Skip to main content
We may receive compensation from affiliate partners for some links on this site. Read our full Disclosure here.

Students Speak Up Against Transgender Policies: “We don’t feel safe”


School boards.

What comes to mind when you hear that?

A group of wanna-be dictators that work tirelessly to ensure the kids are corrupted?

That seems to be what they’ve morphed into.

And they seem to keep living up to that reputation.

But usually they face down adults.

This time, the students are on the frontlines.

It’s hard for board members to not look like the bad guy when these kid’s are telling them they don’t feel safe and they don’t try to help.

These are some brave kids, to stand there and read off the offenses and uncomfortable situations they’ve had to endure because of The Protected Class of gender confused kids.

MSN News reports:

WEST NYACK – After 20 residents spoke against and for Clarkstown school board’s recently passed Equal Opportunity and Nondiscrimination policy, two board members — one who voted for the policy and one who voted against it — pleaded for more understanding.

“We need to respect each other. We need to educate and believe in each other,” said trustee Tammy Bierker, one of two who voted against the policy during a Dec. 11, 2023 meeting. “We want to honor every single student we have.”

“Honor every single student” seems to be code for ‘Honor The Protected Class’.

Given the tenor of the meeting, and the hundreds in attendance who clapped or jeered, it seemed that was an unlikely goal.

The Clarkstown community has been split over the policy. Those against it have focused on the use of bathrooms and locker rooms, particularly by trans girls — that is, a person identified as male at birth who now identifies as female.

They say the district’s new policy, by allowing trans kids to use facilities aligned with their gender identity, goes further than the law. Some students said they were concerned that the policy would make them feel uncomfortable and could open the way to bad actors going into a girls restroom or locker room with bad intent.

River Traitz, 17, said that unrestricted bathroom policy wasn’t state law, and that a trans student can use single-occupancy bathrooms. “How does the board define a woman?” he asked. He was met with thunderous applause.

But Nay Grillo, 17, thanked the board for the policy, a statement that drew a round of cheers. “This is a monumental step,” Grillo said, adding that one could count the number of transgender girls in the district on one hand.

Several spoke about the isolation and safety concerns trans students often face.

A 2021 National School Climate Survey by GLSEN, a national nonprofit that works to ensure a safe school environment for LGBTQ students, found that 56% of LGBTQ+ students have experienced harassment based on their gender expression, and at least half have experienced a form of anti-LGBTQ discrimination at school.

A national nonprofit that works to ensure a safe environment for LGBTQ? Someone needs to do some digging on them. It seems there’s always an agenda with these groups. Who funds them?

CBS added quoted one student:

“I wish that I can feel comfortable to change in the restroom and not be walked in on by biological male. It’s just uncomfortable,” student Melina Canosa said.

So ironic that Democrats keep screaming about “Democracy!”  You know, the idea that the majority rules.

But their actions show it’s always minority rules.

Let 99% of the students feel unsafe for the sake of the .03% mentally distrubed students.

Always the opposite with them.

Hey robot ChatGPT, define supremacy for us:

Supremacy typically refers to the state or condition of being superior to all others in authority, power, or status. It often implies dominance or preeminence over others in a particular context or domain.

Our enemies strive for supremacy. Simple as.



 

Join the conversation!

Please share your thoughts about this article below. We value your opinions, and would love to see you add to the discussion!

Leave a comment
Thanks for sharing!