Alternative fact of the week
In reality, nothing of particular significance had happened Friday night in Sweden — a point which caused much mockery of Mr. Trump from officials and the press in Sweden. The connection between crime in that country and refugees is dubious at best, according to data from the Swedish National Council for Crime Prevention. There was, however, a riot in the Stockholm suburb of Rinkeby on Monday night which resulted in no serious injuries. Whatever issues Sweden has in assimilating refugees, the most dangerous parts of the country are still much safer than quite a few refugee-free neighborhoods within an Uber ride of the White House.
But that was pretty much par for the course with the nation’s 45th president (the combination of disordered thinking, fear-mongering and Fox News having become something of a trademark after just one month on the job). What should top the week’s list of biggest whoppers is one that was actually committed last year — on April 21, 2016, to be exact — when, in response to a question about North Carolina’s contentious HB2 bill restricting bathroom access to transgender people, Mr. Trump said at a televised town hall on NBC’s “Today Show” that such individuals should use the restroom they feel most comfortable with.
As a candidate, Mr. Trump made quite a few contradictory statements about LGBTQ issues, including what anatomical features should qualify a person for men’s or women’s restroom privileges, but this week he truly demonstrated how different his outlook on the matter has changed in 10 months. Late Wednesday, he reversed the Obama administration’s advisory that transgender students should have access to bathrooms that correspond with their gender identity. According to a White House statement, Mr. Trump found it to be a “states’ rights” issue.
Hmm, a failure to support the civil rights of a minority while hiding behind a states’ rights argument — why does that sound so familiar? This new interpretation of Title IX will have only one major effect and that is to make school life much harder for a thousands of kids who are easy targets for bullies and other haters. This is the same states’ rights argument that provided the foundation for slavery, Jim Crow and white supremacist ideology. And if you think lives aren’t at stake here, think again. The transgender suicide rate is already alarmingly high (suicide attempts by transgender individuals are nearly 10 times as common compared to the overall U.S. population, according to a
So why make hurting transgender children such a high priority? We have yet to hear an explanation — whether states’ rights or the “privacy” rights of non-transgender classmates — that seems either factual or relevant. Fortunately, there are many school systems where enlightened administrators, teachers and parents will not back down from sensible anti-discrimination protections. Ultimately, it’s up to the courts to decide what Title IX or other legal protections actually protect and not the opinions of candidate Trump of last April or President Trump of today.