May 3, 2026

04 Culture

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Excerpt from www.washingtonpost.com

A federal court temporarily blocked the Education Department from enforcing new regulations aimed at protecting transgender students in schools, finding that opponents who sued to stop it are likely to prevail when the case is fully considered.

The sweeping set of rules, issued in April, represent the Biden administration’s interpretation of Title IX, a half-century old law that bars discrimination in schools based on sex. The rules are set to take effect Aug. 1, and impact every K-12 school, college and university in the country that accepts any type of federal funding.

The regulation states that discrimination based on sex includes discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation, and would require, for instance, schools to allow transgender students use bathrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity and to use students’ preferred pronouns.

It was challenged in federal court by four states — Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana and Idaho. The preliminary injunction applies in only those four states, though similar challenges are pending in other states. Thursday’s order was the first ruling in any of the cases.

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Excerpt from www.euronews.com

Supporters say a Chinese journalist Huang Xueqin who promoted women’s rights as part of the country’s nascent #MeToo movement has been sentenced to five years in prison on charges of incitement to subvert state authority.

Huang’s sentencing comes almost three years after she and an activist Wang Jianbing were detained.

Jianbing, a co-defendant known more for his labour rights activity also helped women report sexual harassment and was sentenced to three years and six months on the same charge.

Huang Xueqin would also face a fine of 100,000 yuan (€13,000), underscoring the ruling Communist Party’s lack of tolerance for activism not under its control in a system where top positions are predominantly held by men.

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Excerpt from www.baltimoresun.com

CHICAGO (AP) — A lawsuit filed by 17 states challenging federal rules entitling workers to time off and other accommodations for abortions lacks standing, a federal judge in Arkansas ruled on Friday.

Republican attorneys general from each state, led by Arkansas and Tennessee, sued the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in April, days after the agency published rules for employers and workers to implement the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, a 2022 law requiring many employers to make “reasonable accommodations” for pregnant or postpartum employees.

In addition to more routine pregnancy workplace accommodations like time off for prenatal appointments, more bathroom breaks, or permission to carry snacks, the rules say that workers can ask for time off to obtain an abortion and recover from the procedure.

The lawsuit filed in federal court in Arkansas argued the regulations go beyond the scope of the 2022 law that passed with bipartisan support.

Eastern District of Arkansas U.S. District Judge D.P. Marshall, Jr., who was appointed to the bench by former President Barack Obama, denied the states’ request for a nationwide preliminary injunction on the federal rules, which are scheduled to go into effect on Tuesday.

“The States’ fear of overreach by one branch of the federal government cannot be cured with overreach by another,” Friday’s ruling says.

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Excerpt from www.kake.com

From labels such as Tzar Studios, a “visually provocative contemporary menswear brand… inspired by the ethos of the metrosexual man,” to ready-to-wear brand Weiz Dhurm Franklyn, these clandestine, “invite only” shows are curated by designers who keep locations discreet and hand-pick trusted journalists, influencers, celebrities and fashion industry figures to sit in the audience.

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Excerpt from www.techtimes.com

X is facing, yet again, another threat of being banned in Indonesia, but now, it is not because of a misunderstanding and is pointing out its recent policy change, which straight-up allowed porn content on social media. The threat talked about a possible ban for Elon Musk’s X as it violates the country’s laws that prohibit pornography content distribution.

Previously, Musk’s Twitter name change to X also triggered a possible ban for the platform, but after verifying that it was social media, it was pulled back.

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Excerpt from screenrant.com

Summary

  • Meri Brown struggled with polygamy in her marriage to Kody on Sister Wives before finding happiness as a single woman.
  • The Brown family faced judgment and had to hide their polygamous lifestyle due to societal disapproval and taboos.
  • Meri, raised in a polygamous family, had to homeschool her children. She faced challenges and criticism due to an unconventional lifestyle.

