logo
The Progressive Betrayal of Trans Americans

The Progressive Betrayal of Trans Americans

Yahoo21-02-2025
Transgender Americans like me are trapped in a grim paradox. Our progressive champions may have introduced notions of "birthing persons" to corporate America, but they have done little to safeguard our fundamental right to bodily autonomy. As legislative threats from Republicans escalate, those same progressive champions stand to benefit, undeservedly, from a style of civil rights advocacy that unwittingly takes hostage a minority group that feels increasingly desperate for protection.
In 1952, African Americans faced Jim Crow, doctors labeled same-sex attraction a mental disorder, and homosexuality was criminalized in nearly every state. Yet in that same year, a New York Daily News headline proudly heralded, "Ex-GI Becomes Blonde Beauty: Bronx Youth is a Happy Woman After 2 Years, 6 Operations."
The blonde beauty was Christine Jorgensen, and much of the media coverage of her was surprisingly positive. A Chicago Daily Tribune article from the same year, "Parents Praise Bravery," included quotes from Jorgensen's father, who declared his daughter deserving of "an award higher than the Congressional Medal of Honor" for volunteering to undergo "guinea pig treatment."
Jorgensen also faced intense scrutiny, but the criticism often lacked a coherent narrative. One article chided her apparent inability to distinguish between mink fur and nutria fur, while Time implied she might have transitioned for fame rather than a genuine femininity.
Seven decades later, a great deal of progress has been made. A 2022 Pew Research poll found that only 10 percent of Americans oppose protecting transgender people from discrimination—protections that have been enshrined in law by the highest court of the land. Operations like Jorgensen's are no longer at the forefront of medical technology. With the rise of extreme body modification, they're not even the most radical kind of personal presentation Americans might encounter.
In my hometown of Austin, Texas, Eric "Lizardman" Sprague proudly displays bright green skin, subdermal implants, and a forked tongue. The Guinness World Records publishes articles on people like Eric, and many Americans enjoy popular reality TV shows like "Botched," which depict extreme cosmetic transformations.
One might think that in an era of unprecedented tolerance and body modification, transgender people would be the least of anyone's concerns. But turn on the TV and you will find little discussion of the Lizardman or worries of a rhinoplasty craze sweeping our youth. Instead, the 2024 legislative session saw more than 500 anti-LGBT bills introduced nationwide, with a significant portion targeting transgender individuals.
Now, only a month into Donald Trump's second presidency, a series of executive orders has made it clear the issue is one of Trump's top priorities. How did we get here?
The society Christine transitioned in was one still reeling from the horrors of World War II. While Nazi officers stood trial at Nuremburg, the Allied powers faced a trial of their own: If the deeply held values of the old world had led to this, what use were those values?
The cool-headed rationalism promised by the League of Nations had failed. Nationalism marched with Germany into Poland and imperialism sailed with Japan into Nanjing. Even science could be regarded with suspicion. Once the providence of Western optimism and world fairs, it had bathed the empire of the rising sun in atomic hellfire and left hundreds of thousands of civilians dead in its wake.
What values could justify such destruction of the old world and the creation of the new? Americans found a powerful answer to that question in civil rights.
The same year Christine Jorgensen transitioned, a Superman poster illustrated this emerging idea of American duty: "To talk against someone because of his religion, race, or national origin is
UN-AMERICAN." What makes Superman a hero and not a tyrant—what justifies his exertion of force—is this commitment. If such a poster were made today, the cartoonist would probably add sex, sexuality, and gender identity to that list of protected groups.
That's a compelling message, made all the more compelling when Superman is thwarting the creation of a death ray.
But when legislators take on the responsibility of regulating discrimination out of existence, real life has a tendency to present challenges rarely covered in the pages of Action Comics.
What constitutes discrimination? How should laws against discrimination be enforced? What is an appropriate punishment for having discriminated against someone?
Is that un-American if someone uses "he" or "him" to describe me? What if someone calls me a "tranny"? What if someone calls me a tranny and I'm OK with it? Faced with questions like these, it's not surprising that an often flawed government might fail to regulate effectively. As an adult, I feel I should have the right to negotiate my own boundaries for what's appropriate. The government disagrees.
As civil rights laws have evolved, the government has created a set of regulatory standards for what is and is not discrimination. Because it is impossible for Congress to anticipate every potential scenario in which discrimination may take place, questions like the ones posed above are decided by the courts.
Discrimination lawsuits can present a significant cost to businesses. Fee-shifting provisions, like those found in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Fair Housing Act, allow courts to award attorneys' fees to the "prevailing party," often the plaintiff, if that person succeeds in proving discrimination. These practices make losing a discrimination case particularly costly.
Businesses have responded by taking every step possible to guard against accusations of discrimination. This rational response, however, has created an unintended arms race.
Guidelines established by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in conjunction with the Uniform Guidelines on Employee Selection Procedures (codified in the 1991 Civil Rights Act) have created a legal framework in which failure to adopt "best practices" heightens the risk of liability.
