Amazon cancels the Gospel book

Amazon clear book: Ryan T. Anderson is one of the most discerning writers and thinkers in the world evangelico. His research was cited by two US Supreme Court justices. A magna cum laude graduate of Princeton University with a doctorate in political philosophy from Notre Dame University, his work has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, and numerous others. stores.

His book on the transgender issue, When Harry Became Sally, is one of the fundamental works on the subject. I have found it enormously useful in my work. I agree with the description of Anderson of his book as “a thoughtful and accessible presentation of the state of scientific, medical, philosophical and legal debates”. In 2018, it reached number 1 on two of Amazon's bestseller lists before it was even released.

However, you can no longer order his book on Amazon. If you look for it there, you will see “Sorry, we couldn't find that page” and a photo of a dog. You can, however, find Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler and Unabomber Manifesto by Ted Kaczynski on Amazon. Both have an average rating of 4,5 stars.

Amazon cancels the book: John Stonestreet and David Carlson explain why Anderson's book is so important and compelling, perhaps precisely for the reasons Amazon blocked it. The Federalist calls Amazon's cancellation of Anderson's book a "digital book burning." The Wall Street Journal responds to Amazon's action by warning that "tech censorship is accelerating."

Amazon cancels the Gospel book: the writer replies

Amazon clearly intends that fewer people will read Anderson's seminal work on the issue transgender. To the extent that their intention becomes reality, their sin will affect many more people than the sinner. This is how sin always works.

La response by the writer “As I noted yesterday, we must separate the message from the messenger, hold each other to Christ's standards, and balance grace and consequence. Up to the last point, I wrote that "sinners can be forgiven, but they must seek restitution".