When Social Media Presents Only an ‘Unlivable Life’ | WIRED

THERE ARE TIMES when I wonder whether I’m in denial about the perilous state of trans rights; I find my attention snapping from a lovely dinner with my polycule, most of whom are trans, to the screaming Mouth of Sauron that is social media’s endless shouting about how me and my people are all going to die. It can feel convincing; the evidence piles up with every legislative filing, from coast to coast. It’s a bleak picture made up of far more than unkind words.

PHOTO-ILLUSTRATION: WIRED STAFF; GETTY IMAGES

A New Ban On Trans Girls And Women In School Sports Could Lead To “Invasive Examinations” Of Student-Athletes To Prove Their Gender, Advocates Say

The Republican lawmaker who introduced the bill said it would be enforced via student-athletes’ physical exams.

Protesters march outside the Kansas Statehouse on Transgender Day of Visibility, March 31, in Topeka, Kansas. John Hanna /AP

Kansas enacts transgender athletes ban over veto of Gov. Laura Kelly

The Kansas Legislature voted to override the Democratic governor's veto of a bill that bans transgender athletes from participating in girls' and women's sports from kindergarten through college. It is the latest push of several anti-trans bills introduced by Republican legislators in the state.

Rep. Susan Ruiz, D-Shawnee, joins, Rep. Heather Meyer, D-Overland Park, in calling out GOP legislative members following Wednesday's vote to override Gov. Laura Kelly's veto on a bill banning transgender athletes in the state. Evert Nelson/The Capital-Jou

Kansas ban on trans athletes could include “genital inspection,” critics say | Salon.com

"The sports ban has never sincerely been about protecting women's sports," said Micah Kubic, the executive director of the ACLU of Kansas. "Rather, it arises out of the same gender discrimination, stereotyping, and paternalism that has held back progress for cisgender women athletes for centuries."

Kansas Governor Laura Kelly. (Mark Reinstein/Corbis via Getty Images)

Statehouse scraps: Big support for voting rights, transgender ban numbers, homelessness bill paused - Kansas Reflector

The American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas released a poll on voting rights Friday. The civil rights advocacy group found that 70% of Kansans support measures to make voting easier, rather than adding additional restrictions.

Kansas Reflector opinion editor Clay Wirestone works Thursday at the Statehouse in Topeka. (Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector)

Republicans advance 7 anti-abortion, anti-transgender rights bills in Kansas

Lawmakers in Kansas have introduced seven bills in recent weeks focusing on abortion and transgender rights, such as SB 180, which received pushback from groups such as the ACLU of Kansas on the basis that it excludes transgender people from certain spaces.

Photo from Fox 4 KC

Kansas push to define sex, ban trans athletes from girl sports slammed as 'discrimination'

Kansas lawmakers are moving forward with legislation that would define biological sex and ban transgender athletes from women sports. However, Aileen Berquist, Policy Director for the ACLU of Kansas, argued that the bill is not about women’s rights.

Screen of Aileen Berquist, Director of Policy from news segment

Critics call proposed Kansas 'women's bill of rights' sexist, transphobic - Kansas Reflector

“My understanding is that they are jumping from state to state, pushing a very specific agenda,” Berquist said. “The people who are opponents of this bill are living, working, having children and fighting this hatred in our communities every day, and they deserve to have their voices heard.” 

Caroline Dean spoke against a proposed women’s bill of rights during a Feb. 15, 2023 hearing, saying the legislation doesn’t actually benefit women. (Sherman Smith/Kansas Reflector)

Some Kansas lawmakers want to punish doctors who help transgender kids transition

Puberty blockers, mastectomies, surgeries that remove “any body part or tissue” and prescribing estrogen to males or testosterone to females to treat gender dysphoria could be essentially unavailable in Kansas to people under 18 due to a bill in the Statehouse would cost doctors their licenses.

Few empty seats remained as supporters and opponents of the bill packed into the committee room.