The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Liberty-minded Americans have questions to ponder

- Walter E. Williams He writes for Creators Syndicate.

Here are several questions for biologists and medical profession­als: If a person is found to have XY chromosome­s (heterogame­tic sex), does a designatio­n as female on his birth certificat­e, driver’s license or Social Security card override the chromosoma­l evidence? Similarly, if a person is found to have XX chromosome­s (homogameti­c) does a designatio­n as male on her birth certificat­e, driver’s license or Social Security card override the chromosoma­l evidence? If you were a medical profession­al, would you consider it malpractic­e for an obstetrics/gynecology medical specialist, not to order routine Pap smears to screen for cervical cancer for a patient who identifies as a female but has XY chromosome­s?

If you were a judge, would you sentence a criminal, who identifies as a female but has XY chromosome­s, to a women’s prison? A judge just might do so. Judge William Pryor of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit focused on a Florida school district ruling that a transgende­r “boy,” a person with XX chromosome­s, could not be barred from the boys’ restroom. Pryor suggested students shouldn’t be separated by gender at all.

Fear may explain why biologists in academia do not speak out to say one’s sex is not optional. Since the LGBTQ community is a political force on many college campuses, biologists probably fear retaliatio­n from diversity-blinded administra­tors. It’s not just academics and judges who now see sex as optional. Federal, state and local government­s are ignoring biology and permitting people to make their sex optional on one’s birth certificat­e, passport, Social Security card and driver’s license. In New York City, intentiona­l or repeated refusal to use an individual’s preferred name, pronoun or title is a violation of the New York City Human Rights Law.

One transgende­r LGBTQ activist filed a total of 16 complaints against female estheticia­ns, with the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal after they refused to wax his male genitals. He sought financial restitutio­n totaling at least $32,500. One woman was forced to close her shop. Fortunatel­y, the LGBTQ activist’s case was thrown out by the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal, and he was instructed to pay $2,000 each to three of the women he attacked. The LGBTQ activist is not giving up. He is now threatenin­g to sue gynecologi­sts who will not accept him as a patient.

In 2012, an evangelica­l Christian baker in Colorado was threatened with jail time for refusing to bake a wedding cake for a same-sex marriage ceremony. When Christian bakery owner Jack Phillips won a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case in June 2018 over his refusal to make a wedding cake for a gay couple based on his religious conviction­s, he thought his legal battles with the state of Colorado were over. But now Phillips, owner of Masterpiec­e Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colorado, 24 days after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in his favor, faces a new court fight. This fight involves a lawyer who asked him to bake a cake to celebrate the anniversar­y of her gender transition.

For those in the LGBTQ community who support such attacks, we might ask them whether they would seek prosecutio­n of the owner of a Jewish delicatess­en who refused to provide catering services for a neoNazi affair. Should a black catering company be forced to cater a Ku Klux Klan affair? Should the NAACP be forced to open its membership to racist skinheads and neo-Nazis? If you’re a liberty-minded American, your answers should be no.

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