If businesses begin to adopt an expansive set of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, that decision can become one piece of a broader best practice and, therefore, instrumental in protecting against liability. United States Steel boasts of its commitment to "fostering diverse, inclusive and equitable workplaces." This kind of language is universal among large U.S. firms—not because employees of tech companies in San Francisco and steel mills in Gary, Indiana, share social preferences, but because both companies exist downstream from the same federal standards.
This arrangement has put the bureaucrats who design DEI programs in charge of regulating social norms at work, at school, and in government.
If a transgender man works at United States Steel, my guess is that he's capable of handling a few jabs on the job. In fact, my guess is that he's one hard-nosed son of a bitch, like the other hard-nosed sons of bitches he works with, and that it might not help him integrate at work if everyone is walking on eggshells around him.
Then again, maybe he likes the DEI programs offered at his workplace. Many employees appreciate strong protections and identity affinity groups. There's a genuine business argument to be made that such programs can be used as a tool to recruit and retain talent from minority groups.
But in such cases, putting regulatory force behind them is all the more absurd. Rather than allow employees to self-select into employers that match their preferences, our laws encourage the adoption of a single, universal, hyper-progressive option.
There's no doubt this option works for many transgender—and non-transgender—people in San Francisco and New York. But for those of us who live in red states, introducing neologisms and radically restructuring what is appropriate speech have only inflamed cultural tensions.
Progressive activists' ability to push their most unpopular opinions into every area of American life that is regulated by civil rights law has failed to deliver us the kinds of protections that matter, while also making the political right—and generally apolitical voters who might be drawn to the right—more hostile toward us.
What matters most to me and millions of other transgender people is much more fundamental than linguistic minutiae. It's freedom.
I should have the freedom to wear the clothes I want to wear and I should have the freedom to pursue cosmetic changes to my body. But that freedom goes both ways. You should be free to not care, not date me, not call me a woman, and not pay for my hormones or surgeries.
Cases like the "Lizardman" suggest that Americans are broadly open to even radical free expression. But many of the central transgender issues of today—public restrooms, sports participation, metaphysical questions about womanhood—require society to do more than just leave transgender people alone.
They are about what transgender people are entitled to. Does our society have an obligation to protect transgender people from being misgendered in the workplace? Does it have an obligation to provide transgender women access to their preferred restrooms and sports teams?
Among these issues, Americans remain divided. Despite finding only 10 percent who oppose protecting transgender people from discrimination, the same Pew data show Americans divided on the questions posed above: 41 percent believe transgender people should use bathrooms that match their biological sex, and 58 percent believe trans athletes should compete on teams that match their biological sex. Only 27 percent of Americans (and a minority of Democrats) believe health insurance companies should be required to cover gender transitions.
Moreover, while Americans are broadly in favor of bodily autonomy for adults, most agree that we have a social responsibility to protect children from decisions they may come to regret. And on the question of whether that means preventing minors from transitioning, Americans are also divided: 46 percent believe such transitions should be illegal.
These disagreements speak to fundamental philosophical values that can't be ignored. Americans ought to have a great deal of freedom to negotiate the answers to these questions for themselves. The current interpretation of civil rights law makes that impossible, instead putting activists in charge of regulating social norms.
The Trump administration made a major stride forward by repealing Executive Order 11246, which required the government to engage in affirmative action. But other executive orders leave much to be desired, indicating Republicans have more interest in instituting their own regulations than in freedom.
Thus far, the Trump administration has focused on withholding government funding. Executive Order 14187, "Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation," restricts federal funding to medical institutions providing gender-affirming care to individuals under 19, including treatments like puberty blockers and hormone therapies. Meanwhile, Executive Order 14201 bans transgender women and girls from participating in female sports teams at educational institutions, threatening to withhold federal funding from schools that do not comply.
I would normally argue that no sports team, educational institution, or medical provider is entitled to government money. But just as civil rights law makes a more laissez-faire approach to speech in the workplace prohibitively costly, the extent of government involvement in sports, education, and medicine makes genuine competition between private organizations with differing views unlikely.
We must defend freedom on two fronts. First, the arms race for progressive workplace regulation has to end, and that begins with scaling back fee-shifting and the informal and formal regulations on best practices. Second, our government must be held to its constitutional commitment not to infringe on personal liberties.
If a company wants to mandate respectful pronoun use and gender-neutral bathrooms, then it should have that freedom. If a sports league wants to let transgender athletes compete with athletes of the opposite sex, then it should have that freedom. And if a hard-nosed son of a bitch working at a steel mill in Indiana is OK with being jokingly called a "tranny," then goddammit—he should have that freedom.
The post The Progressive Betrayal of Trans Americans appeared first on Reason.com.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Live updates: Texas GOP issues arrest warrants in redistricting showdown with Democrats
Live updates: Texas GOP issues arrest warrants in redistricting showdown with Democrats

