going.
  • by takionya ( 7833802 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:41PM (#61125208)
    The Social Justice cult of Woke (SJCW) strikes again. That's a set of professional victims who trawl the Internet all day long in search of material to get offended over, on behalf of some imaginary oppressed third party.

    Next up, Where the Wild Things Are [wikipedia.org] is getting banned for being insensitive to Furries. The Snowman [wikipedia.org] being banned for being racist to Caucasians.
  • By the VHS tape of that Beavis and Butthead episode where they play softball with a bullfrog.

    Neither of the leads were harmed during the making of that classic episode.

  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:49PM (#61125234) Homepage

    I'm reminded of the ST:TNG episode "Darmok", about a society that communicated through stories that were commonly known. If you didn't know the stories, you could not understand the people.

    We are rapidly moving to a point where all of our shared stories are becoming forbidden knowledge, because "someone" was offended by what happened in the past. Not to mention the apparent need to re-define words so that, if you read the stories of the past, your understanding of them is clouded so you think the "correct thing" about what was said.

    The negative stereotypes reported in the Dr. Seuss stories apparently took years of study to find. Otherwise, you would think people would have figured it out decades ago.

    • but they were Asians. You'll notice you can't buy prints of some of the really, really racist stuff Suess wrote/drew about black folks? That's because it was quietly pulled from the market long before the American right wing figured out they could distract you from economics with "Culture War" issues.

      The Asian stuff kind of got ignored because we don't beat up on Asians like we do with blacks. It's become an issue probably because there's been a raise in hate crime against Asians due to a certain well k
  • by cirby ( 2599 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @09:50PM (#61125244)

    Over 30,000 listings for actual bad-guys-in-WWII memorabilia, including action figures.

    (circumspect language to avoid a filter that makes sure you can not see certain words)

    • (circumspect language to avoid a filter that makes sure you can not see certain words)

      Oh you mean the not see filter -- the one that makes sure we do not see the word that they want us to not see.

      It sure is a heil of a filter!

  • No one is forcing anyone to buy them so is just seeing them for sale so disturbing to some people that they have to be removed? That's just crazy.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      You still don't get it.

      This is about the free market. Random House just wanted to purge some crap from their back catalog and score some easy publicity. eBay is reacting because they don't like being known as the hot place to buy racist children's books.

      See, the market knows that catering to racists is a losing proposition. Normal people avoid racist garbage, the people who buy it, and, most importantly, the companies that make it and the places that sell it.

      We don't want your racist trash. We don't gi

  • "As a High Ranking Member of Dr. Seuss: We Own the Rights to Him Inc, I'm uncomfortable with the thought of Dr. Seuss being seen as a racist - let's pull a few of his books from publication so hopefully they won't accidentally cause a fuss and taint his legacy".

    "Hm, yes, I agree, that could be bad for us. Shall we quietly delete the offending books from the catalog?"

    "No, let's announce what we're doing to the media. I'm sure this won't turn into one of those weeks-long moral panic shitstorms."

  • by Anachronous Coward ( 6177134 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:11PM (#61125316)

    Dr. Seuss's The Pocket Book of Boners [wikipedia.org].

    • The twelve-year-old part of me kept giggling as I read that short Wikipedia entry - even knowing what the word meant in context.

  • Not 46 books, 6 books. Sloppy summary.

  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:41PM (#61125440)
    The Social justice warriors are performing the 21st century version of Book Burning.

    If literature offends, it must be destroyed.

    Cn anyone tell me exactly why we must destroy anything considered offensive? And where does it end? Remember how we cheered on the scientists who raced to preserve AGW information during the early yers of the Trump administration? It didn't fit with the Republican's ideology. So the scientists were sving it from destruction. Oddly enough, a Doctor Who quote comes to mind.

    " You just want cruelty to beget cruelty. You're not superior to people who were cruel to you. You're just a whole bunch of new cruel people"

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @10:44PM (#61125444)

    Time to check those childhood closets friends, as books like "If I ran the Zoo" are going for over $500 [amazon.com] on Amazon from used book sellers.

