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You would......
Guy's a stud. Wouldn't mind trading places with him for a few days.
You would......
I would kill myself before throwing out my Billy Joel vinyls.
Vermont high schoolers clash over transgender bathroom rules
Going to see a lot more stories like this in the future.
Vermont high schoolers clash over transgender bathroom rules
Going to see a lot more stories like this in the future.
Surely there's atleast 1 single serve restroom in just about every school. Just say go use that 1.
The transgender bathroom debate is incredibly stupid. And that's why we care.
Let me explain.
In case you've been on a news blackout for the last few weeks: Transgender activists and their allies are starting a movement to legally allow transgender people to access the bathrooms (and other sex-segregated facilities, such as locker rooms) of the genders they identify with. The most high-profile example is a transgender rights law passed in Charlotte, North Carolina, in February.
Conservatives are up in arms over this, passing their own laws, notably a North Carolina law directly responding to the Charlotte rules, that restrict transgender bathroom use.
This is all so stupid it makes my brain hurt.
First of all: These laws are only symbolic. They serve no functional purpose. Presumably, post-transition transgender people look like the gender they identify with. Who, exactly, is going to stop someone who looks like a woman from walking into a ladies' room? Or someone who looks like a man from walking into a men's room? The American nanny state may be out of control, but we still don't have bathroom police. As such, post-transition transgender Americans likely already have access to the bathrooms of their choice, even without these new laws.
As for the conservative claim that these transgender rights laws give sexual predators license to attack people: This is nonsense. There are surely transgender sexual predators, just like there are cisgender sexual predators, just like there are straight, bi, and gay sexual predators. The problems posed by bathrooms and sexual assault (the access, the relative privacy) are the same with or without the transgender element, and with or without these laws.
So why are we making such a big deal out of a purely symbolic issue? Precisely because it's purely symbolic.
Think back to the debate around same-sex marriage. Early on, the focus was on partner visitation rights. But that was never really the point. It was always clear that gay marriage activists would never have been satisfied with a deal that gave same-sex couples the exact same package of rights and duties as married couples have but without the word "marriage." The symbol was always the point. It had to be "marriage" — a major societal proclamation of the equality of worth of same-sex relationships with opposite-sex relationships.
It's the same with transgender bathrooms. The point is not, or not crucially, to help solve practical problems for transgender people; it is, rather, to coax out of society an affirmation of transgender people and their identity.
Regardless of where you stand in our culture wars, this is important. Gender is a very important part of our lives, and how we experience it, in ourselves and in others, and how we relate to it, has dramatic consequences on our lives. And part of how we experience it is mixed in with the kinds of stories that society tells about gender, including, but not only, what is "right" and "wrong."
Many conservatives believe that while gender dysmorphia might be a real thing and that people who experience it certainly are endowed with human dignity and rights, a total societal affirmation of transgender identity would ratify an essentially fictitious view of gender as totally socially constructed and malleable. This is an important debate to have! And, to circle back to the bathroom issue, the total lack of practical import for whatever policy is chosen actually has a clarifying effect. It shows us that it's all about the symbolic — and therefore crucially important — societal affirmation, or lack thereof, of transgenderism.
It's precisely because the stakes are so low that the stakes are so high.
The man also appreciates Joel. I'll have my lawyer start drawing up the papers to give my sister away.
Don't be scared to take somebody on. Don't feel like you got to shut your ears off because you're too fragile and somebody might offend your sensibilities. Go at them if they're not making any sense. When I was a state senator, I helped pass Illinois’s first racial profiling law, and one of the first laws in the nation requiring the videotaping of confessions in capital cases. I didn’t say to them, 'Oh, you guys are so racist, you need to do something.' I understood, as many of you do, that the overwhelming majority of police officers are good, and honest, and courageous, and fair, and love the communities they serve.
I'm also a lawyer!
...maybe that ruins my chances.
"Less government rules" is not the same as "no rules from anybody." Whoever owns the bathroom should be the one deciding who's allowed in and out. McDonald's can make one rule, Target can make another.Shouldn't those who advocate less federal government interference support transgender use of bathrooms of their choice as has been the case historically in local communities?
I hate that my nickname is such a hated term across America
Across every demographic group, the vast majority of Native Americans say the team’s name does not offend them, including 80 percent who identify as politically liberal, 85 percent of college graduates, 90 percent of those enrolled in a tribe, 90 percent of non-football fans and 91 percent of those between the ages of 18 and 39.
Even 9 in 10 of those who have heard a great deal about the controversy say they are not bothered by the name.
What makes those attitudes more striking: The general public appears to object more strongly to the name than Indians do.
lulz to the PC crowd fighting the Redskins battle:
New poll finds 9 in 10 Native Americans aren’t offended by Redskins name
https://www.washingtonpost.com/loca...a-11e6-924d-838753295f9a_story.html?tid=sm_fb
Shouldn't those who advocate less federal government interference support transgender use of bathrooms of their choice as has been the case historically in local communities?
Perhaps local communities should outlaw pornograhy? In a state like Utah, the vast religious majority could choose to eliminate all alcohol. With more local control and in accordance with the interests of the majority, the access to country and western music could be legislated and a hot button issue that needs to be taken to the Supreme Court.
