Gender ideology is losing in the courts
Gender ideologues may have been able to force their way into our medical institutions, the education establishment, and even the White House, but they’re not having much luck in the courts.
Two recent cases prove that the legal system is hesitant to flip our understanding of biology upside down.
In Florida, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit ruled in late December that “sex” does not include “gender identity,” and that therefore a school board policy requiring students to use the restroom that corresponds with their biological sex does not violate the Constitution or federal civil rights law.
Writing for the 7-4 majority, Judge Barbara Lagoa pointed out that much of the law regarding sex is based on the understanding that men and women are different and that separate spaces protect the rights of both sexes. Title IX, for example, specifically grants schools the right to separate bathrooms by biological sex, she wrote.
Transgenderism is experiencing a crisis of scientific legitimacy
Today, almost every academic medical school, most prominent U.S. professional medical organizations, and the Biden administration are fully advocating both drugs and major surgeries, including the removal of healthy tissue and organs, in children, adolescents, and adults. Planned Parenthood makes it easier than any medical insurance company does, advertising "gender euphoria" services with drugs prescribed and delivered after a remote 30-minute telehealth session starting at $59 a month.
The problem is that they all ignore the fundamentals of biology and make unsubstantiated claims without the conclusive, long-term clinical safety findings otherwise required for all other types of medical or pharmacological interventions.
There appears to be pushback in both the courts and the MSM. Have (((they))) gone too far?
All these ideas…are chained to the existence of men, to who[m]…they owe their existence. Precisely in this case the preservation of these definite races and men is the precondition for the existence of these ideas. --