 

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Excerpt from whnt.com

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — Wall Street rallied Thursday as Argentina’s President Javier Milei traveled to Italy for the Group of Seven summit, buoyed by his first legislative victory after the Senate passed sweeping proposals to slash state spending and boost his powers.

Having hitched his political fortunes to the goal of cutting down Argentina’s bloated state, Milei hailed the vote as a “triumph” and “the first step toward the recovery of our greatness.”

Even so, opposition senators scrapped an income tax package and watered down other parts of the bill after a daylong debate marred by clashes between police and protesters in the capital of Buenos Aires.

The legislation aimed at overhauling Argentina’s long-troubled economy during its worst financial crisis in 20 years will return to Congress’ lower house for final approval, where it’s expected to become law.

In a further boost to Milei’s agenda Thursday, data released by the government statistics agency showed Argentina’s monthly inflation rate halving to 4.2% in May, the lowest rate since January 2022.

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Excerpt from dailycaller.com

California Democrats are pushing a series of bills to crack down on the wave of retail theft that has rocked the state. But there’s just one catch – the bills would be repealed should a ballot measure imposing harsher punishments for certain crimes be approved.

Democrats in the California State Legislature inserted clauses into the bill package earlier this month that would repeal the laws if the ballot initiative passes. The move has enraged Republicans, who accused the Democrats of “playing games,” according to The San Francisco Chronicle.

“Democrats need to stop playing politics with public safety and let voters decide on fixing Prop. 47,” said Assembly Republican Leader James Gallagher in a press release. “These poison pills show that Democrats aren’t serious about ending the crime wave–they just want to look like they’re doing something because their years-long support for criminals has become a political liability.”

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Excerpt from www.foxnews.com

A large group of anti-Israel protesters took over and barricaded a campus building at the California State University, Los Angeles, on Wednesday night, trapping school employees inside.

Between 50 and 100 protesters blocked off entrances and exits at the student services building, according to KTLA 5. Video footage showed protesters wearing kaffiyehs and face coverings using golf carts, picnic tables and umbrellas to create a makeshift wall along the building’s perimeter.

Some of the protesters, who had reportedly come from a nearby encampment, sat in chairs chained to columns at the base of the building.

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Excerpt from will.illinois.edu

Thousands of children in our state are homeschooled. Parents who decide to homeschool are required by state law to follow the same educational standards as public schools. But the law doesn’t say how they have to go about that. The state can’t require parents to demonstrate how they teach, their curriculum or testing outcomes. As the regulations are set up now, it’s difficult for officials to investigate or intervene when homeschooling concerns arise.

Today, we are joined by two reporters who investigated this issue. Molly Parker and Beth Hundsdorfer are reporters from Capitol News Illinois.

First, we’ll learn what is not isn’t regulated in the world of Illinois homeschooling. Parker and Hundsdorfer will talk about the stories of some homeschooled children they investigated for their report.

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Excerpt from freebeacon.com

Bob Casey Requests Taxpayer Funds for LGBT Center That Offers ‘Wide Array of Services’ to Children as Young as Seven

Democratic senator Bob Casey (Pa.) requested hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxpayer funds this month for an LGBT center that offers a “wide array of services” to children as young as seven years old.

Casey seeks $565,000 for the LGBT Center of Greater Reading to “support access to mental health care for underserved populations,” according to his June 5 earmark request to a Senate appropriations subcommittee.

The LGBT Center of Greater Reading, which lists Casey as a “proud supporter,” has hosted “Drag Queen Story Hour” events for children and provides referral letters for clients seeking “top surgery” and “bottom surgery,” procedures that reconstruct breasts and genitals, respectively.

What’s more, the director of the center’s wellness clinic, which provides mental health services like those identified in Casey’s request, performs gender reassignment surgeries on adults and minors at a nearby hospital. The physician, Ashley Brandt, has posted photos on social media from the operating room after performing vaginoplasties and breast-removal procedures on transgender adults and filling “testicular implants” in preparation for surgery. Brandt has said she performs surgeries only on post-pubescent children and said that “we all take surgeries on minors very seriously.”

