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 I work at a rural community college & had a chance some yrs back to talk with one of the people who'd originally advocated for building it. Told me he met a LOT of resistance from the economic leaders at the time, who wanted to keep their labor force ignorant & captive. He kept telling them "It's 1967! They have cars! They'll just leave anyway, & then you'll be stuck with the ones who aren't smart enough to leave!"
@MelMScow later told this story to the fundraising guy at my college. He just nodded sagely & said that's how it was everywhere around that time. (He'd had his first higher-ed grant-writing job around that same time.) So, yeah, alas, there does seem to always be an influential segment of society that wants to keep people from educating themselves.