Culture Tranny News Megathread - Hot tranny newds

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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I don’t really care much about womens sports (fake sports) and FtMs would get dominated by real men, so this issue has never meant much to me. However, the government has no place in regulating this shit. This, as most things the government stick their nose into, is a matter for private individuals, organizations and corporations to work out amongst themselves.
you are arguing against title nine, which happened over fifty years ago.
 
Unsure what your point is, no private individuals, organizations, or corporations are involved. This is the government v government.

Additionally, this isn’t women’s sports, it’s girls. Sports for adults/pro sports should be able to justify its existence by popularity and bringing in $$. Kids and educational system sports are about keeping kids fit, teaching fair play, and improving their educations and future educational opportunities. Nobody gives a fuck what happens with adults, no matter how annoying Rachel McKinnon is. But no, all these girls dont need to have their opportunities taken away just because some untalented black boys decided it‘d be funny to stop losing to other boys and start destroying girls.
you are arguing against title nine, which happened over fifty years ago.
Yawn
Don’t care.
 
Obviously you do, or you wouldn't have made two stupid posts about it. If you didn't care you wouldn't grace us with your opinions you now state don't really exist.
I graced you all with my objectively correct and based opinions because I wanted to, I care about myself and no one else. I don’t respond to anything or go out of my way to state something unless it benefits me to do so, whether psychologically, physically or “spiritually.”

I am a fucking god
 
I graced you all with my objectively correct and based opinions because I wanted to, I care about myself and no one else. I don’t respond to anything or go out of my way to state something unless it benefits me to do so, whether psychologically, physically or “spiritually.”

I am a fucking god
Gods don't have autism, bro.
 
This, as most things the government stick their nose into, is a matter for private individuals, organizations and corporations to work out amongst themselves.
These are people who would definitely sue if they (MtF trannies) were excluded from women's sports. The government will get dragged into it whether it volunteers or not.
 
Coronavirus can’t stop drag queen story time. It’s going virtual now.


As LGBTNation has aggressive ads that are hard to block, I include the full text:

Gather the kiddos around and join in the fun on Saturday with Nina West.
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While Christian conservatives have already started blaming LGBTQ people and the “sin” of marriage equality for the worldwide pandemic of coronavirus, one pundit linked to a recognized hate group went so far as to proclaim the virus “good” because drag queen story hour events can’t be held at public libraries while they’re closed.

Former RuPaul’s Drag Race contestant Nina West apparently didn’t get the memo, because she’s started holding virtual story hours for kids on Instagram Live.

West, who wrote the children’s book Drag Is Magic, held her first story time show this week. She chose RED: A Crayon Story to debut the series and followed it up with a short arts and crafts segment.

The story by Michael Hall is about “a crayon who suffers an identity crisis when he is labeled wrong.”

“Yesterday was AMAZING!” West posted on Instagram the next day. “Thank you to all of my friends who tuned in to the very first STORY TIME WITH NINA. This will be happening again (and again and again!).”

“I hope this first story time brought some smiles to your face and the face of little ones in your life! We will be doing it again this Saturday!”

All other Drag Queen Story Hour events are still being held – virtually, on Facebook and Instagram. They continue throughout this weekend and beyond.

 
From Twitter to Vice to NBC News. Lamestream Media now whining about troon surgeries.

Vice seems confused.

Last week, when everyone was dealing with COVID-19, they were telling us tranny surgeries were more important.

Now they are saying that Idaho shouldn't be worrying about cheating trannies, because, er, COVID-19 is more important.

Make up your mind tranny fuckers!


Everyone Else Is Dealing with COVID-19. Idaho’s Pushing an Anti-Trans Bill

"They don't have their priorities straight."

By Nico Lang
Mar 25 2020, 7:15pm
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SOL DE ZUASNABAR BREBBIA / GETTY IMAGES
Lindsay Hecox was looking forward to finally running track in college. Hecox, a 19-year-old freshman at Boise State University, ran cross country in high school and said it was the only place where she felt like she could be herself. In addition to describing herself as a “shy introvert,” Hecox has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, which made it difficult to make friends. Running provided her a shared experience to bond with her classmates.