Casey’s funding request could pose a political liability for the Pennsylvania Democrat, considered one of the most vulnerable incumbents in the upcoming election. A majority of Americans oppose many of the services offered by the LGBT Center. According to a 2022 poll, 60 percent of adults think “Drag Queen Story Hour,” in which drag queens read story books to kids, is inappropriate. The LGBT Center of Greater Reading has hosted that kind of event since at least 2019, according to its social media pages. It held “Out in the Park” in October 2022, in which children under 10 years old were admitted free to an event that featured a “Drag Queen Story Hour,” a “large kids area,” and free HIV testing.

The request also marks an emerging pattern for Casey, who will face Republican businessman Dave McCormick in November. Casey requested $1 million in funding for the William Way LGBT Center last year, but he pulled the request after revelations that the center hosted BDSM and “kink” parties.

The three-term incumbent recently touted a $400,000 earmark for the Mazzoni Center, which, like the LGBT Center of Greater Reading, offers referrals for clients seeking sex-change procedures.

While the LGBT Center of Greater Reading offers its “wide array” of services to children, it is unclear if those services include referrals for surgical procedures and controversial hormone treatments such as puberty blockers.

But Brandt, who hosted a “Gender Affirming Surgery 101” seminar at the center in April 2023, acknowledges performing surgeries on minors, though only those who have gone through puberty and have parental consent and consultation with mental health professionals.

“This idea that we’re operating on minors, that we’re doing irreversible procedures on minors, is not a new idea,” said Brandt, who in a July 2023 interview compared sex-change surgeries to cosmetic surgeries or bariatric procedures. “There are surgeries done on minors all across the board … that require these very intense discussions.”

Casey’s office and the LGBT Center of Greater Reading did not respond to requests for comment.

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The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled in a 3-2 decision that public schools do not have a right to determine the type of material that can go into their libraries, that the “rights” of trans and gay kids to have access to trans and gay books trump’s the library’s right to determine what is or is not appropriate for kids to read.

Two of the three judges voting for this limited the books the libraries must return to those without explicit sexual content, while one judge would have forced libraries to put these books backs on their shelves as well. Judge Jacques Wiener, Jr. wrote in the ruling, “[A] book may not be removed for the sole—or a substantial— reason that the decisionmaker does not wish patrons to be able to access the book’s viewpoint or message. . . . [A] book by a former Grand Wizard of the K.K.K., which hasn’t been checked out in years and is discovered by a librarian during routine weeding, could be removed based on lack of interest and poor circulation history.”

One of the dissenting justices, Judge Stuart Duncan, countered, “A public library’s choice of some books for its collection, and its rejection of others, is government speech…  This conclusion is supported by a long line of Supreme Court precedent, as well as authority from our sister circuits. It means the Free Speech Clause does not constrain a public library’s collection decisions.”

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Excerpt from legalinsurrection.com

An appeals court issued a First Amendment decision on June 6, ordering the return of controversial books to public library shelves in the children’s section. The highly fractured court opinion requires libraries in Texas to restock books on trangenderism but not those depicting nudity and sex.

The case arose after community members objected to “pornographic and overtly sexual books in the library’s children’s section,” and libraries removed the objectionable materials in response. Several community members sued.

Litigation in the lower court, which issued a more expansive order to restock the books, continues after the appeal court’s decision and will determine whether the removals violated the First Amendment.

Two judges on the three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit agreed that books like Gabi, a Girl in PiecesBeing Jazz: My Life as a (Transgender) Teen, and They Call Themselves the K.K.K. must return to library shelves during the ligitation.

These books discuss sexuality and homosexuality, transgenderism, and “the history of racism in the United States,” respectively.

One judge would have ordered books like In the Night Kitchen and It’s Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, Sex and Sexual Health to return to library shelves.

It’s Perfectly Normal, a book written for a 10-and-up audience, is replete with cartoons of people masturbating and having sex.

