US Ohio bathroom law targeting transgender students has brought internal strife to some campuses - "At Antioch College, nearly 90% of the school’s 120 students identify as LGBTQ+ and about 1 in 6 say they are transgender."

Ohio bathroom law targeting transgender students has brought internal strife to some campuses
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Geoff Mulvihill
2025-02-24 01:29:12GMT

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Antioch College student Ahri Morales-Yoon is photographed, Thursday, Feb.13, 2025, on the campus of Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

For some famously progressive colleges in Ohio, a new state law designed to keep transgender women from using women’s restrooms at schools is bringing a moment of soul-searching for students, alumni and administrators.

It’s one of many such laws adopted around the country, with the stated intent of protecting female students. The Ohio law — which applies fully to private colleges, unlike the others — allows individual institutions to decide how they will obey and enforce the measure.

But navigating the law has become a challenge, especially at colleges like Antioch and Oberlin, campuses built on a bedrock of idealism and protest where many see the law as part of a wider attack on transgender students.

For some, the idea of complying at all runs counter to the long-held value of being gender-inclusive. At the same time, colleges across the country are sorting the impact of the Trump administration’s crackdown on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, including a threat to cut federal funding for schools that reject its interpretation of civil rights laws.

Oberlin has published policies saying the school will comply with the law taking effect Tuesday and is offering counseling and a chance for students to ask to move out of their dorms. Antioch has not announced a detailed plan.

Ahri Morales-Yoon, a first-year student at Antioch College who is nonbinary, said the law’s impact will go beyond bathroom access.

“It will cause a lot of fear and uncertainty,” they said. “It’s in the back of your head that this law is hanging over us.”

Colleges see effort to undercut support for transgender students
Jane Fernandes has been president of Antioch College since 2021. In that time, she said, she hasn’t fielded a single complaint about anyone’s presence in a restroom.

The school, about an hour’s drive west of Columbus, was founded in 1850. Horace Mann, the education reformer, abolitionist and former member of Congress became its first president. The school shuttered in 2008 amid financial struggles but relaunched three years later. Nearly 90% of the school’s 120 students identify as LGBTQ+ and about 1 in 6 say they are transgender.

“We will do everything we can to make it possible for transgender students to be very supported and safe here,” said Fernandes, who has spoken out repeatedly against the law.

Shelby Chestnut, the executive director of the Transgender Law Center, who is an Antioch graduate and chair of the school’s board of trustees, said the law is an effort to deter colleges from supporting students.

“This is an outright attack on student safety,” they said in an interview.

The law calls for colleges in Ohio to designate all multioccupancy restrooms, locker rooms, changing rooms and showers for the exclusive use of males or females, based on sex at birth.

Ten other states already enforce bathroom laws. But none of those apply broadly at private colleges and universities.

“The point was that we’re treating our students equally across the board in Ohio,” said Republican state Rep. Beth Lear, one of the measure’s sponsors.

The bathroom laws are part of a wave of anti-transgender policies. Most GOP-controlled states, including Ohio, have banned gender-affirming medical care for transgender minors and passed laws to keep transgender women from competing in women’s sports.

Since returning to office, President Donald Trump has signed a series of executive orders targeting transgender and nonbinary people on several fronts, an abrupt change from President Joe Biden’s efforts to include them explicitly in civil rights protections.

External pressure leads to internal campus strife
Since its founding in 1833, Oberlin College and Conservatory, outside Cleveland, has broken down social barriers, including being among the first colleges to admit women and Black students. The college was on the cover of Life magazine in 1970 when it offered co-ed dorms.

By the 1990s, dorm residents were voting on bathroom policies, and they often made facilities open to any gender.

The bathroom law has sparked angst on campus and among some alumni, who see the administration’s intention to comply with the law as an abdication of values by the school of nearly 3,000 students. The college said in a campus-wide note that following the law “does not diminish our support for every member of our diverse community.”

But it’s not that simple to everyone.

It goes against “the whole idea of Oberlin,” English professor DeSales Harrison said, “to refrain from making a decisive argument about what seems true and good in the world.”

Some have called for Oberlin to take a more forceful stand.

Kathryn Troup Denney, who graduated in 1995, is a Massachusetts-based musical theatre director who wrote a production about transgender people. Like several alumni on message boards, she said her alma mater should not comply with the state law, even if it means risking government funding.

“When the law is deliberately causing discriminating against one particular population of people,” Denney said, “that’s when good people can rise up and say, ‘No, this law is not fair, it is not equitable, and it is not safe.’”

Oberlin officials declined interview requests.

Signs are changing, but it’s not clear restroom use will
When students returned to Oberlin for the spring semester, there were new signs designating multi-person bathrooms as being for either men or women.

Many dorm bathrooms previously had signs designating them as open to everyone, people of just one gender or just one occupant. Students could change the signs. In academic and other buildings, instead of designating a gender, some signs described whether a bathroom had stalls or urinals.

Some of the new signs have been removed, apparently as acts of protests, and the administration has been replacing them.

But at both Antioch and Oberlin, it’s not clear that who uses which restroom will change.

Natalie DuFour, Oberlin’s student body president, noted the law does not require anyone to check who is using the bathrooms.

“Students, in theory, have the freedom to use whatever they want,” she said.

Antioch’s Fernandes has signaled the same thing: “We’re not going to monitor who’s going in which bathroom.”

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Antioch College President Jane Fernandes is photographed, Thursday, Feb.13, 2025, at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Antioch College student Ahri Morales-Yoon, walks across campus, Thursday, Feb.13, 2025, at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
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Antioch College student Ahri Morales-Yoon, left, and Antioch College President Jane Fernandes laugh together, Thursday, Feb.13, 2025, at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
 
Life isnt The Sims.

