Comedian Michael Loftus calls on the 'absurd' censorship to stop. That year, Katie Ishizuka penned a 43-page study titled, "Rethinking Dr. Seuss for NEA’s Read Across America Day: Racism Within Dr. Seuss’s Children’s Books & The Case for Centering Diverse Books" in which the content of 50 of Seuss’s most popular books were analyzed. Ishizuka co-founded the Conscious Kid Social Justice Library, a subscription service which sends its subscribers monthly shipments of titles featuring multicultural characters, and her report was an early indicator that progressives would seek to remove the beloved children's author from widespread circulation. Ishizuka wrote that Black children may feel uncomfortable going to school on Read Across America Day because of its ties to Dr. Seuss. She explained that because that the famed children’s author had a history of "drawing anti-Black, anti-Japanese political cartoons and advertisements" that most people were unaware of, she wanted to dive into his books and see if they were problematic as well.