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A Texas School District principal is allegedly a hit on Facebook teacher The “devil” assigns a book that is considered inappropriate.
Dr. John Coon, Principal of Abilene Independent School District Facebook PostsThis has left thousands of stocks, reactions and hundreds of comments criticizing social media and its comments, saying he can’t share it with Fox News Digital.
“I went to my hotel room and found some social media commentators calling my teacher a “devil” because they named the stunning book “extremely loud, incredible intimacy” for the freshman’s readings in recognition of the reading passages of the English class. It’s a book written, a book, a book that he lost his father in a horror attack, a book. I was told the teacher was not familiar with this,” Kuhn wrote.

A Texas school district opened a viral Facebook post because some people allegedly called teachers “the devil” because he assigned a book that was considered inappropriate by unidentified social media commentators. (iStock)
He went on to say, “This has a rough joke on the butts of the conversation – I’m a nine-year-old boy, and that’s the kind of chaos we giggle, so the author is very realistic. It also has the word “p —–” but that’s what kids call cats, but Facebook posts highlighted part of the book.”
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Kuhn recognizes that the book may be limited to certain age groups. However, he believes that despite their intention to challenge senior readers, teachers face criticism of the books they allocated to students.
“The thing is, this book should be limited to older kids (17 and 18 years old. It’s too low and angry about it.

Abilene ISD President Dr. John Kuhn aims at Senate Bill 2, which establishes an education savings account. He also slammed Senate Bill 13, which requires teachers to “categorize every book in the classroom” and passed a bill to change the state’s standardized testing practice. (Brendan Bell/Getty Image)
“They decided that a ‘s —‘ is tolerated. They won’t be offended by the word ‘p —‘ because it’s not a bad word in the context. They got approval from colleagues.”
Kuhn said he was surprised by comments from the teacher who assigned the book in social media posts.
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“They are called ‘devils’. (Ironically, in the Comments of Angry Posts, they are also called “AS —- s,” which is actually worse than “an-“, one of the words parents stand out and offend, but no one scolds the commenter for scolding this vulgar person. Selective anger, anyone.”
Before highlighting criticisms against the book, Kuhn aims at it Senate bill 2establish an education savings account. Kuhn described the bill as “Excrete the deposit for public schools.“He also criticized Senate Bill 13which requires teachers to “categorize every book in the classroom” and Section 8 of the House Bill, a policy that changes the state’s standardized testing practice.
Other bills that are officially emphasized are Article 12 of the Senate and Housing Act 3372.
“There is a political movement that can pull teeth in schools, city councils and county commissioners’ courts so that all we have is Centralize national leadership. So local Yokels like you do have to be constantly demonized and legislated to surrender. ” he added.
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Abilene ISD Director Dr. John Kuhn, PhD, which received thousands of shares and reactions and hundreds of comments criticizing social media posts and their comments, said he could not share with Fox News Digital. (iStock)
Since the coronavirus pandemic, school boards and legislatures across the United States have passed parental rights bills and other education policies that provide transparency to parents and limit content taught in the classroom.
As for the specific social media posts Kuhn mentioned, he told Fox News that the numbers had been removed.
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“The original poster either deleted his post or had a private account (I just saw that I couldn’t see any of his posts, and there was another user who shared it that was showing something that said the original post was not available. Digital.
Kuhn said the book “extremely loud and incredible intimacy” will be put on hold until the committee can review it, which will determine whether it is suitable for display in libraries in the area.
Kuhn told Fox News Numbers that my understanding is that it has a rating of 14+. ”