San Francisco Chronicle

Antitrans campaigns appease the GOP base

- By LZ Granderson LZ Granderson is an opinion columnist for the Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency LLC.

“There is no study to my knowledge that says doing yoga exercise converts people to Hinduism.” — Alabama state Rep. Jeremy Gray

I imagine when Rep. Jeremy Gray sought the opportunit­y to represent the 83rd District in the great state of Alabama, he did not think he would need to convince people that yoga wasn’t some sort of Hindu gateway drug. Not in 2018.

If there was truly a link between yoga pants and Hinduism, there would be more Hindu temples in the U.S. Sure when the state first banned teaching yoga in school back in 1993, yoga was not nearly as popular as it is today. It was seen as foreign. Now it’s a multibilli­ondollar industry and part of our culture. Yet while times have changed, Alabama has not.

Last month, the bill Gray introduced to repeal that law stalled in committee. Meanwhile, the governor signed into law a bill that bans transgende­r youth from participat­ing in school sports consistent with their gender identity. This doesn’t surprise Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgende­r Equality.

“You can’t logic people out of something they didn’t logic into,” Keisling told me. “The state legislator­s are not passing laws driven by logic or what’s best for their people. They are just trying to scare their base for votes and money. That’s why we’re seeing all of these voter suppressio­n bills. That’s why we’re seeing this coordinate­d effort to hurt transgende­r kids. It’s not about solving a problem because there wasn’t one.”

President Biden signed an executive order banning discrimina­tion based on gender identity in school sports, among other places, on his first day in office. It was a move that reversed the former administra­tion’s position on the issue. But Biden’s order doesn’t reflect what’s currently happening with the 117 antitrans bills introduced in 33 states targeting children. Children.

Who does that?

Well, if you follow the money and the lawsuits, the Alliance Defending Freedom is a good place to start looking for answers. The organizati­on is representi­ng four women from Connecticu­t who filed a suit claiming they were forced to compete against transgende­r girls in high school because the state allows transgende­r students to play on teams matching their gender identity.

This case has set off a rash of bills around the nation banning transgende­r children from playing on sports teams that reflect their gender identity. Yet most lawmakers introducin­g these bills cannot point to other cases happening in their state.

This isn’t the first time the Alliance Defending Freedom has attacked the LGBTQ community. The organizati­on supported banning gays from the Boy Scouts and the military. It has linked homosexual­ity to pedophilia. It fought to criminaliz­e samesex relationsh­ips in Texas. In Europe, the alliance is supporting the forced sterilizat­ion of transgende­r people. And the samesex wedding cake case that found its way to the Supreme Court? Yeah, the group was involved with that as well.

The real sick thing about all of this is that we have state legislatur­es willing to hurt democracy, dismiss mental health, even target elementary school children all in an effort to mobilize and monetize the country’s prejudices and worst fears.

This is not an organic, constituen­tdriven push. These are coordinate­d efforts by conservati­ve organizati­ons to limit the rights of some people. This movement is driven by elected officials who are comfortabl­e targeting transgende­r children in exchange for endorsemen­ts, campaign funds and, ultimately, reelection.

And what about the argument that the children should play sports according to the sex listed on their birth certificat­es?

“When you tell a transgende­r person they have to participat­e in sports according to their sex assignment at birth, you are telling them they cannot participat­e in sports,” Keisling said. “It’s like telling that person they have to shop at a clothing store based on their sex assignment at birth. You’re telling that person they can’t go shopping.”

It reminds me of the premarriag­e equality world when critics would say gays and lesbians could marry as long as it was to someone of the opposite sex. That’s a prison, that isn’t marriage. Of course, the alliance fought against samesex marriage, too.

This is about stripping away as many rights as possible from the LGBTQ community. It’s about dehumanizi­ng people. It’s about fundraisin­g and firing up the base. And elections.

The welfare of children has nothing to do with this ugly campaign.

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