Showing posts with label sex education. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sex education. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Oppose LB89 Anti-Trans Bill - anti-trans bills have no place in Nebraska or a free country

Nebraska Unicameral Legislation in Question:

This entry is in opposition to the disrespectfully named bill:

LB89 - Adopt the Stand With Women Act <---- this is bullshit

Which puts the very small number of transgender and nonbinary athletes at risk of being in the wrong locker room b/c narrow minded people think gender is a binary. 

https://nebraskalegislature.gov/bills/view_bill.php?DocumentID=58025&docnum=LB89&leg=109 

I've written to my own state senator and ALL state senators multiple times on this issue. 

Recently, I wrote an email with questions, and one lovely senator in opposition replied: 

Thank you for the email and for taking time to share your opposition with LB89. I don't always have time to respond to folks who live outside of my district (LDXX in XX), but I have to say your opening line made me laugh - I sometimes wish I could share such remarks  on the mic during debate. Like you, I'm opposed to LB89, and I will try my best to stop this bill from advancing. I'll never stop fighting for safe and inclusive communities. 


Here was my email sent 4/20/25 (Easter morning) to ALL Nebraska Unicameral Senators:

Greetings, Senators,

I hope this day finds you well. Unless you are supporting LB89. Then I hope it finds you having doubts. If you support LB89, please look in the mirror and ask yourself:

  1. Why am I so concerned about other people’s genitals? 

  2. What is lacking in my life that I need to harass the youth of this state and their family and friends and allies? 

  3. Why do I think that policing anyone’s genitals makes girls and women safer, when it just puts them at risk? 

  4. Why am I unable to grasp the reality that trans and nonbinary people have existed since the dawn of time? 

  5. Why do I want to treat them as less than human and put them in harm’s way when they just want to safely use the restroom and live their lives?

  6. What would I do if someone told me I was in the wrong restroom and started yelling at me?

  7. Why am I willing to waste the time, money, and resources of this state to harass perhaps less than 10 transgender and nonbinary youth in Nebraska sports when the NSAA already has policies in place, when schools already support their students?

  8. Why can’t I see that I am hurting large populations of this state who are transgender, nonbinary, queer, or allies when I support hateful, discriminatory, unnecessary, legislation?

  9. Why do I say I support freedom when I am working to take away basic human rights and dignities?

  10. Why do I say I want a small government, when it ends up just being small-minded?

  11. Why do I attack transgender and nonbinary people, just like the Nazis did?

  12. Why can’t I make space for others and defend their rights and freedoms when I’ve taken an oath to do so?

I write to you from District XX, in opposition to LB89. I am an ally and have transgender and nonbinary people in my family and friend group, right in the state of Nebraska and beyond. What you do affects all of us.

Please oppose LB89 and further your education on LGBTQ+ existence. Please do some soul-searching to unalign yourselves with hateful, harmful rhetoric and the sowers of ill will. We deserve better than LB89 and bills like it that strip away rights and dignities.




Another senator, we'll call him Senator Z, next to my district, was not so amused. Here was his response on 4/23/25:


Thank you for your email.   Allow me to respond to your questions, many of which I find inaccurate.  

1). I am concerned about other people’s genitals when they insist on being in the same locker room with little girls. 

2). What is lacking in my life?  Certainly, morals are not lacking. I find it highly immoral when trans people want to push their agenda on young people.  

3). Risk?  I find it a risk to continue to push the liberal agenda upon everyone.  Please understand!  If you are a transperson - that is fine.  Do not expect everyone to buy into your ideals.  If you have a child who is trans - I am sorry.  But other people do not have to change their beliefs to buy into yours.   My education with LGBT issues begins with my faith. While I have compassion for all young people who may suffer from mental illness or from gender dysphoria, I do not have compassion for adults who continue to push their agendas on people who believe differently.



If you know me, I couldn't let that glibness go unanswered. I spent more than 2 hours last night (4/23/25) crafting my reply. 



Greetings, Senator Z,

Wow what an interesting response. I see you did not answer a number of my questions, but let me respond to those you did answer. 

I'm including my own Senator Q on here, b/c I see he voted to push LB89 forward, which is so very disappointing to me. 

I know this is a long email, but please bear with me. I'm trying to get a sense of what you actually believe, because your answers lacked depth to give me a sense of your true values. You're about 11 years younger than my father, but seem to share some interests with him.