Judge Jacques Wiener, Jr., who would have ordered all books returned, accepted that libraries must engage in content-based curation, such as assessing what will be or is of interest to the community. Wiener, however, argued that the removal decisions were substantially motivated by a wish to deny patrons access to material the censor personally disagreed with instead of because of a lack of community interest:

[A] book may not be removed for the sole—or a substantial— reason that the decisionmaker does not wish patrons to be able to access the book’s viewpoint or message. . . . [A] book by a former Grand Wizard of the K.K.K., which hasn’t been checked out in years and is discovered by a librarian during routine weeding, could be removed based on lack of interest and poor circulation history.

Judge Leslie Southwick agreed in part with Wiener and wrote a partial concurrence. Southwick, however, argued that removing books like In the Night Kitchen and It’s Perfectly Normal was likely constitutional:

I would have no difficulty in allowing the removal of a book from the children’s section on the basis that it encourages children to engage in sexual activity with adults or includes sexually explicit content. At this stage of the case, I find ordering the return of such books to be error.

Judge Stuart Duncan dissented. Duncan chastised Wiener and Southwick for “appoint[ing] themselves co-chairs of every public library board across the Fifth Circuit” by “issu[ing] ‘rules’ for when librarians can remove books from the shelves and when they cannot.”

In Duncan’s view, public libraries’ curatorial decisions were government speech immune from the First Amendment:

A public library’s choice of some books for its collection, and its rejection of others, is government speech. . . . This conclusion is supported by a long line of Supreme Court precedent, as well as authority from our sister circuits. It means the Free Speech Clause does not constrain a public library’s collection decisions.

The opinion:

 

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Excerpt from www.lifenews.com

A public school teacher was caught taking a student to an abortion clinic without her parents knowing, according to an investigative report from the New Hampshire Department of Education.

The teacher took the day off, claiming to be sick with food poisoning. The teacher later admitted to the school he or she was not actually sick and “went with a student to a medical appointment,” per the report.

According to the redacted document, the teacher spoke to the student for weeks about her “options,” then brought her to the abortion clinic during school hours to end the life of her unborn child.

School officials later terminated the teacher, according to the report.

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Excerpt from altamontenterprise.com

To the Editor:
I read last week’s editorial about the Berne-Knox-Westerlo school budget revote with great disappointment and some surprise [“Berne-Knox-Westerlo School Board is taking a ‘helluva gamble’,” June 6, 2024].

In the editorial, you indicate that there has not been an organized anti-budget  movement in the Hilltowns. The fact of the matter is every school budget is met with displeasure by a group of anti-tax, anti-public school individuals who take to Facebook to spread misinformation and fear about the proposed spending plan, regardless of what it includes.

We have a large contingency of homeschoolers in this district who are vocal about their objections to public schools and, while they have the right to educate their children however they see fit, they do not have the right to dismantle school budgets and decimate programming for the other children in our community.

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Excerpt from thefederalist.com

At a time when war is raging in Ukraine and the Middle East, the U.S. military is busy flaunting its support for LGBT insanity.

The most recent example came earlier this week when Stars and Stripes, a left-wing outlet, revealed that airmen stationed at Osan Air Base in South Korea are authorized to wear a “pride morale patch” on their uniforms this month to celebrate leftists’ made-up “pride month.”

A photograph of the patch published by the outlet shows an LGBT flag encircled by a black ring with the words “Osan+” and “Osan Air Base ROK” on it. Capt. Michelle Chang told Stars and Stripes the patch “represents the advancement of the Air Force’s commitment to diversity, inclusion, dignity, and respect within the mission.”

The patch was devised by Osan Plus, a pro-LGBT organization created at the base in October, according to the outlet. Tech. Sgt. Brittany Ortega, the group’s president, said getting the patch approved was easy and added that “our leadership really, really just wants to promote the acceptance of LGBTQ service members and their families.”

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Excerpt from legalinsurrection.com

 

This is happening in so many red states now. People have finally caught on to what DEI is really about and why it is harmful.

