President Obama’s Books Banned

07/10/09  Print This Post Print This Post    6 Comments   Popular   Written by Julie Schwietert
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And what will we do about all the translated editions? Photo: ~Mers

The Associated Press calls prison officials’ decision “the audacity of nope.”

In a story that seems straight from Chuck Shepherd’s News of the Weird, that venerable mainstream media giant, Associated Press, is reporting that President Obama’s books, Dreams of My Father and The Audacity of Hope, have been banned.

The ban was issued by officials at a US federal supermax prison in Colorado and applies specifically to inmate Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, who requested President Obama’s books to help him while away some time during his 30 year sentence. He was convicted for joining al-Qaeda and plotting to assassinate former President George W. Bush.

Prison officials reported they were advised by the FBI not to grant Mr. Ali’s request, citing the claim that providing Mr. Ali with President Obama’s books would constitute a threat to national security.

Meanwhile, anyone with a library card can check out and read either book without potentially threatening the country?

What will the FBI recommend next?

Community Connection:

It’s common practice to redact news and approve (or deny) prisoners’ reading requests, but this one seems a bit extreme.

What do you think?


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About the Author

Matador ID: collazo

Julie Schwietert is the managing editor of Matador Network. She contributed a chapter to the recently published book, The Voluntary Traveler, and is currently working on five features for Fodor's Puerto Rico, 6th Edition.

6 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Hal replied on July 10, 2009

    Well that’s just weird.

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Luke Nye replied on July 10, 2009

    That’s dumb. How is a person in a super-max prison with no outside contact going to harm national security by reading a book?

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Adam replied on July 10, 2009

    Forget the super-max part, it just seems awfully strange that our own president’s books could be considered a threat to national security.

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • joshywashington replied on July 10, 2009

    I think the dangerous stupidity of banning books is a bigger threat to our national security

    (Report comment)

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  • Michelle replied on July 10, 2009

    What Josh said. :)

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply
  • Mrs. Murphy replied on July 24, 2009

    What Michelle said about what Josh said

    (Report comment)

    ↵ Reply

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