The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns the freedom to pee in private. The cultural war has gone to the children, and children do not like it. Children and teens want the freedom to pee in private, or at least away from the prying eyes of the opposite sex. This act used to be guaranteed, but things are changing and not always for the best. There is a definite “bathroom crisis” in some areas of the United States as well as other countries.
George Packer wrote a long feature article
titled “When the Culture War Comes for Your Kids.” He describes the decision to send his son to public school in New York City and
the ordeal of finding the right one. The parents wanted the child to experience
more diversity that he was getting in the private school where he previously
attended. The parents did their research and selected a school, and everything
seemed to be okay until one second-grade girl decided she was a boy. This one
girl’s decision affected every child in the school.
The bathroom crisis hit our school the
same year our son took the standardized tests. A girl in second grade had
switched to using male pronouns, adopted the initial Q as a first name, and
begun dressing in boys’ clothes. Q also used the boys’ bathroom, which led to
problems with other boys. Q’s mother spoke to the principal, who, with her
staff, looked for an answer. They could have met the very real needs of
students like Q by creating a single-stall bathroom – the one in the
second-floor clinic would have served the purpose. Instead, the school decided
to get rid of boys’ and girls’ bathrooms altogether. If, as the city’s Department
of Education now instructed, schools had to allow students to use the bathroom
of their self-identified gender, then getting rid of the labels would clear
away all the confusion around the bathroom question. A practical problem was
solved in conformity with a new idea about identity.
Within two years, almost every bathroom in
the school, from kindergarten through fifth grade, had become gender-neutral.
Where signs had once said BOYS and GIRLS, they now said STUDENTS. Kids would be
conditioned to the new norm at such a young age that they would become the
first cohort in history for whom gender had nothing to do with whether they sat
or stood to pee. All that biology entailed – curiosity, fear, shame,
aggression, pubescence, the thing between the legs – was erased or wished away.
The school didn’t inform parents of this
sudden end to an age-old custom, as if there were nothing to discuss. Parents
only heard about it when children started arriving home desperate to get to the
bathroom after holding it in all day. Girls told their parents mortifying
stories of having a boy kick open their stall door. Boys described being afraid
to use the urinals. Our son reported that his classmates, without any
collective decision, had simply gone back to the old system, regardless of the
new signage: Boys were using the former boys’ rooms, girls the former girls’
rooms. This return to the familiar was what politicians call a “commonsense
solution.” It was also kind of heartbreaking. As children, they didn’t think to
challenge the new adult rules, the new adult ideas of justice. Instead, they
found a way around this difficulty that the grown-ups had introduced into their
lives. It was a quiet plea to be left alone.
Packer continues his article by discussing the reactions of some parents who were not at all pleased with the solution put forth by the children and showed up en masse at the PTA meeting. The principal assigned a group of parents to settle the problem. After six months the school district decided that one bathroom would be gender neutral.
Tony Perkins wrote about Jasper, a small town in Georgia with approximately 3,800 residents. Parents in Jasper decided that their schools would stop the march for transgender bathrooms from affecting their children. More than 900 angry residents attended a special meeting of the school board. Accommodations had already been made for the two students that identified as another gender. There were single-person restrooms available for anyone who wanted to use them. However, the transgender students were not satisfied. Parents in Jasper were insistent. They were not going to run the risk of children with bladder infections caused by not drinking anything while at school. Their fury convinced the superintendent that they were serious, and they won the skirmish.
Perkins is the president of the Family Research Council, and he says that parents need to be prepared for the moment that this crisis comes to your town and your school. He suggests that parents read “A Parent’s Guide to the Transgender Movement in Education” as well as watch videos about the experiences of other people who have come face to face with this agenda.
Children and teenagers should not have to experience the fear or embarrassment of not being able to pee in private. This act is such a personal one, and the rising generation has enough problems without this one being forced upon them.
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