Share
Commentary

Teen Swimmer Fights Tears After School Board Votes To Allow Trans Students in Locker Room

Share

An Illinois school district sparked national outrage by choosing, after four years of debate, to grant transgender high school students unrestricted access to the bathrooms and locker rooms of their choosing.

According to the Chicago Tribune, the overwhelming — and, frankly, baffling — 5-2 decision by School District 211’s Board of Education came as a shock, eliciting “mixed emotions” from an audience of some 250 local residents on Nov. 14.

Judging from video taken at Fremd High School just minutes after the vote, however, talk of “mixed emotions” hardly does justice to the immense outpouring from local students and parents.

Most notable among those emotional accounts was that of junior student-athlete Julia Burca, who fought back tears explaining her frustration for the school board’s utter unwillingness to “accommodate” students uncomfortable with the idea of undressing in front of their transgender peers.

“I feel uncomfortable that my privacy is being invaded,” Burca told a reporter in the video. “As I am a swimmer, I do change multiple times, naked, in front of the other students in the locker room.”

Trending:
Watch: Rep. Anna Paulina Luna Scolds Dems Waving Ukrainian Flags After Vote - 'Put Those Damn Flags Away!'

Rational and considerate in her response, Burca would express understanding of the school board’s “obligation to all students,” lamenting only that the body had not taken into account students with concerns like hers and made honest compromises in solving the problem.

Former district student Nova Maday, on the other hand, was “ecstatic.”

Do you think it's right to force girls to share bathrooms and locker rooms with boys who claim female gender identity?

A 20-year-old male claiming female “gender identity,” Maday was seemingly too excited to stand still — all smiles as he told one reporter, “Yeah, it passed. It passed.”

The lack of self-awareness was, one can only assume, palpable. The disconnect here is unfathomable.

As a bunch of teenage girls expressed genuine feelings of disappointment, frustration and discomfort with the prospect of being forced to undress in front of male students who identify as female, laughter and celebration arose from a rapidly growing, vocal minority that contends people’s gender is somehow entirely separate from their sex.

And that celebration, laughter and unwillingness to sympathize did not simply come from the transgender students in the room or their misguided, irresponsible parents.

Support for this decision to normalize the deconstruction of gender at the expense of a bunch of underage girls was celebrated across social media.

Related:
Service's First Openly Transgender Military Chaplain Suspended for Sexual Misconduct: Report

But why on earth are any of us surprised?

Transgender women’s “rights” always come at the expense of real women’s rights.

The cruel irony of the ever-growing “intersectional” women’s movement is that it stands in direct opposition to the legitimate ideals, goals and empowered female identity set forth by first-wave feminists.

This ideologically corrupted, left-wing brand of feminism has the women’s movement signing its own suicide note, encouraging — and in many cases coercing — feminists into aligning themselves with other “marginalized” groups with whom their interests are in fact diametrically opposed.

Heck, it has brought American culture to a point in which biological men can receive brand endorsements for stepping into the boxing ring to punch biological women in the face.

We have hit a point in which the culture is so desperate to achieve “social justice” that it is willing to roll back all the progress made by women in the last century in order to provide “progress” for the lunacy that is the left’s new gender orthodoxy.

And if our public institutions are recognizing and legitimizing that orthodoxy, then we are teetering on the edge of a cultural cliff from which a fall would undoubtedly be crippling.

Truth and Accuracy

Submit a Correction →



We are committed to truth and accuracy in all of our journalism. Read our editorial standards.

Tags:
, , , , , , , , , , ,
Share

Conversation