“Even though I definitely wasn't the most social, I still felt accepted,” Hecox told VICE. “I was a pretty good runner and everyone likes you if you’re nice and you can run fast.”
Hecox, who came out as transgender at the end of her senior year of high school, took the year off from running competitively to start transitioning and focus on her studies. Guidelines established by the NCAA state that trans female athletes must take medications that suppress their testosterone levels for a year before they are allowed to compete, and she started hormone replacement therapy last September. That means she could have been eligible for the 2020-2021 school year. (The NCAA told The Hill last month that it was “monitoring” the bill’s progress.)
If she had made the team, Hecox would have made history: No transgender student athlete has ever competed openly on a collegiate track team in Idaho. Hecox said she wasn’t looking to break records, though. She just wanted to feel at home again.
“Running really helps stabilize me, as I sometimes have mood fluctuations,” Hecox said. “If I go out for a run, it cleans the slate, and I feel like I can release a little bit of stress after that. If you have a friend and you’re running alongside them, it feels like you’re losing track of time and it gets your mind off things, as you just look forward to the next mile marker.”
But Hecox could soon be banned from the sport she loves if Idaho signs a bill into law that would prohibit transgender women and girls from participating in school athletics in alignment with their gender identity. House Bill 500, also known as the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, applies to student-athletes playing in K-12 sports and at the collegiate level, no matter if the university is public or private. The legislation is headed to Gov. Brad Little’s desk after passing the Idaho Senate last Monday by a 24-11 vote and the House last month, both of which are dominated by Republicans.

HB 500 isn’t the only anti-trans bill awaiting the governor’s proverbial pen. Just days after the Senate overwhelmingly approved the trans sports ban, it also passed House Bill 509, which prevents transgender people from updating their birth certificates to match their lived gender. In a Thursday vote, all but six Senators approved the legislation, also called the “Idaho Vital Statistics Act.”
Little has yet to state whether he intends to support either of the two proposals, but when asked about them last month, the governor was quoted in the Idaho Press as saying he’s not a “big discrimination guy.”
The bills have been met with virulent opposition from civil rights groups. Kathy Griesmyer, policy director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Idaho, said their passage would set a “really dangerous precedent” that would likely be used as a “model for discriminating against transgender people in other states.” Although the ACLU estimated that 17 states in the U.S. have introduced bills in the 2020 legislative session that would restrict the ability of trans students to compete in school sports, none have passed. HB 500 would be the first bill of its kind in the nation.
“There are really devastating consequences if HB 500 becomes law,” Griesmyer told VICE. “This has the potential to harm intersex people, women who present too masculine, or anybody who wants to use this law to go after a competitor.”

Among the most glaring issues with HB 500 is that it stipulates that a student athlete’s “biological sex” would have to be determined by one of three factors before they are allowed to compete. These options are a test of the individual’s “internal and external reproductive anatomy,” “normal endogenously produced levels of testosterone,” or “genetic makeup.”
But as in the case of a similar bill introduced in Arizona, the legislation does not establish a process for bringing about these claims, meaning that any student or their parent could accuse an athlete on an opposing team of being transgender. Accused students, many of whom as likely to be cisgender, would thereby be forced to undergo costly DNA testing or an invasive genital exam. The proposal also does not state what body would be responsible for looking into complaints or how a student’s private medical information would be protected.
Notably, the Arizona bill was watered down to remove the genital testing components following public backlash. The Idaho legislation has remained unchanged, despite the concerns of LGBTQ advocacy groups.
“This bill is not based on science,” Kate Oakley, senior counsel for the Human Rights Campaign, told VICE. “It is legislation that is based purely in misinformation about trans youth, and it is targeting trans youth for discriminatory treatment. For any trans person in Idaho, they are now on notice that their government is willing to make laws that are based on fear and not facts.”

The anti-trans bills are likely to be met with immediate legal action should they be signed into law, as five former Idaho attorneys general argued in a March 17 letter addressed to Little. In particular, critics said HB 509, the birth certificate bill, would violate a court order from U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Candy W. Dale, who ruled in March 2018 that Idaho’s policy of denying birth certificate corrections on the basis of gender identity was unconstitutional. Prior to that time, Idaho was one of three states—along with Ohio and Tennessee—that did not allow trans people to update their birth records.
When that policy was overturned in district court, Emilie Jackson-Edney was one of the first people in Idaho to apply for a corrected birth certificate. Jackson-Edney, who sits on the board of the Pride Foundation in Boise, said she had started her application process eight years earlier but that the long wait was worth it.
“It’s necessary to navigate safely through society with minimal harassment and minimal scrutiny,” Jackson-Edney told VICE, noting that a third of trans people without a corrected birth certificate report experiencing mistreatment and even physical violence as a result. “It’s a safety issue. For trans people having concurrent identity documents that reflect their gender identity is really critical, and not being able to have them would be very difficult.”

