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Julianne Moore Speaks Out After Her Children’s Book Faces Ban

Julianne Moore slams Donald Trump after her children’s book is banned

‘Freckleface Strawberry’, a children’s book written by the Still Alice star, was released in the year 2007.

Julianne Moore has given an interview in which she discusses the “great shock” she experienced when she found out that the Trump administration had “banned” her children’s book, Freckleface Strawberry.

Moore, who has won an Academy Award for his work in films such as Still Alice and The Room Next Door, has also written a series of books, the first of which was published in 2007 and titled Freckleface Strawberry.

Moore’s personal nickname, which she was first given when she was seven years old due to the fact that she “was covered in freckles and had very red hair,” served as the inspiration for the book series.

“She hoped that they would go away when she grew up, but they didn’t,” the website for the series claims. “She hoped that they.”

Due to the fact that “the things that make you different also make you YOU,” the idea of the series revolves around a young girl who is “learning to love the skin she’s in.”

Moore has already turned to her Instagram account to reveal that her first book, which is simply titled Freckleface Strawberry, has “been banned by the Trump Administration from schools run by the Department of Defense.” This is despite the fact that the message conveyed by the series is positive.

“Freckleface Strawberry is a semi-autobiographical story about a seven-year-old girl who dislikes her freckles but eventually learns to live with them when she realizes that she is different ‘just like everybody else,'” Moore wrote on Instagram yesterday (February 16).

“The story is about a girl who was born with freckles.”

I developed this book for my children and for other youngsters to serve as a reminder that although we all face challenges, we are bound together by our shared humanity and the community that we live in.

My shock is compounded by the fact that I am a proud alumni of Frankfurt American High School, a school that was formerly located in Frankfurt, Germany and was a Department of Defense institution.

During my childhood, I was raised by a father who served in the United States Army and was a veteran of the Vietnam War.

I could not be more pleased with him and the service he has provided to our nation.

The realization that children who are like me, who are growing up with a parent who is in the military and who are attending a school that is run by the Department of Education, would not have access to a book written by someone whose life story is so close to their own is really galling to me.

In addition, I can’t help but wonder what it is about this children’s book that is so contentious that the United States government has decided to prohibit its publication.

I am deeply upset, and I never imagined that I would be able to witness something like this in a nation where the right to freedom of speech and expression is guaranteed by the constitution.

I would like to express my gratitude to @penamerica for bringing this to my care. Using the hashtags “#FAHS #frecklefacestrawberry @uyenloseordraw @thebookgrp,”

In order to obtain a comment, UNILAD has reached out to the Department of Defense.

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