It’s time for America to stop starving its libraries of funding.
The Nation: 6.04.2015 by Katrina vanden HeuvelONE BOOK,
ONE CONGRESS
There are more public libraries in America—some 9,000 central buildings and 7,500 branch locations—than McDonald’s
restaurants, making them one of the most ubiquitous institutions in the nation.
Far from serving as obsolescent repositories for dead wood, libraries are
integral, yet threatened, parts of the American social fabric. Libraries, after
all, are truly democratic spaces where all are welcome and where everything
inside is available to everyone. Few American institutions strive for “equity
of access,” a core principle of the American Library
Association, and even fewer pay more than lip service to the idea that
services like the Internet are necessary aspects of life that simply must be
made available to all members of society. But despite their impact and
import—much of it hidden from people of means who can independently (and often
expensively) secure for themselves those services provided by the
library—America is starving its libraries, cutting off millions of people from
the stream of information that, like oxygen, powers the development and basic
functions of society. READ
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