Library lecture draws more than 200 More...
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Library lecture draws more than 200
More than 200 high school students and teachers packed the Friends
Meeting Room at the Newport Beach Public Library on Saturday to hear
author Eric Schlosser speak about the craft of investigative
journalism.
Earlier this week, the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
announced that it would not permit fliers advertising Schlosser’s
appearance to be displayed in schools, citing the concerns of some
parents regarding Schlosser’s views on U.S. drug laws. Schlosser, the
author of “Reefer Madness: Sex, Drugs and Cheap Labor in the American
Black Market,” has long been an advocate of decriminalizing
marijuana, although he does not support legalizing the drug.
At the district’s board meeting on Tuesday, a number of parents
had asked that the schools not display the flier. Despite the
controversy over much of Schlosser’s work, however, the event on
Saturday passed without protest.
Schlosser only briefly touched on the issue of censorship during
the hour-long seminar, which was held exclusively for a high school
audience. At one point, he mentioned the biases in the mainstream
media and urged students to seek truth on their own.
“Billions of dollars are being spent to target young consumers
like yourself,” Schlosser said. “You’ve got to learn to see through
those systems that are trying to control you.”
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