Julia Landy

Rainbow is often associated with the LGBTQ+ community and was adopted as their flag colors. The colors reflect the diversity of the LGBTQ+ community and the spectrum of human sexuality and gender. Graphic by Julia Landy.

[Multimedia] Legislation around the country targets LGBTQ+ youth

April 14, 2022

In the first few months of 2022, around 250 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been proposed in state legislatures, primarily targeting transgender youth. The bills have been largely criticized for their potential negative effects on young LGBTQ+ people’s mental health. 

LGBTQ+ students at MSD are enraged and unsettled over the rise of anti-LGBTQ+ bills

“I think that a lot of the [anti-LGBTQ+] bills are unnecessary. Most of them are conservatives trying to remove the rights of the LGBTQ+ community in the United States. It doesn’t make any sense. These bills hurt the community and put us in harm’s way,” junior Eleanor Sather said. “We are discriminated against and don’t have the rights we deserve. The United States is supposedly a ‘free’ country. How can it be a free country if we are going to take away the rights of people in the LGBTQ+ community?”

In legislation targeting trans people, they may restrict healthcare for trans youth, single-sex facility restrictions, excluding trans youth from sports, school or curriculum restrictions, restrictions on access to accurate ID and others.

“I think [the bills targeting trans people] are very unfair. Many people have prejudices against the trans community and refuse to acknowledge people by their preferred gender or pronouns. My family members are transphobic and it disgusts and scares me. I’m afraid that trans rights will be taken away, that we won’t be able to live as we should,” freshman Avery Doe* said. “People have no idea how much the trans community [have] to deal with and the stealing of their rights is only something else to add onto that. It isn’t fair to take away such basic human rights and it makes no sense why they’d target trans people just because they can’t open their minds to people that aren’t exactly like them. It really hurts.”

Attacks, like Oklahoma’s “Save Women’s Sports Act” which bans transgender athletes from playing on girls’ and women’s sports teams or Arkansas’ ban on transition-related healthcare for trans minors through legislation, have been back on the rise since 2020. However, trans advocates have pointed out that this time, cisgender allies aren’t giving the same solidarity that people saw in 2016 when North Carolina passed and signed into law HB2, which banned people from using public restrooms that do not correspond with their biological sex. Kelly Hayes, host of the podcast “Movement Memos,” wrote “Trans youth are facing right-wing attacks and a solidarity shortage.”

Chase Strangio, deputy director for transgender justice at the American Civil Liberties Union, has been a fierce criticizer of responses to anti-LGBTQ+ bills that focus on its effects on cis queer people.

“Between the meaningless self-aggrandizing videos of people saying ‘gay’ and the cis gays who have never shown up for trans people being shocked that they too are targets, this moment is a perfect encapsulation of contemporary movement failures,” Strangio tweeted.

Targeting the LGBTQ+ community as a whole are “religious exemption” bills. To make them constitutional if passed, bills can be considered Religious Freedom Restoration Acts: religious exemptions regarding healthcare for LGBTQ+ people, adoption and foster care and more. “Religious exemption” is often regarded as a “dog whistle” for anti-LGBTQ+ sentiments, essentially saying that religion allows them to discriminate against LGBTQ+ people.

“I think that negative LGBTQ+ beliefs based on religion is complete bullsh*t,” freshman Jane Doe* said. “People shouldn’t be scared to be who they are just because it’s ‘forbidden’ in religion. […] My religion should have nothing to do with my sexual orientation or identity.”

Regarding healthcare, the bills would allow healthcare providers to deny LGBTQ+ patients service. 8% of lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer people reported that a doctor or other healthcare provider refused to see them because of their sexual orientation, according to the Center for American Progress. For transgender survey respondents, that number rose to 29%. 

Several lawsuits have been filed over reports of adoption and foster care agencies turning away prospective LGBTQ+ parents. “Religious exemption” bills on adoption and foster care would allow these agencies to do such legally if they claim doing it because of their religion.

“I myself am religious and I can say that this whole idea [of religious exemption] is ridiculous,” Avery* said. “[…] I understand some people may have been taught to be homophobic, yet they need to understand that our world is changing and we are trying to progress in our ideas and way of life. The freedom that another person has shouldn’t be limited by the religious beliefs of another.”

Religion can be a struggle for many LGBTQ+ students as homophobia and transphobia are very often excused with religion.

“As a bi Muslim, it’s a little harder for me to talk to family about this because there aren’t too many Muslims who are part of the LGBTQ+ community because it is considered ‘haram,’ which means bad or forbidden,” Jane* said.

Anti-LGBTQ+ bills and rhetoric, including trans-exclusionary radical feminism, a record number of fatal violence against trans people in 2021 and over 250 anti-LGBTQ bills introduced in 2022,  have been on the rise in the past two years, but mainly since 2016. 

“In 2022, what we’re seeing nationally is really an all-out assault on trans people, particularly trans young people in state legislatures. That looks a lot just like an escalation of what we’ve seen year after year, really beginning in 2016, when we started to see the so-called bathroom bills really emerge as a sort of backlash to marriage equality,” Strangio said in an interview with TruthOut. “[…] Between 2016 and 2020, because of that, attacks on trans people in the restroom context really waned. This was also of course during the Trump administration when state legislatures could rely on the federal government to be sort of the ‘discriminator-in-chief’ with respect to trans people. And then what starts to happen in 2020 is we start to see an escalation of attacks and a real pivot from our opponents.”

