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“Words and pictures are yin and yang. Married, they produce a progeny more interesting than either parent.” — Dr. Seuss

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Why is The Lorax banned? Popsugar released its banned books 2020 list and it’s full of head-scratching surprises. The Lorax film, starring Zac Efron and Danny De Vito, maybe. But why is The Lorax banned in its children’s book form? And what does Dr Seuss have to do with environmental issues? Well, it’s complicated.

“Hollywood is once again trying to indoctrinate our children.” So intones Lou Dobbs in the clip below from his show on the Fox Business Network, flagged by the Observer and other publications. Possibly alluding to the roundly mocked discussion of the Muppets back in December—which prompted Kermit and, especially, Miss Piggy to punch back at Fox News last month—Dobbs then lumps The Secret World of Arietty and The Lorax together as two new films that are “plainly demonizing the so-called 1 percent and espousing the virtue of green energy policies, come what may.” Dobbs’s attempt to smear The Secret World of Arietty with this brush seems frankly bizarre. The movie, produced in 2010

Liberal Mother Jones blogger Kate Sheppard wrote that environmentalists were “having a (rather justified) heart attack about the fact that ‘The Lorax’ is now being used to cross-promote a new SUV.” Mazda was using the movie to sell the new Seussified CX-5. One commercial featured a cartoon version of this SUV driving through a grove of Truffula trees. “The ads claim that the car is ‘Truffula tree friendly’ whatever that is supposed to mean,” she complained. The film, she wrote, “includes a musical number … about how capitalism is awesome and everyone needs a Thneed,” the silly, woven all-purpose product made from tufts of the Truffula trees “which plays over a scene of his (the Once-ler’s) company decimating the landscape with all its biggering and bigg

Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel) first published The Lorax in 1971. And, it was destined to join the ranks of his most popular (and controversial) children's books. ... He said, "it's stressful on the child when he has to choose between Dr. Seuss and Daddy." ...

“Nothing is going to change, unless someone does something soon.” — Dr. Suess

It’s Banned Books Week, a time to celebrate the freedom to read! It may come as a surprise that many of your favorite childhood books, from authors such as Dr. Seuss and Maurice Sendak, have been deemed unfit for reading in the US. In fact, each year hundreds of books are challenged or removed from schools and libraries. Banned books have existed for centuries, but here is a list of five familiar children’s books you probably didn’t know were banned.

The recent movie adaptation of The Lorax was a smash hit at theaters, drawing viewers into a 3-D version of the world Dr. Seuss created over 40 years ago. Hollywood expands upon the classic environmental tale but loses the simplicity of the message in updating the story for a modern audience. But the message — that the environment must be protected against those who would profit from it — is important. With Earth Day nearly upon us, it’s worth taking a closer look at the children’s book that spawned the movie.

Turning Grinch-Like on Dr. Seuss : Town’s Loggers Want ‘The Lorax’ Axed LAT ARCHIVES SEP. 14, 1989 12 AM PT UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL LAYTONVILLE, Calif. — Beloved children’s author Dr. Seuss is under attack by logging families in a rural upper Northern California town who want his 1971 classic, “The Lorax,” chopped as required reading by their kids. A special committee of the Laytonville Unified School District met Wednesday to consider a complaint that the book “criminalizes” tree-cutting. “It seems as though the battle lines are drawn right down the main street of Laytonville,” an unincorporated community where both logging interests and environmentalists are prominent, District Supt. Brian Buckley said. “The Lorax” criticizes the destruction of Earth’s forests. Teachers of the Mendocino County community, for the second year and with approval of the school board, have placed “The Lorax” on its required reading lis

Ever wonder why seemingly harmless books like Harry Potter and The Bridge to Terabithia were once banned in the good ol’ USA? Wait — you mean to tell me that you didn’t know some of your favorite childhood books flaunt their banned status? The same ones that shaped you into the person you are today? Books that made you think about your place in the world, or reassured you that it is okay to be you? That being different compared to society’s norm is good and beautiful? Many widely read and extremely popular titles within the United States all happen to bear the title “banned” due to the “radical views” or messages they contain that might get readers… thinking. More likely than not, you encountered at least five banned books in your life that appeared threatening to the power of authorities in some way. And if you haven’t read any of these, well, being told you can’t only make the desire to do it that much stronger. ADD THESE 15 BANNED BOOKS TO YOUR LIST TO SEE WHY AMERICANS KICKED THEM TO THE CURB! WHY ARE BOOKS BANNED?

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