Hamilton Journal News

Fight for transgende­r rights gets a boost from feud

- Clarence Page Middletown native Clarence Page writes for the Chicago Tribune.

Maybe Rep. Marie Newman, an Illinois Democrat, should send flowers or a fruit basket to her controvers­ial fellow freshman, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.

After all, Washington is a town in which publicity often translates into power and political donations, no matter which political side you’re on — and Greene, a Georgia Republican whose paranoid style of politics has earned such nicknames as “QAnon Marge,” brought a ton of attention to the liberal Newman.

A feud between the two newcomers broke out after a passionate speech by Newman on the House floor in support of the Equality Act, which would ban discrimina­tion against people based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

“I’m voting yes on the Equality Act for Evie Newman,” she said in her speech, referring to her transgende­r daughter, “the strongest, bravest person I know.”

When Greene tried without success to block the bill’s movement through the House, Newman responded by erecting a transgende­r-support flag outside her office door and tweeted that it was so Greene “can look at it every time she opens her door.”

To which Greene responded with a sign. “There are TWO genders: MALE & FEMALE,” it said. “Trust the Science.”

Oh, I thought, now she wants to “trust the science”?

Her notorious spreading of false and bigoted conspiracy theories — including ugly notions that school shootings were staged and that a California wildfire was ignited by a space laser controlled by Jewish financiers — and suggestion­s of political violence against Democrats brought condemnati­on from both parties.

It also brought the loss of her committee assignment­s by a vote of 230-199 in early February with 11 Republican members voting with Democrats against her, which also brought censure and hate mail from some of their voters back home. But, as with former President Donald Trump, Greene has a lot of fans too, even if they like her opinions more than they like her.

Such is the case with hot buttons such as the rights of transgende­r students. Few culture war issues are easier to demagogue, especially among voters who already are unsettled by the feeling that America as we know and love it is falling apart — socially, economical­ly, politicall­y and morally.

“As mothers, we all love and support our children,” Greene tweeted over a video of Newman’s floor speech. “But your biological son does NOT belong in my daughters’ bathrooms, locker rooms and sports teams.”

I appreciate her candor, but fears of cross-dressing muggers and other mythical stereotype­s of transgende­r folks are beginning to fade as accommodat­ions improve and experience crowds out ignorance.

The biggest recent legal breakthrou­gh came last June when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the 1964 Civil Rights Act protects gay, lesbian and transgende­r employees from discrimina­tion based on sex. Significan­tly, the 6-3 ruling was written by Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first appointee to the high court, and joined by fellow conservati­ve Chief Justice John Roberts, along with the court’s four liberal justices.

One important question, also raised by Greene and others, is the protection of women’s sports and the safety of female athletes, if they are forced to integrate with male or transgende­r athletes. Many of these concerns have been overblown, but we need to take such concerns seriously.

That means paying attention to real science, not internet rumors.

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