The Hill

time11 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Live updates: Texas GOP issues arrest warrants in redistricting showdown with Democrats

Texas Democrats who have taken refuge in blue states to protest GOP-led redistricting in the Lone Star State face civil arrest warrants after missing a legislative session on Monday. Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows (R) signed the warrants, which allow for the Democrats' arrests, as Gov. Greg Abbott on Monday called their protest 'crazy bluster' and said the state would push ahead with redrawing maps. 'Democrats are freaking out because they are realizing Texas has the authority to redistrict, and we're going to do so in a way that's going to lead to these additional seats that will vote Republican, and they will be serving in Congress in the next session,' Abbott told Fox News's Sean Hannity on Monday night. Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chair Ken Martin told CNN on Monday night that Republicans are getting what they asked for: 'Donald Trump, Greg Abbott, Ken Paxton, they said they wanted a showdown. And guess what? That's exactly what they're getting. A showdown.' The Texas House needs two-thirds of its members present to vote; Democrats' absence has deprived the chamber of that quorum. It will convene its second legislative day, likely without Democrats, on Tuesday. In Washington, President Trump is set to join CNBC for an interview Tuesday morning and sign an executive order on later in the afternoon. Just days ahead of his new tariff scheme taking effect and in the wake of a weak jobs report, he faces concern from Republicans on Capitol Hill. Catch up here:

What happens next in Texas redistricting and for Democrats facing civil arrest warrants
What happens next in Texas redistricting and for Democrats facing civil arrest warrants

CNN

time15 minutes ago

  • CNN

What happens next in Texas redistricting and for Democrats facing civil arrest warrants

