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'Gratuitously cruel': How trans youth became political targets – Stateside with Kai and Carter

First publishedJul 8, 20:45 UTC
Last updatedJul 11, 22:33 UTC · just now ago
Guardian US Politics
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'Gratuitously cruel': How trans youth became political targets – Stateside with Kai and Carter
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Last week, the US supreme court ruled that Idaho and West Virginia can continue enforcing their bans on transgender athletes playing on girls’ and women's teams in schools. It’s the latest development in the political and legal attack on trans people – and especially trans youth – that has surged in recent years. On the heels of that decision, Kai Wright talks with Guardian reporter Sam Levin, who has been covering the debate over trans athletes in California and speaking with students and their families, and Chase Strangio, co-director of the ACLU's LGBTQ & HIV Project, who is the first out trans person to argue in front of the US supreme court. They walk through the legal and political strategies animating the anti-trans movement, and discuss why this most recent decision could open the door to the erosion of civil liberties for everyoneTrans youth athletes vow to keep playing after US supreme court rulingHow the US supreme court case on trans athletes could unravel LGBTQ+ rightsI’m a 14-year-old trans athlete. No one should face the vicious attacks I have faced Continue reading...

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