WATCH: Mom Exposes Middle School For Using Book That Contains “Anal Sex” Passages, School Board Cuts Off Her Mic (VIDEO)

Being a little irritated with members of the Lake Travis Independent School District board of trustees in Austin, Texas, would be an understatement of the situation for Kara Bell.

According to Bell, a local parent and past school board candidate, A book she found in use at the local middle school is sexually graphic, and she became enraged at a school board meeting last week, according to KXAN-TV, which broadcasted the discussion.

And after seeing a video of Bell reading a chapter from a book to the board, it is evidently clear that she’s onto something.

“Take her out back, we boys figured, then hand on the t***ies, put it in her cornbox, put it in her cornhole, grab a hold of that braid, rub that calico,” she recited to the board, before adding, “You can find that on page 39 of the book called ‘Out of Darkness,’ which you can find at Hudson Bend Middle School and Bee Cave Middle School.”

According to the station, “Out of Darkness” is a young adult book written by Ashley Hope Pérez that was published in 2015.

Bell went on to say,  “All right, not gonna lie, had to Google ‘cornhole’ because I have the game in the back of my yard. But according to Wikipedia, ‘cornhole’ is a sexual slang vulgarism for anus. The term came into … use in the 1910s in the United States … its verb form ‘to cornhole,’ which came into usage in the 1930s, means to have anal sex.”

Then she unleashed a tirade at the board members, saying:  “I do not want my children to learn about anal sex in middle school! I’ve never had anal sex! I don’t want to have anal sex! I don’t want my kids having anal sex! I want you to start focusing on education and not public health!”

Bell’s microphone was turned off at that moment, but her school board rebuke can still be heard on video: “You are not public health officials; you are supposed to be educating our children! Do not teach them about anal sex!”

After being taken from both middle school libraries, the school district informed KXAN that the book’s contents will be examined.

As a result of school board policy, a district spokeswoman informed the station that it has “significant discretion” over what is included in its school libraries collection of books. A district, on the other hand, is required to use its discretion in a way that is compatible with the First Amendment.

According to KXAN, the spokesman also said that “district shall not remove materials from a library for the purpose of denying students access to ideas with which the district disagrees. A district may remove materials, because they are pervasively vulgar or based solely upon the educational suitability of the books in question.”

The district informed the station that it does not know how long it will take to evaluate the book in question.

As reported by NBC News shortly after the book’s publication, “Out of Darkness” centers on a romance between a black boy and a Mexican-American girl after a 1937 explosion in East Texas that claimed the lives of almost 300 students and teachers, according to the station.

KXAN reported that Jonathan Friedman of Pen America, a nonprofit that “defends diversity, inclusion and free expression in literature,” told the station that many books with sexually explicit content have holistic value because they include diverse viewpoints and expose young people to the realities of life in a diverse and inclusive society.

“Central Texas is one among many areas in the country that have become hotspots for these eruptions of local anger and disagreement,” Friedman added to KXAN. “I think to pretend books that deal explicitly with sex or sexual assault are in some way a threat to young people are doing them a disservice. This is about having access for young people to a wide variety of literature that people from different backgrounds are reflected in.”

The station said that Friedman also took direct aim at parents, saying, “you have a small contingent in many cases of parents who decide that they disagree, and that they must know better than those who are in the classroom.”