Utah universities dismantle DEI to comply with state law

Two public universities in Utah, Weber State University and the University of Utah, are taking steps to end Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) programs and positions.

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox signed a bill into law, HB 261, on Jan. 30 that forbids DEI training and other DEI initiatives in state public colleges and universities, as well as in Utah’s state government.

Since the signing of the legislation into law, at least one Utah school has renamed its DEI department in an attempt to evade the ban.

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Excerpt from www.thecollegefix.com

St. Cloud State University finalizes plan to cut back on degrees, minors amidst budget problems

Nearly one in three degree programs at St. Cloud State University will get the ax, due to budgetary problems.

Roughly 60 percent of minors are also getting the boot at the public university, according to a recent announcement.

“In a presentation to the campus community on Tuesday, SCSU Acting President Larry Lee confirmed the university will suspend 42 degree programs and 50 minor programs,” KARE 11 reported yesterday.

The news outlet reported that other cuts were made last year as well.

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Excerpt from conservativeroof.com

In a historic decision, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has achieved a significant victory against the Biden administration’s Department of Education (DOE). Paxton successfully halted the DOE’s attempts to implement radical “transgender” policies in Texas educational institutions.

This action effectively opposes the administration’s effort to redefine Title IX to include “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” as protected classes, which is seen as a violation of both state and federal laws.

 

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Excerpt from thepostmillennial.com

Student council members at a Washington state high school were accused of promoting white supremacy after proposing a mural of the school’s unofficial mascot, the hammer-wielding Norse god Thor, be painted as their senior gift.

The school district’s diversity, equity, and inclusion office raised concerns that the painting represents white supremacy and would need to be accompanied by women and people of color to meet the Evergreen Public School district’s racial and gender equity standards, KTTH reports. Klarissa Hightower is the Director of Equity and Inclusion at Evergreen Public Schools.

Student councilors at Mountain View High School in Vancouver proposed the artwork because their school’s mascot is The Thunders, and the name “Thor” translates to “thunder.” There is already a statue of Thor at the school’s main entrance, which added further confusion among the student body government.

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Excerpt from townhall.com

Will “Lia” Thomas, the male swimmer who thinks he’s a woman, will not be able to rob women of awards in the Olympics.

In January, Townhall reported how Thomas was engaged in a “secret” legal battle in hopes of overturning a rule established by World Aquatics prohibiting males who think they’re “transgender” from competing against women.

This week, the Associated Press broke that Thomas lost the legal challenge.

Reportedly, the Court of Arbitration for Sport three-judge panel dismissed Thomas’ request or arbitration with the World Aquatics governing body (via AP):

World Aquatics banned transgender women who have been through male puberty from competing in women’s races. It also created an “open” category for which transgender athletes would be eligible.

Thomas had asked the sports court in Switzerland to overturn the rules approved in 2022 that she said were invalid, unlawful and discriminatory.

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Excerpt from www.jdsupra.com

A federal appeals court recently held that an employer’s health insurance plan wrongly excluded coverage for gender-affirming care in violation of federal civil rights law – offering a warning to employers across the country when it comes to supporting transgender workers. The exclusion drew a line between gender-affirming surgery and other operations and intentionally carved out an exclusion based on one’s transgender status, which the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals found violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. What do employers and benefit plans need to know about the May 13 decision?

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Excerpt from www.louderwithcrowder.com

Restricting u-turns is now homophobic, and at this point, it would probably be a lot easier if the powers that be provided a list of all the things that are not anti-gay.

Silver Lake, a neighborhood in the City of Los Angeles known for its high hipster population, has officially taken down the last two “No U-turn” signs because they were supposedly put in place to prevent gay men from “cruising” and picking up other gay men.

According to the Los Angeles Daily News:

Getting rid of the signs was long overdue for many, including Donovan Daughtry, a gay man who five years ago moved to Silver Lake, known as being LGBTQ-friendly.