What makes these bills particularly hurtful for trans people in Idaho is the timing of the legislation. They were pushed through the state Senate during the same week that municipalities across the country took measures to curb the spread of coronavirus, also known as COVID-19. And yet in Idaho, little has been done to stop its citizens from contracting coronavirus.
“I haven’t seen one thing from the [state] government other than telling us to wash our hands, and I honestly don't think that we’re taking it very seriously,” said Yarit Rodriguez, who runs a support group for trans youth in Idaho, told VICE. He added that it “doesn't make sense” to him why passing anti-trans bills is “more important than an outbreak affecting multiple communities.”
The lack of statewide action on coronavirus is particularly personal for Hecox, who was being forced out of her dorm at Boise State as she spoke over the phone on Thursday. The university sent an email to students earlier the same day ordering anyone who hadn’t already abandoned campus housing to evacuate the premises within the week. Although many students who have family in the area have the option to simply move back home, it wasn’t so easy for her.
“I was living with my grandparents in California before,” she said. “They don't want another person living with them because of their age. They are susceptible to having a bad reaction to the virus or dying.”

To keep Hecox from being homeless, her mother is uprooting her life in California to move to Boise. Even as the federal government debates a trillion-dollar stimulus package that would provide greater assistance to families like hers, which have been forced into impossible situations, Hecox noted that Idaho lawmakers had yet to make any similar moves. The Senate wrapped for the year on Thursday, while the House finished up the following day.
“They have not passed any legislation for that,” she said of a statewide coronavirus relief effort. “They don’t have their priorities straight.”
 
Now they are saying that Idaho shouldn't be worrying about cheating trannies, because, er, COVID-19 is more important.
LMAO. Troon's name is Lindsay Hecox 🤣
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The Lovely Miss Hecox
Archive
 
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LMAO. Troon's name is Lindsay Hecox 🤣
View attachment 1203463
The Lovely Miss Hecox
Archive
His real name is Bryce Patrick Hecox


Still competing as a man last year




Cheating shit.

This is exactly why Idaho is right and trannies are wrong.

I'd have sympathy if Jazz Jennings wanted to run after being abused and trooned out by his parents, but dudes like this who are fully grown adult males should just FOAD
 
I'd have sympathy if Jazz Jennings wanted to run after being abused and trooned out by his parents, but dudes like this who are fully grown adult males should just FOAD
Jazz is a cripple. Crippled children deserve sympathy, because even those who were "asking for it" are (mostly) victims of societal abuse and neglect (usually, but not always, their shitty parents), and cripple leagues are mostly a good thing.
However, the existence of cripple leagues and associated benefits is predicated on an implicit assumption that being a cripple is regretful. This assumption, when applied to trannies, obviates the need for a tranny league in a middle-term perspective.

Furrthermore, society is interested in providing a baseline for a healthy female as one of two distinct types of normal humans, not as a weaker, shorter, testicularly challenged failed male.

So no, troons, even victims like Jazz, should just gtfo.
 
His real name is Bryce Patrick Hecox


Still competing as a man last year




Cheating shit.

This is exactly why Idaho is right and trannies are wrong.

I'd have sympathy if Jazz Jennings wanted to run after being abused and trooned out by his parents, but dudes like this who are fully grown adult males should just FOAD
This dude was getting smoked. He should just recreational run.
 
I'll see if I can find it, it wasn't long or particularly interesting I just remember that part. The guy had been yeeted himself, losing his high-paying job and was now driving a taxi delivering sushi. It was written anonymously but it felt like it could have been Jamie Kilstein.

@Vitruvius, here's the link I knew about, which I think was written after the Quillette piece, but I don't know if it's the same person - https://reason.com/2019/08/23/im-radioactive/?amp&__twitter_impression=true

But are traps gay?

According to some faggots on reddit, traps are 2/19% gay, because that's the average volume of cock on a dude. But, it was a faggot, and it was discussed on reddit, so it's probably double-gay.

is "hecox" his actual name?

'Hiscock' is an Irish name, and presumably made it to the various places the Irish Disapora has reached.
 
