Sunday, April 04, 2021

The Other GOP Obsession: Attacking Transgender Youths

The number one obsession of Republican controlled state legislatures is passing voter suppression bills that will - at the least the GOP backers hope -  make it harder for minority voters to cast ballots in state elections and, most importantly in the 2022 federal midterm elections. With a shrinking base and policies that a majority of Americans appear to be rejecting, suppressing the vote and district gerrymandering are the GOP's best hope for winning.  Changing the party's agenda and ceasing to be defined by racism and hatred towards others is nowhere within the GOP mindset.  But there is a second, less noticed obsession in the GOP controlled legislatures: attacking and punishing transgender youths.  With gay marriage legal for over five years nationwide and the world not having ended as same sex couples marry and go mainstream so to speak, a new bogeyman is needed to fire up evangelicals and Christofascists (the modern day Pharisees who are killing religion in America)  who, with white supremacists, comprise the base of today's GOP.  Sadly, transgender youth appear to be that new bogeyman as a piece in Huffington Post notes.  Here are article highlights:

Republican-controlled legislatures across the country have introduced dozens of bills targeting transgender youth, building on conservative dog whistles and putting some of the country’s most vulnerable at risk, human rights groups say.

The bills fall into two main categories: At least 17 states are considering laws that would limit access to health care for young transgender Americans, and 28 more have bills excluding trans kids from school sports, according to a tally by the American Civil Liberties Union. 

So far, the effort is working. Bills prohibiting children from playing on sports teams in line with their gender identity have already been passed in Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee — and other measures are moving forward as well.

South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) went so far as to say she was “excited” when such a bill passed in her state. She later declined to sign it, saying she was worried about legal challenges, and instead issued a pair of executive orders she said would “protect” sports teams this week.

The push to roll back freedoms for transgender kids amounts to a dramatic uptick in exclusionary legislation by GOP lawmakers that builds on the far-right push to establish anti-trans bathroom laws, human rights groups say. 

“We are truly witnessing an escalation of attacks on trans people, unlike anything I’ve ever seen in government,” Chase Strangio, deputy director for transgender justice at the ACLU, told Democracy Now. “I think what we’re seeing today in state legislatures is a particular effort to pivot from the anti-trans restroom bills into a new form of regulation of trans young people and trans bodies.”

The ACLU has pledged to file suit against such bills, and a judge overturned legislation in Idaho last year that sought to exclude transgender girls from girls sports teams. But studies show that a vast majority of trans youth feel unsafe at home and at school, Strangio said, and ongoing efforts will only contribute to that. 

This bevy of legislation relies heavily on misinformation and negative tropes about transgender people, and flies in the face of medical advice.

After the Arkansas legislature overwhelmingly passed a harmful bill that would prohibit doctors from providing medically necessary treatment to trans youth, the president of the American Academy of Pediatrics said it was a “dangerous” attempt to politicize medicine.

“This is discrimination by legislation and transgender children and all children deserve better,” Dr. Lee Beers said. “It puts politicians rather than pediatricians in charge of a child’s medical care.”

The National Center for Transgender Equality said the Arkansas legislature’s decision was putting young people at risk. 

“They would deny them live-saving, appropriate health care not because it’s good public policy but because politicians believe that it will bring them more power,” said Rodrigo Heng-Lehtinen, deputy executive director for the group. “We need to remember that these are children. All children deserve to have access to the support and health care they need to live happy and healthy lives.”

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