File under "Paywalled but pertinent."
The Harris campaign chose not to respond to the Trump ads â not even to point out, as the Lincoln Project did, that trans health care for prisoners (including surgery) was the policy of Trumpâs Bureau of Prisons during his first term. In campaign rallies, Harrisâs litany of âfreedomsâ invariably ended with gay rights (âThe freedom to love who you love openly and with prideâ). It never once included trans rights. The same was true for Democratic candidates down the ballot. Before McBride was banned from the Capitol bathrooms, she was excluded from the Democratic National Convention stage.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., called the Capitol trans bathroom ban dangerous for âall women and girlsâ because âall it does is allow these Republicans to go around and bully any woman who isnât wearing a skirt because she might not look woman enough.â Thatâs a lot like someone in 1955 objecting to Jim Crow laws because some white people might get mistaken for Black people. AOC didnât mention McBride or civil rights.
Trans people have become untouchables.
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If it sounds like Iâm terrified, I am â as are many trans Americans and their families. In recent years there has been an escalation in the number of anti-trans bills introduced in Republican state houses (669 bills in 2024). Most are targeting trans minors, taking away bathrooms, sports, books, forcibly outing them, outlawing âcrossdressing,â greenlighting hate speech, criminalizing any mention of gender identity, and criminalizing their parents, doctors and counselors. As Trump has vowed, and as the state of Oklahoma has done, theyâre not going to stop with children.
But what terrifies me most doesnât just concern trans people. Iâll pose my fear as a question: What percentage of the German population was Jewish at the time of Hitlerâs rise? The answer â 0.75% â is lower than most people guess.
The Nazi party gaslit a nation into thinking that a group comprising 0.75% of its population was a threat that could âpoisonâ its culture, seize its economy and needed to be stopped. During the 1930s, before Germanyâs âfinal solutionâ to âthe Jewish problem,â more than 400 anti-Jewish decrees and regulations were issued by national, regional and municipal officials, gradually eliminating Jews from public life, employment, education, culture, travel, hospital care and turning them into outcasts.