In rural Australia in the 1940s, my mother had rocks thrown at her and was branded a 'communist' because her father, a school headmaster, advocated for establishing a public library.

In the Canadian province where I now reside, the Catholic Church controlled libraries -- and thus access to information -- until the 1960s.

We forget how recent the democratisation of knowledge is -- how transformative such institutions were and how hard-won.

We should not part with them easily.

@MelMScow Most country towns in Australia had a “Mechanics Hall” or institute with a library from the 1830s onwards & cities like Melbourne had grand libraries as signs of their wealth, progress & ambition. (A literate society including the working class was a goal from very early on.) Im sorry your mother & her father copped that, but it was probably unusual that they didn’t already have a library.
@Susan60 Valuable as they were, I'm not sure that the Mechanics Institutes were quite the same thing as publicly-funded libraries. I'm also not sure that they were quite as ubiquitous as you contend, but am perfectly happy to be proved wrong.