While legislation has been a key factor in anti-LGBTQ+ sentiments, discrimination and homophobic and/or transphobic rhetoric has come from other places. Comedian Dave Chappelle and Netflix were slammed last year after Chapelle expressed that he was a “TERF,” or trans-exclusionary radical feminist, in his Netflix special. 

Chappelle also showed support for “Harry Potter” author JK Rowling. Rowling has faced controversy for her sentiments against trans people since 2019. Rowling also is a TERF, publishing what is regarded by critics as a “transphobic manifesto” in June 2020.

The frequent attacks on LGBTQ+ people, especially youth, have had negative effects on some MSD students’ mental health.

42% of LGBTQ+ youth seriously considered attempting suicide in the past year, including more than half of transgender and nonbinary adolescents, according to The Trevor Project’s National Survey on LGBTQ Youth Mental Health in 2021. 94% of LGBTQ youth reported that recent politics negatively impacted their mental health.

Passed legislation is being counter-acted by lawsuits, though some LGBTQ+ students feel that the damage is already done. LGBTQ+ students struggling can get help by talking, texting or chatting with counselors at the Trevor Project. 

More generally in BCPS students can call 754-321-3421 for suicide counselors at any time.

*Names indicated were changed to protect the student’s anonymity

Waving flags in protest

Theron Piccininni

Students feel silenced now that they are no longer allowed to say “gay” in schools under Florida law. Freshman Riley McCleary covers their mouth with a pride flag signifying they will not stay silent about their sexuality.

With over 250 anti-LGBTQ+ bills being proposed in 2022 alone, students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School are finding new ways to silently protest against these bills. Either it be creating art and writing, or wearing pride clothes, masks, and flags, students that feel strongly about these bills are ready to fight back for their rights. 

“Carrying a flag makes me feel like I have control over who I am and I can share that with the world. It gives me pride to be who I am without shame. Carrying around a flag means ‘I am here and I will be seen’ to me,” freshman Riley McCleary said.

Flags represent what a person stands for, when students at MSD carry around their flags they feel a sense of control over their life and they use this as a source to protest. These flags represent what someone identifies as and when carrying these flags it gives them a sense of pride and identity. 

In the past flags, bands, and more have been used to change history for the better. Like John and Mary Beth Tinker’s peace sign bands used to protest the Vietnam War. Their Supreme Court case, Tinker vs. Des Moines, is about two highschool siblings who decided to wear peace armbands to protest the war in Vietnam. The school they went to then proceeded to suspend them and they decided to fight back. The case then led to freedom of speech in schools for students. These small symbols on pieces of fabric represent a cause that can mean so much in a protest, silent or out loud.

These bills are affecting many students at MSD with the LGBTQ+ population representing about 19% of the school population. The bills banning books and other items displaying LGBTQ+ members in a positive light, students are sharing their opinion on the matter in many ways.

“The bill “SB 1142” in Oklahoma seeks to ban books in school libraries, this just makes me feel unseen because they’re trying to keep us from being represented in the media,” McCleary said. 

MSD students have strong opinions about these bills and are finding any way they can to show representation and to fight back against moving backwards in time.

“[The bills] are unnecessary, it’s no one’s business but the individuals as to how they identify themselves. I don’t understand how who they love affects other people,” sophomore Ninar Khalouf said.

By participating in a silent protest, like the carrying of flags, students are able to share and express who they are while fighting against the bills.

[Opinion] Anti-LGBTQ+ laws should not be passed in the U.S

Queer people in America have been victim to discrimination and hate since the foundation of the country and in 2022, nearly 250 years later, that has not changed. Only four months into the year, hundreds of new laws were passed in certain states to further the injustice that the LGBTQ+ community faces. These laws are cruel and put children and adults in danger. 

These bills affect schools, healthcare and the wellbeing of many queer people. School is a place where students are supposed to feel safe and with these laws, students are prohibited from being themselves. Florida passed the “Parental Rights in Education” bill, also known as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. This bill bans schools from talking about sexual orientation and gender identity which can give kids the wrong impression about these topics. Ignoring that queer people exist during school, which continues outside of school,  can give the effect that something is wrong with them. Everyone should have a chance to explore and talk about their sexuality and feel normal not to be heteronormative.

In schools, for example Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, students have started silently protesting through the wearing of their respective sexuality flags on clothes, pins, and even bringing physical flags to hold in school. Not only should the queer community stand up for themselves, but friends, classmates and teachers should stand up for them too. 

Some of the bills being passed are specifically targeting transgender people people. Not only are anti-transgender bills affecting every-day life, they are affecting the needs of transgender people. In many southern states, laws forbid doctors and health care providers from treating the transgender community for hormones or gender-affirming surgery. Denying someone a basic human right based on who they are and how they express themselves can not be justified. No doctor would deny healthcare from someone who is heterosexualand the same should be said for the LGBTQ+ community.

Most of the bills that are being passed are by states that are a conservative majority, a political identification whose beliefs usually disagree with or discriminate against the LGBTQ+ community. Republican majority states such as Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Arizona have all introduced laws targeting and removing the rights of transgender people. There are many more states following these examples and they should be stopped because passing these bills are creating hurt and chaos within the country.

If sexuality and gender identity is not discussed and normalized, then the country will be taking a step back keeping these subjects taboo and illegal. A countless amount of queer people have been victims to hateful words and violence and if bills like this keep being passed, many more will suffer.

Do you support the bills currently in legislation that are targeting the LGBTQ+ community?

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