I am aware. I don't randomly turn mac and cheese into a black mass.

But it seriously wouldn't be that significant of an increase in design overhead when building the building to do it that way. Hell, go with the Japanese "sink built into the back of the toilet" design and it would actually involve *less* plumbing.
 
Why'd they do that?

I dunno, maybe because I had a 4.0 GPA through all of high school, was an athlete with lots of extra-curriculars, a National Merit scholar, and crushed the SATs and ACTs? Would those be considered valid reasons? Princeton wanted me, too, so did West Point and VMI. I toured all three. Almost went with West Point, glad I didn't.
 
I am aware. I don't randomly turn mac and cheese into a black mass.

But it seriously wouldn't be that significant of an increase in design overhead when building the building to do it that way. Hell, go with the Japanese "sink built into the back of the toilet" design and it would actually involve *less* plumbing.
Buddy, trust me, you don't want to deal with the lawyers these standalone-sink industry people have.
 
Antioch College has been dying for close to 50 years. The approximate cause of it falling into insanity was that that Rockefeller Foundation and the Rockefeller family took an interest in it. As with other Rockefeller-funded institutions in the 1950s and 1960s, the money was used to push the institution from being progressive toward total insanity.

The college initiated a program to fill the school with large numbers of really stupid and completely uneducated black males who were often not even high school graduates. Some were right out of prison. The college quickly transformed into a place where nobody learned anything....and disputes were dealt with in classrooms through yelling and physical violence. It was a place that had a reputation for violence, guns sometimes being drawn on campus and the occasional rape.

Those decisions eventually led to a series of "strikes" by students around 1973 over lack of free stuff at the college. By the time of the strikes, the school was physically and intellectually in a state of total ruin. It had also managed to waste a large proportion of the money it had on liberal daydream programs and outright corruption. Before the strike, there were maybe 2000+ students. After the strike, there was a death spiral in enrollment that has never really ended. But centering the college on uneducated worst-of-the-worst black people kind of ended with the strike.

The college became famous in the 1990s when its lesbian students (Womyn of Antioch) put in a whole series of sexual consent rules that were worthy of parody. The school also became famous for inviting a black guy on death row as a commencement speaker.

At some point in the mid-2000s, the school discovered that a large proportion of its overall money had disappeared. They called this an "accounting error". But the school was forced to shut down for a few years. And when it re-opened, it only had a handful of students left. The larger and more organized Antioch University detached itself from Anitoch College about the same time. Antioch University today represents the continuation of the original vision of Antioch College in the 1800s. Antioch College itself today is a total joke.
 
... How the fuck do you have a college with 120 students? The little podunk community college in the small town I grew up in had more students than that by an order of magnitude.

How do you even have enough professors to teach all the subjects with only 120 students?

Shimer College, when it was at IIT, had about that many. Shimer, BTW, is the ORIGINAL O.G. Go woke, get broke clown collage.
 
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I read an article by an alum of the college who went to an open house on the campus in 2007, and he said that there was radical slogans graffiti all over the place, and he looked at the bulletin board and there was a flyer for a “fisting and felching” workshop that was taking place on campus.
 
she hasn’t fielded a single complaint about anyone’s presence in a restroom
Could this be because you made it clear that the entire institution considered such complaints bigoted, litrul violence, etc? And actual women (if any remain) knew they would be incurring the wrath of both the hulking crossdresser and the vindictive bureaucracy?

The school shuttered in 2008 amid financial struggles but relaunched three years later.
Nearly 90% of the school’s 120 students identify as LGBTQ+ and about 1 in 6 say they are transgender.
Lmao. Cut off the federal gibs and let them pursue their fetishes on their own dime.

If 1 in 6 are troons, why not just make a special troon restroom?
A simple easy solution would be small, single unisex bathrooms, but we all know that's not what they really want.
No simple, easy solution would be accepted because of course the point is to have unlimited access to normal women, and to make everyone play along with their fetish.
 
Antioch University is a different thing than Antioch College. The college is the woke factory. The University has a different set of problems.
Ah, my mistake. Thank you for the correction. What are the odds they would both be filled with insane people? :lossmanjack:
 
Reality is a bitch to professional day dreamers..... who knew?


Could this be because you made it clear that the entire institution considered such complaints bigoted, litrul violence, etc? And actual women (if any remain) knew they would be incurring the wrath of both the hulking crossdresser and the vindictive bureaucracy?
"El Generalissimo surprised to be ousted in coup despite his 100% approval rating."


Also, look at that graduating class pic again.



Million dollar endowment, but can't mow the damned grass or weed the steps.

But why do such trivial things when billions of troons are sacrificed to the golden throne to keep the God Emperor alive daily, right?
 
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Can we just start lynching trannies, please? What are considered "human rights" are retarded and wide reaching. It's to the point where all discussion of "human rights" focus around masterbation, drugs and hurt feelings. Its childish. These retarded standards have me questioning if humans even deserve rights. If people can't figure out, on their own, their route to prosperity without impeding on others, then we might as well implement a caste system and remove all rights for everyone.
 
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That's... That's not how any of this works!

History alone should take multiple professors. This isn't high school. There are multiple fields of history, and at the college level, professors specialize. Any one of those fields would take multiple professors to properly teach.

And it's a college, not a trade school. There are still going to be basic competencies, language courses, etc,

They would have damned near as many professors as they have students!
You so severely overestimate the quality of American higher education. It absolutely shits the bed into high-school-extension territory once the acceptance rate passes 39%. Part of me wants to say this is maybe a post-covfefe lineup where they realized they can just have 10 teachers shilling zoom classes, but it's realistically some cheap small town shit they've been able to get away with cause the area is dying and erryone deserves a degree now. Troon kid agencies probably funnel their little tardlets straight to this school.
 
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