Source: CNN Texas Republicans are scheduled to reconvene Tuesday after they voted to issue civil arrest warrants for Democrats who fled the state to stop a GOP-led redistricting effort. The Texas House on Monday authorized the warrants for dozens of Democratic lawmakers who didn't appear and denied the Texas House a quorum necessary to move forward with redistricting. The warrants empowered state troopers to arrest the absent Democrats and bring them to the Capitol. But the Democrats who left the state fled to Illinois, New York and Massachusetts, three Democratic-led states outside Texas law enforcement's authority without local officials' cooperation. 'That's why in this case and in previous recent quorum breaks, they have left the state to escape the jurisdiction of the marshals and other arresting officers in the state,' Sarah Chen, a voting rights attorney with the Texas Civil Rights Project, told CNN. And since the Democrats aren't breaking any criminal or state laws, Chen said, it wouldn't be possible for officials to seek the lawmakers' extradition from the states they're holed up in. 'Any sort of work with other states or federal law enforcement would be more of like calling in a favor rather than any sort of legal obligation,' she said. One of the Texas lawmakers who fled to New York, state Rep. Jolanda Jones, said Monday that Texas Gov. Greg Abbott was 'trying to get soundbites' by threatening arrests of the absent legislators. 'Subpoenas from Texas don't work in New York, so he's going come and get us how?' Monday's action 'is just the procedure of what you do when people walk out,' said Andrew Cates, a lawyer in Texas who specializes in legislative and political law. 'No one is scared of it' if they've left the state. 'They haven't broken any laws that anyone knows of, so extradition is not going to work,' he added. The state House is currently scheduled to meet at 2 p.m. EDT (1 p.m. CDT). It doesn't appear that the House will have enough lawmakers present to reach the two-thirds attendance needed for quorum. Texas House Speaker Dustin Burrows said he had signed civil warrants for the Democratic lawmakers who fled the state. The speaker told reporters that House Republicans will work with the Texas Department of Public Safety 'to locate members.' He said one Democrat had announced a fundraiser Tuesday in Austin. 'I've sent that fundraising letter to DPS and said they should be invited to attend, as well. We'll see how that goes forward,' he said. Abbott said in a statement he had ordered DPS 'to locate, arrest, and return to the House chamber any member who has abandoned their duty to Texans.' 'This order will remain in effect until all missing Democrat House members are accounted for and brought to the Texas Capitol,' he said. The House Democrats' decision to flee the state and deny majority Republicans a quorum comes as the state's legislature seeks to redraw the Texas congressional districts to make five seats more favorable for the GOP. Doing so would improve the party's chances of holding onto control of the US House, where they now have a three-seat majority, next November. As he presided in the House on Monday, Burrows said he would do 'everything in my power to establish quorum and move this body forward by any and all means available to this office.' 'To those who are absent: Return now,' he said. 'Show the courage to face the issues you were elected to solve. Come back and fulfill your duty, because this House will not sit quietly while you obstruct the work of the people. The people of Texas are watching, and so is the nation, and if you choose to continue down this road, you should know, there will be consequences.' Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said he would do 'everything in my power' to force Democrats back to Austin. 'It's imperative that they be swiftly arrested, punished, and face the full force of the law for turning their backs on the people of Texas,' Paxton said in a statement. Republicans tried a similar tactic to force an end to Democrats' 2021 quorum break — that one a failed attempt to block restrictive new voting laws. The House sergeant-at-arms sent the warrants to those Democrats, deputized law enforcement to find them and even dropped paperwork off at some members' homes, though no arrests were made. The Texas Supreme Court ruled in 2021 that the House does have the authority physically compel the attendance of absent members. In the wake of that 2021 quorum break, the Texas House also adopted new rules that allow for $500-per-day fines for those who are absent. Lawmakers cannot use their campaign or official funds to cover their own fines. Those new rules have not yet been tested in state court, Chen said. Cates noted the fine for absenteeism has not been enshrined in state law. If a lawmaker refused to pay, he said: 'How do you enforce it?' Abbott issued warnings about potential bribery charges – and suggested he will seek to remove the absent Democrats from office and replace them – in a Fox News interview Monday. 'I believe they have forfeited their seats in the state legislature because they're not doing the job they were elected to do,' he said. The GOP's threats, and civil warrants, were not a surprise to Democrats who said they knew the consequences when they left the state. 'If law enforcement arrests me, I will go peacefully. But I am doing this because I'm fighting for my constituents,' state Rep. James Talarico told CNN. CNN's David Wright, Devan Cole and Fredreka Schouten contributed to this report. See Full Web Article

Former senior Biden aide to appear before House committee in probe of former president's alleged mental decline
Former senior Biden aide to appear before House committee in probe of former president's alleged mental decline

CNN

time42 minutes ago

  • CNN

Former senior Biden aide to appear before House committee in probe of former president's alleged mental decline

A longtime aide to Joe Biden is set to sit for a transcribed interview in House Republicans' probe of the former president's potential cognitive decline and possible efforts to conceal it from the public. Bruce Reed, the former White House deputy chief of staff for policy, is scheduled to appear before the House Oversight Committee Tuesday as part of the Republican-led panel's investigation. He's just the latest Biden White House official to do so, and the first of two top former White House aides scheduled to appear this week. Former senior adviser to the president for communications Anita Dunn is set to appear Thursday, and the committee is expected to hold more voluntary interviews in the coming weeks. During the Biden administration, Reed oversaw much of the domestic policy agenda in the White House. He had also played a role in preparing Biden for his presidential debate against Donald Trump – a disastrous event for Biden that eventually led to his exit from the race altogether. The panel has conducted a number of interviews with former Biden officials in recent weeks, with varying degrees of cooperation. Former Biden counselor Steve Ricchetti and onetime senior adviser Mike Donilon voluntarily sat for transcribed interviews last week. Others have been subpoenaed to appear. Compelled to testify, White House physician Dr. Kevin O'Connor, former assistant to the president and senior adviser to the first lady Anthony Bernal and former assistant to the president and deputy chief of staff Annie Tomasini all invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store