Having local laws determining the majority's wishes would free us from a federal politically correct mindset to a state/local politically correct level of thinking. How would Texans decide who should use what bathrooms? What if Dallas/ Fort Worth and Houston who voted Democratic in the last Presidential race decide who should use what bathroom? That might set up a confrontation between state and local governments that would end up in the courts.
ALABAMA (NEWSWATCH33) – Despite the Supreme Court ruling on legalizing same-sex marriages in all 50 states, Alabama refuses to accept the decision, placing a 30-day ban on same-sex marriage licenses. To add to their fight against same-sex marriage, some Alabama officials are attempting to ban the popular candy, Skittles, “Taste The Rainbow” commercials because they believe it advocates same-sex acceptance.
Most local communities have been making decisions about this, except in the dozen or so left-wing states that already have a rule like this. The new federal rule attempts to take that authority away from local communities.
Last fall Houston voters specifically rejected this sort of rule by a large majority- a majority unattainable in Houston without the support of lots of Democrats. It is of no matter; the Obama administration is zealous and doesn't give a damn about popular support of its edicts.
Students leaving afternoon classes at the University of New Mexico last Thursday were greeted with a raucous spectacle: abortion protesters had flooded the campus, passing out flyers and occasionally yelling slurs from across the quad. Near the school entrance, a gaggle of teens calling themselves the Survivors of the Abortion Holocaust brandished a huge image of a dismembered, fully developed fetus. Ten feet away, pro-choice advocates handed out free pizza and abortion testimonials to interested classmates.
Outside the library, notorious pro-life protester Rives Grogan, who was banned from Washington, D.C., last year after lodging himself in a tree during President Obama’s Inauguration, was taken into custody for screaming at students and faculty.
In other local referendums,
Vote Lands Albuquerque at Center of Abortion Battle (from Time) (Catholic, Swing state)
Albuquerque Voters Defeat Anti-Abortion Measure
Free pizza always gets the message across on college campuses. Works like a charm.
Shouldn't those who advocate less federal government interference support transgender use of bathrooms of their choice as has been the case historically in local communities?
Perhaps local communities should outlaw pornograhy? In a state like Utah, the vast religious majority could choose to eliminate all alcohol. With more local control and in accordance with the interests of the majority, the access to country and western music could be legislated and a hot button issue that needs to be taken to the Supreme Court.
Having local laws determining the majority's wishes would free us from a federal politically correct mindset to a state/local politically correct level of thinking. How would Texans decide who should use what bathrooms? What if Dallas/ Fort Worth and Houston who voted Democratic in the last Presidential race decide who should use what bathroom? That might set up a confrontation between state and local governments that would end up in the courts.
nice choice of comparisons...pornography, booze ... both have an age restriction...WHY? If you think about that for a moment, you might actually get some constructive insight into at least one facet of the Transgender bathroom issue.
nice choice of comparisons...pornography, booze ... both have an age restriction...WHY? If you think about that for a moment, you might actually get some constructive insight into at least one facet of the Transgender bathroom issue.
This issue is so simple to me...Want those kind of changes, come with money in hand to make them, or STFU. When forced to responsibly deal with THAT ONE ISSUE, the discourse changes pretty quickly, because what you find is, proponents of the Transgender bathroom pick 'em can't articulate where the money would come from...nor the guidelines to do this correctly...just more hand waving, ignoring the reciprocal impacts to the majority of people, but demanding they "deal with it", and "make it so" Executive Branch garbage, combined with shaming practical people who may have, at one time, understood the plight of the truly gender dysphoric, but are now forced to make them feel alienated to stop embarrassingly juvenile and obviously poor governance.
The transgender bathroom issue is a matter of protecting transgenders from excessive bullying (physical, mental, and emotional). Adding a few private bathrooms would not be a major expense. I've witnessed schools spend multiple thousands of dollars remodeling the principal's office or the superintendent's office every time someone new is hired for the position. They also spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on new technology annually. Technology that is outdated in 3-5 years. Our district recently spent a million dollars upgrading the football field and a couple hundred thousand dollars upgrading the soccer field. The football field is used 4-5 times per year. The soccer field is used 8-10 times per year. Our district also provides buses for every child in school. About 1/3 of the students live within one-half mile of school. Another 1/3 lives within a mile of school. All of those students could walk to school on paved sidewalks. We also pay aides to supervise the playground, positions that could be filled by volunteer parents. So the money to construct private restroom facilities is already available. School administrators just have higher priorities than the safety of a few transgenders or other groups that may be singled out for bullying.
School officials like to pretend they don't have a problem with bullying. They tend to ignore the issue until confronted with a suicide, a videotaped and publicized beat down, or a lawsuit.
The solution is simple. Several private bathrooms available to students who are uncomfortable or feel unsafe using a public bathroom. In the long run, it's less expensive than paying the lawyers and the settlement awarded by a jury when the school has failed to provide a safe environment for the students. It's also cheaper than putting a security guard in every restroom.
Isn't the real solution guns in the classroom?
When you protect our students' 2nd Amendment rights, everyone is safer - from bullying, lone gunmen who may be bullied transgendered. When kids see their teachers armed and carrying openly, you also get more discipline. An armed bathroom monitor will do wonders.
No gun-free zones, especially in schools!! After school gun safety classes for Seniors. Not politically correct in a few socialist states.
Obviously more gun presence = less gun violences. duh!
We should lower the age to own guns to 16, we are denying our youth of their constitutional rights.