Skip to main content

Extra Credit: Trump Administration Considering Strict Definitions of "Sex" in Federal Law

This past week, the New York Times reported that the Trump administration is considering redefining "sex" in federal statute so that people's gender would be determined by the biological sex they are assigned to at birth. According to the Associate Press, "LGBT leaders across the U.S. reacted with fury Monday to a report that the Trump administration is considering adoption of a new definition of gender that would effectively deny federal recognition and civil rights protections to transgender Americans."


In today's Denver Post, transgender Coloradans respond to this possible change in law. For Owen Flaherty, a staff member at the LGBT Center of Colorado, "it's the pointed cruelty of the measure, to tell people you’re not going to honor their existence ... That you’re not going to honor your civil rights, you’re not going to honor our health care."

Celebrity Caitlyn Jenner, a former Trump supporter published her regrets this week, too, in the Washington Post, admitting that despite her early optimism that President Trump would be an ally of the LGBTQ community. "Sadly," she writes, "I was wrong. The reality is that the trans community is being relentlessly attacked by this president. The leader of our nation has shown no regard for an already marginalized and struggling community. He has ignored our humanity. He has insulted our dignity."

As we move into our next few weeks of class, let's pay attention to the news and better understand the  challenges and the injustices that LGBTQIA+ folks are facing, on campus, in our city and state, the United States, and internationally. What are you aware of that we should all know more about? Please share your insights in the comments below.





Comments

  1. As I was reading more about this in the news and just in my own personal lives, I'm realizing now is the best time to be an ally. It's easy to be an ally when things are going great in the world and in the LGBTQIA+ community, it's times like this when we have to stand up with the community and defend them. I was talking to a transgender friend of mine and it broke my heart to have him talk about his struggles and doubts. First his parents and family didn't believe that he was transgender and now it's the whole country. I think right now we need to advocate for the legitimacy of our transgender friends and family.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Blog Post for Thursday, August 30—Welcome to “Justice, Gender, Sexuality”

Welcome to our course blog—“Justice, Gender, Sexuality”!  In this space, you’ll have the chance to reflect on our course reading, ask questions, interact with each other and build a virtual community to complement our classroom space. For this first post, I’d like to invite you to do two things:  First, tell us more about yourself.  What do you think we should know about you as we begin this semester together?  You might consider these questions:  Who are you?  How do you identify?  Where are you from?  To whom do you belong?  What communities are you a part of?  What values or beliefs do you hold dear?  Or, share some other facet about yourself that you think is significant.  You might also consider telling us more about why you decided to take this course, and what you hope to learn from it. Then, please reflect on the reading assigned for class.  Given ...

Let's Embrace Queer! by Yael Greene

Starting from a very small age, probably starting at five or six years old, my parents, especially mymom, explained what it meant to be “gay,” “lesbian,” and “transgender,” just to start. All those talk were very positive, with the both of them reiterating that if my sisters and I ever felt that we were not straight or not identifying ourselves as females, they would continue to support and love us. As Igrew up, I heard more terms such as “asexual,” “pansexual,” and more! My mom and dad never changed their response about how they would fully love me no matter how I identified myself sexually or with my gender. The one thing they would add when we continued growing up was that the term “queer” is very derogatory and offensive towards people in the LGBTQIA+ community. I hated the word for a long time because of the negative history behind it. Nobody of any sexual orientation and gender identity deserves any form of hatred. Nowadays, the term “queer” has been reclaimed as a posit...

Blog Post for Tuesday, October 30: The Criminalization of Queer Folks

After reading the first two chapters of Queer Injustice (for class on Tuesday, October 30), use evidence from the reading to answer this question:  How have LGBTQIA+ folks been criminalized in the United States? (Put another way, how has U.S. culture, society, and law defined "queers as intrinsically criminal" (23)?) To help you get started, you might want to review briefly how our authors explain what they mean by the criminalization of queers (see p. 23, for a starting point). Then, please discuss two concrete examples of how queers have been criminalized in the U.S. Aim for at least 250 words in your comment.