Two years ago, Daughtry reached out to L.A. City Councilmember Nithya Raman’s office about the signs after learning about them from a podcast hosted by Chris Cruse, founder of queermaps.org, an online archive of 150 years of queer history in L.A. On Monday, moments after he helped take down the last sign, Daughtry said, “This is a small effort, but just to have a sign that I would have to walk past with my dog every day be taken down meant a lot.”

Oh, geez. Cry me a river, Karen. This is how you know these people are privileged. They can literally go and complain that they don’t like a sign and city officials will get rid of them just so they don’t have to look at them. You really can’t get more spoiled than that, and they will still turn around and pretend they are victimized.

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Excerpt from www.sandiegouniontribune.com

A federal court on Wednesday dismissed the appeal of a lawsuit that challenged a transgender woman’s acceptance into a sorority at the University of Wyoming, ruling it had no jurisdiction to hear the case.

The lawsuit could not be appealed because a lower court judge in Wyoming left open the possibility of refiling it in his court, the three-judge U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver determined.

The case involving Artemis Langford, a transgender woman admitted into the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority chapter in Laramie, drew widespread attention as transgender people fight for more acceptance in schools, athletics, workplaces and elsewhere, while others push back.

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Excerpt from www.cpr.org

Some Colorado GOP officials and candidates are pressuring their leader, state party chair Dave Williams, to resign.

The push comes in response to anti-LGBTQ Pride emails and social media posts from the party, including one calling on people to “Burn all the #pride flags this June.”

The messages were a final provocation for those Republicans exhausted by Wiliams’ already tumultuous tenure at the helm of an embattled and diminished Colorado GOP. With the state primary just weeks away, the anti-Pride emails appear to have ignited long-standing criticisms into an unprecedented public uprising against a state party chair.

Two candidates renounced the state party’s endorsement over the emails, and a coalition of local party leaders are also asking Williams to step down.

“We are calling for the immediate removal of Mr. David Williams, the Chair of the Colorado GOP, for continuing to incite hatred and further division in Colorado,” states a letter signed by local party leaders in Teller County, as well as Republican municipal leaders in the cities of Woodland Park, Cripple Creek and Victor.

The head of the Jefferson County Republican Party Nancy Pallozzi also released a formal letter demanding Williams resign. And opponents have started gathering signatures to force a vote by the state central committee on whether to retain him as chair.

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Excerpt from americanactionnews.com

Judge Robert L. Hinkle of the Federal District Court in Tallahassee ruled on Tuesday against upholding a Florida law that banned sex change surgeries, cross sex hormones and puberty blockers for minors.

The Southern Legal Counsel and the Human Rights Campaign Foundation challenged Florida SB 254 last July, allegingthe Florida law deprived parents from making “necessary” medical decisions for their children. Hinkle, who was nominated by former President Bill Clinton, wrote in his decision that the law was an “unconstitutional” restriction of “widely accepted gender-affirming medical care.”

“Transgender opponents are of course free to hold their beliefs,” Hinkle wrote in the decision. “But they are not free to discriminate against transgender individuals just for being transgender. In time, discrimination against transgender individuals will diminish, just as racism and misogyny have diminished. To paraphrase a civil-rights advocate from an earlier time, the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice.”

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Excerpt from www.lifenews.com

In the midst of a contentious election year, Democrats are desperate to convince voters that protecting women and protecting unborn children are mutually exclusive. This was the purpose of last week’s U.S. Senate Health, Education, Labor, & Pensions (HELP) hearing, “The Assault on Women’s Freedoms: How Abortion Bans Have Created a Health Care Nightmare Across America.”

Committee Chairman Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) kicked off the meeting by implying that protecting children somehow harms mothers. “This morning, we will be holding a hearing to take a hard look at how this decision, the Dobbs decision, has impacted women,” he lamented.

Sanders was joined by Senator Patty Muray (D-Wash.), who also commented, “We take a close accounting of the trauma Republicans are inflicting on women and families across the country, and the damage they are doing to basic reproductive health care through their horrific anti-abortion crusade.