GOOD NEWS EVERYONE!!: Idaho's governor Brad Little sign off on 2 bills. One banning troons from competing in Women's/ Girl's sports.
(Article) (Archive)
Idaho governor signs GOP’s anti-transgender bills, setting up likely legal challenges

Idaho Gov. Brad Little has signed into law two anti-transgender bills.

One bill would ban transgender girls and women from participating in sports that align with their gender identity. The other bill would make it illegal for transgender people to change gender markers on their Idaho birth certificates.

Little signed the bills Monday afternoon. He didn’t issue signing statements on either bill.
The bills’ next likely stop will be the courts for a lengthy and expensive legal battle. Republican lawmakers passed both bills despite legal warnings of their unconstitutionality.

House Bill 500, dubbed the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, would apply to all sports teams sponsored by public schools, colleges and universities. A girls or women’s team would not be open to students who were born as male, even if they identify as female. The bill does not apply to transgender students wanting to participate in boys or men’s sports.
Under House Bill 509 a birth certificate can be amended only within one year of its filing. After one year, it can be changed only via a court challenge “on the basis of fraud, duress, or material mistake of fact.” Lawmakers passed the bill despite a federal court ruling that a previous Idaho ban on changing birth certificates was unconstitutional.
An Idaho Attorney General’s Office’s analysis of the bills, which was provided to lawmakers, found them possibly unconstitutional and open to legal challenge.
Should the transgender-related bills face a legal challenge, the AG’s office, as the state’s legal arm, will have to defend them in court. The ACLU of Idaho issued a statement saying that it would not hesitate to fight the measures:
“The ACLU of Idaho condemns Governor Brad Little’s decision to sign discriminatory, unconstitutional, and deeply hurtful anti-transgender bills into law. Leaders from the business, faith, medical, education and athletics communities will not forget this decision or what it says about the governor’s priorities during a global pandemic. The ACLU will see the governor in court.”

Idaho has a constitutional defense fund it uses to pay legal costs for the state to file lawsuits or defend Idaho from lawsuits. The taxpayer-funded account was created in 1995, and it hasn’t funded a winning case since 1996.
In that time, the state has spent $3.2 million through the fund. Its current balance is $1.3 million.
In its legal analysis of the transgender birth certificate bill, the AG’s office indicated that it could cost up to $1 million to defend that bill in court, in part because it defied a federal court order.

VETOES FROM LITTLE
Five other bills received Little’s veto stamp so far this legislative session, which concluded March 20.

House Bill 384, the Idaho Wrongful Conviction Act, would have required the state to compensate for every year spent behind bars those prisoners who are found wrongfully convicted. Little vetoed the bill Monday.
“This bill has an admirable objective but establishes a flawed process to recompense the wrongfully convicted,” Little wrote in his veto letter, noting that the bill creates an “unfunded mandate” and he would rather see a state board or commission, like the Commission of Pardons and Parole, determine compensation rather than the courts in a lengthy “adversarial” proceeding.
House Bill 325 would have transferred an estimated $18 million annually from general fund sales tax revenue to transportation projects. Little vetoed the bill on March 24.
Little said he vetoed the bill “due to the uncertainty in the coming fiscal year and the COVID-19 crisis.” He said the maintenance and growth of Idaho’s infrastructure “remains a vital commitment.”
“I encourage the Idaho Legislature to pursue a comprehensive package when the state is facing a more positive economic outlook,” Little wrote.
House Bill 487 would have loosened state rules on crop-duster pilots and pesticide applicators. Little vetoed this bill on March 26.
Little said he vetoed the bill because it mandates changes to the rulemaking process, which could have unintended consequences.
House Bill 561 would have let property owners appealing their tax assessment use the sale amount from an “arms-length sale” or a recent appraisal to help justify the appeal. Little vetoed this bill on March 25.
Little said he vetoed the bill because it could “result in unintended tax shifts” to other taxpayers and could create “a lack of uniformity” in property tax assessments.

Senate Bill 1295 pertained to teledentistry by adding requirements for such telehealth services. Little vetoed this bill on Friday. He said he did so because “emergencies such as the current (coronavirus) pandemic demonstrate the potential for telehealth to serve as a tool to triage patients to maintain access to care while traditional venues close or limit their scope.”
Little said the bill would have taken away telehealth flexibility during public emergencies.
 
According to some faggots on reddit, traps are 2/19% gay, because that's the average volume of cock on a dude. But, it was a faggot, and it was discussed on reddit, so it's probably double-gay.
It's gay. There's no way you could measure slamming the ass with dick and balls just above it.
 
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