The Philadelphia Free Library system is broke, and they’re shutting it down, including cancelling “all branch and regional library programs, programs for children and teens, after school programs, computer classes, and programs for adults” and “all children programs, programs to support small businesses and job seekers, computer classes and after school programs” and “all library visits to schools, day care centers, senior centers and other community centers” and “all community meetings” and “all GED, ABE and ESL program.”
Just look at that list of all the things libraries do for our communities, all the ways they help the least among us, the vulnerable, the children, the elderly. Think of every wonderful thing that happened to you among the shelves of a library. Think of the millions of lifelong love-affairs with literacy sparked in the collections of those libraries. Think of every person whose life was forever changed for the better in those buildings.
Think of the nobility of libraries and librarianship, the great scar that the Burning of Alexandria gouged in human history. Think of the archivists who barricaded themselves in the Hermitage during the Siege of Leningrad, slowly starving and freezing to death but refusing to desert their posts for fear that the collections they guarded would become firewood…
Read the whole entry by Cory Doctorow over at Boint Boing: Philadelphia Free Library System is shutting down. On further reading, I gather that the Library system may not actually shutdown, if the political brinkmanship gets resolved but it is highly possible.
Reading this post by one of my favourite science fiction authors (and major proponents of Creative Commons) was a great inspiration. Sometimes we focus so much on our tools and methods that we lose sight of the broader picture. Thanks for reminding us, Cory!