I think your arrests for unprovoked assault will do that part.
It's almost like blindly opposing bans can backfire on you.
during incubation/mass cloning then deliberately traumatized as children to influence their behaviour later in life. There's a hell of a lot of difference in what's going on between those two books.
There's trying to survive a brutal reality show in a dystopian future (and later leading a revolution against the dystopian government running that show), and then there's the book focused on constant drug use and sex in a society where people are deliberately made stupid by oxygen deprivation
I found that particular book at a used book store, but there wasn't anything on the cover to hint it wasn't the type of book it'd be appropriate to have in a school library.
You're not safe to have anywhere near public restrooms, please stay far away from them and only use the restrooms of your own house.
being splattered from the skullfucking (which occurred in a hyper-realistic mental room thing). I don't think books like that should even exist, much less be put in school libraries. Most especially that should never be assigned reading.
place, but up until that point it'd been a fairly cutesy witch with familiars type story, before it took that hard turn into guro sex with the "possession/mindbreak" storyline which was solved in about 2 seconds with some blase advice from an older witch after detailing the main character's brains
As an example, anyways, there's actually a whole lot of messed up stuff in books out there. Personally the point where I decided flat out banning books was perfectly fine was reading this one novel where the author explicitly details the main character being skullfucked. The plot was all over the