By TalesFromFlorida.com Staff
Florida’s schools are in the middle of an epic showdown—not over test scores or teacher salaries, but over books. And not just any books. We’re talking about penguins. Yes, you read that right.
The $500,000 Penguin Problem
Escambia County just dropped nearly half a million dollars defending its decision to remove And Tango Makes Three—a book about two male penguins raising a baby penguin. That’s right, folks. Florida taxpayers are now funding legal battles over gay penguin literature.
Somewhere, a teacher is crying into their decades-old textbooks, wondering why this is where the money went.
But Wait, There’s More!
It’s not just penguins causing chaos. Other books caught in the crossfire include:
– The Bluest Eye (Nobel Prize winner? Too dangerous!)
– Brave New World (Dystopian classic? Banned!)
– Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk (Because Fight Club wasn’t disturbing enough?)
Meanwhile, Florida’s per-student funding is still one of the lowest in the nation. But hey, at least we’re keeping kids safe from penguin propaganda, right?
The Real Victims? Teachers (And Your Wallet)
Teachers are stuck in the middle, sweating over whether their classroom library will get them sued. Meanwhile, legal fees keep piling up—only for courts to put the books back anyway. It’s like paying for a gym membership and never going.
And let’s not forget: These lawsuits are losing. So we’re basically burning money for the privilege of losing in court.
What Could That Money Have Bought?
- Teacher raises (Imagine that!)
- New textbooks (Instead of ones held together by duct tape)
- STEM programs (But who needs science when you have book bans?)
The Takeaway
No matter where you stand on book bans, one thing’s clear: Florida’s priorities are wild. While other states invest in education, we’re out here suing over penguins.
So next time you see a school fundraiser, just remember—your tax dollars are already funding something. Just maybe not anything useful.
Stay tuned for more Florida absurdity, only on TalesFromFlorida.com.