  • We didn't ban racial stereotypes. And we liked it! Weeee loved it!
  • If people are actually offended, as opposed to being told they are offended, do not buy the books.

    That and I think this bollocks is all about saviour syndrome, from people who donâ(TM)t want or need a saviour.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      No one was buying the books. That's why Random House decided to stop printing them.

      Then you and your racist buddies threw a fit like a spoiled toddler.

      The only people triggered here are the racist shit-bags.

  • Kimmel Is Right (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dcw3 ( 649211 ) on Thursday March 04, 2021 @11:53PM (#61125634) Journal

    Jimmy said "this is how you get Trump reelected", and he's right. Keep going after meaningless "microaggressions", and many are going to turn on you. You keep taking offense where none was given, and expect to be praised for it, while all you're doing is making enemies.

  • by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Friday March 05, 2021 @12:09AM (#61125662) Journal

    Wokeness is the new religion. If we go back in time a little ways in the United States, 50 years will do, a much larger percentage of the population were religious. Specifically, of the Christian faith. One of the main functions of religion within society is to codify and propagate morality. Things like loving your neighbor, not coveting another man's wife, doing unto others as you'd have them do to you, etc. So in the recent past, a large portion of the population attempted to live by these kinds of morals, and also try to instill them in others.

    For the last number of decades the percentage of religious people has been declining in the United States. Yet, for people who are very empathetic and are strongly led by their conscience (yes, that is a trait that varies in intensity across the population), they have a strong desire to be moral and try to instill morals on others, but they do not have any codified set of morals to go by. We now have these very nebulous things floating out there, like racism is bad, emotionally hurting a person because of their sexual preference is bad, harming our environment is bad, preventing people coming into our country because of their citizenship is bad, etc.

    Because these things are not codified to the extent that morals are in various established religions, there are no rules, guidance or leaders to help delineate all the nuances and shades of gray in these sorts of things. People interpret these loose sets of items I described above with various levels of zealousness, depending on the amount of emotions that are invoked or their personal experiences as victim.

    So to sum up all I've said, organized religions are being replaced with being "woke", which is such a nebulous and non-codified set of morals that it cannot be applied in any kind of universal or consistent manner. Because of that we will see more and more irrational, inconsistent, unfair and, eventually, dangerous behavior manifest over time. Essentially there is a "religion vacuum" which is being filled by being "woke".

  • Moral Panic (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jodka ( 520060 ) on Friday March 05, 2021 @12:17AM (#61125682)

    The National Post explains: Here are the 'wrong' illustrations that got six Dr. Seuss books cancelled. [nationalpost.com]

    Ebay won't sell you a book with Eskimo Fish (that's racist!!!) [thequint.com] but they do offer several Alabama Coon Jiggers [ebay.com].

    In the same week that the copyright holder stopped publishing six Seuss books, and eBay banned their sale, Amazon revised an icon [news.com.au] because some people imaged that it was really a H*tler face. Democrats insisted that a CPAC stage designed by Democrats [foxnews.com] was secret N*zi symbolism.

    In the 1980's American Christians imaged there was a Satan worshipper hiding under every rock. Known as the Satanic Panic [vox.com], it is characterized variously as mass hysteria [wikipedia.org] or moral panic [wikipedia.org]. That propensity for paranoid groupthink expresses itself in active generations today as the conviction that racism is everywhere; in a drawing of a fish resembling an Inuit, in a stage, in a cardboard box icon. Thirty years from now, a generation hence, now will be known as the time of the Great Racism Panic.

    The root cause for the outbreak of unhinged cancel culture is that western society has become too tolerant. See the Paradox of tolerance [wikipedia.org]:

    The paradox of tolerance states that if a society is tolerant without limit, its ability to be tolerant is eventually seized or destroyed by the intolerant. Karl Popper described it as the seemingly paradoxical idea that in order to maintain a tolerant society, the society must be intolerant of intolerance.

      In other words, cancel cancel culture.

           

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