@commander555 @JeniParsons Uh huh. And what smut, exactly, are you talking about? Be specific. Show your work. Let's see some titles. Are you prepared to defend your position? Have you read the books you want restricted?
Who decides what is smut and what is not smut? You? Your friends? Chaya Raichik?
Who determines who does and does not get access to smut? Politicians? Church leaders?
Are you able to answer any of these questions?
Would you object to Playboy or Hustler getting a spot on a school library? What about 50 shades of gray? Again, this is not about the content, because I believe that smut depicting consenting adults should be legal for consenting adults to view, I just don't think the government should be making smut socially acceptable by putting it in school or public libraries. Again, I only have so many characters, so I cannot go over every example, but lets go over two that I object to and why. My first example is "The Fourth Wing" which I consider to be literary porn because it contains multiple sex scenes between the protagonist and antagonist. These sex scenes depict specific types of sex acts and are clearly meant to arouse rather than to tell the story. Again, adults should be able to read this even if it is not my thing, I don't object to the content, I object to where the content is made available and to who. My second example is Gender Queer, which I object to not because it depicts non binary people, but because it contains a specific plate depicting the author masturbating and tasting her own sex fluids. Again, adults should be able to buy this, but the government shouldn't be making it socially acceptable by putting it in libraries.
@commander555 it's a good idea to put any alternative pronouns you're using in your bio just for ease of understanding.
If your personal pronouns are we/us (love that for you), putting them in your bio will make it easier for people online to understand that you mean yourself alone.