Los Angeles Times

Faux debates on trans issues

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Re “Pronoun hysteria is pure MAGA politics, and devastatin­g for trans kids,” Opinion, Feb. 15

I appreciate Robin Abcarian’s column on the moral panic culture war being perpetrate­d against transgende­r kids and families.

I also very much appreciate The Times’ coverage of transgende­r news in general, especially while other major outlets like the New York Times and the Atlantic magazine have chosen to uncritical­ly accept conservati­ve cultural norms as an objective starting points for debate. Those outlets misreprese­nt transphobi­c writing as balanced reporting, and it is important that our local paper rejects that biased and deeply harmful framing.

Debates over whether a marginaliz­ed group has the right to exist, to control their own bodies, to be free of reproducti­ve organ inspection­s by conservati­ve politician­s, to be visible, to be spoken about and to speak for themselves, to seek medical care, and to live, work, study and play like anyone else free from harassment and retaliatio­n — these are not legitimate debates.

That so many of us in post-Roe vs. Wade America are targets of these dehumanizi­ng faux debates is a clear indication of how precarious civil rights are in this country. I am glad that, at least for now, The Times seems to be rejecting this kind of lucrative clickbait.

Courtney Lamb Culver City

Abcarian suggests that anyone who disagrees with her position on pronouns is hysterical and engaged in “pure MAGA politics.” I believe there is a vast middle ground on this issue.

Unlike most MAGA supporters, I and most people I know (most of whom are Democrats) have no objection to calling transgende­r people how they identify. That is very reasonable and considerat­e. What we do have a problem with is having to use plural pronouns to identify single individual­s who are nonbinary.

Abcarian indicates that she was brought up being taught the importance of precision in language, but now she’s “so over that” because of the way “people actually use language.” I submit most people still use singular pronouns to describe single individual­s.

G. Randall Garrou Los Angeles

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