Perhaps you read about Florida’s most recent efforts to beef up book banning in public schools.

Yes, Florida — a state where test scores already lag — is trying to make sure students have fewer books to read.

The latest crusade led by the attorney general targets another 55 books, including “Forever” by Judy Blume, “Wicked” by Gregory Maguire and “Clash of Kings” by “Game of Thrones” author George R.R. Martin.

As I was reading about the latest attempt to purge books that include pages of sexually descriptive material, one question kept running through my head: How detached from reality are these people?

We live in an age where virtually every teen in America has 24-7 access to the internet, usually in the palms of their hormone-fueled hands. Most parents would be thrilled if the only sex scenes their teens ever encountered came from American literature.

I mean, seriously. My kids are now grown. But if I had a 15-year-old son and learned that, when he wanted to get his jollies on, he decided to bypass all the easily accessible smut on Twitter or a zillion other apps to instead trek down to the school library and check out a 400-page book, I might give the kid an allowance hike.