Your answers were off-putting, and seemed to come from misinformation, fear, and a lack of exposure to others, but I'd like to extend the benefit of the doubt to you. Perhaps you are the type of person that, when you have made a mistake, you can admit you were wrong and apologize. Or that perhaps if you've been operating under misconceptions, you might be open to learning, accepting new information, and changing course. I don't know if those are attributes you take pride in, but I'll proceed, hoping that could be the case. 

Question 1 for Senators who support LB89 from Scribble Scribe: 
Why am I so concerned about other people’s genitals? 

Answer 1 from Senator Z: 
I am concerned about other people’s genitals when they insist on being in the same locker room with little girls. 

Response 1 from Scribble Scribe:
You seem to be viewing trans and nonbinary people's need to use a restroom as predatory instead people who just need to relieve themselves, and in the case of LB89, have a place to change to get ready to compete in their sport of choice. You might want to ask yourself why you view them, in this case, transgender and nonbinary youth, as predators. It's such an odd generalization to have of a small group of people you don't actually know. Seems like you are operating from lack of familiarity and "othering" people. 

This sounds like you have created some odd scenarios in your mind. As a youth, I faced harassment from other girls in the locker rooms. None of them were transgender or nonbinary to my knowledge at the time, but were cisgender girls with a cruel streak. I don't view all cisgendered women as bullies. 

Where is your fear coming from? I'm viewing your landing page for the NE Legislature because I wanted to learn who I was writing to. I see you were a wrestling coach. Did you often find people trying to get into locker rooms for the purpose of assault? If you're concerned about "little girls," that might mean to me that you are worried about boys or grown men trying to get into locker rooms. Did this often happen? Could it be that you are actually more worried about cisgender men as predators? If so, this bill does not address that.

I'm not an athletic person, but my understanding of youth competing in sports is that they have to work really hard and show up to practices and competitions to put in the time and work. They have to sacrifice time with friends, put homework aside, put their body through endurance training and be a part of a team. I don't think someone is going to do all of that if they simply have the aim of assaulting someone. 

When you were a wrestling coach, I'm going to guess for perhaps boys only, did you have boys acting inappropriately with each other? So in theory, they all have the same genitalia. Might it not be about genitalia, then? 

Also, in case you don't understand what it means to be a transgender or nonbinary youth, let me give you a little bit of knowledge. Let's say there is a child at school who transitioned socially (meaning, hair, clothing, perhaps hormone blockers), with the support of their parents. (A note on hormone blockers, or what I have learned while following these anti-trans bills for the past few years.... hormone blockers are also used with cisgender children too, as when an 8 year old starts early puberty, and her guardians and doctor want to hold off that stage for a few years so she can match her peers.)

So, this child that transitioned socially from a young age, let's say they are now 16, perhaps born a girl but started socially transitioning early, and have only been known as a male at their school. With LB89, you are going to require this person who is known to their peers as a boy to be in the same locker room with a bunch of teen girls. OR, a teen who was born as a boy, but has presented as a girl. You want this person, who is known as a girl at their school, to enter the boy's locker room. 

Do you see the issue here? You are asking transgender and nonbinary students, who may not be "out" at their schools to put themselves in harm's way. You're asking them to use a restroom that is not appropriate for them. To what end? To appease your unfounded, and illogical fear that every trans or nonbinary person is somehow a predator? If that fear is motivating you, that is an issue for YOU to delve into in therapy, and not to transpose on transgender and nonbinary students who just want to represent their school in a sport. 

Question 2 for Senators who support LB89 from Scribble Scribe:
What is lacking in my life that I need to harass the youth of this state and their family and friends and allies? 

Answer 2 from Senator Z: 
Certainly, morals are not lacking. I find it highly immoral when trans people want to push their agenda on young people.

Response 2 from Scribble Scribe:
Part 1 to your statement:
You identify very strongly as a person with morals. Okay. Good. Having a moral compass is helpful. A set of morals provides a necessary guide for people as they navigate the world around them. I have very strong morals myself and am proud of that, too. For example, I do not support discrimination, fearmongering, or intentional misinformation, or scapegoating of minorities. I support education, equity, self-acceptance, interconnectedness, to name a few. 

However, it seems you are insinuating that anyone who is LGBTQ+ is immoral. Or do you just take umbrage specifically with transgender and nonbinary people's existence? Do you think they lack morals, just for the fact that they are transgender or nonbinary? Are you generalizing a whole group of people and stating that they don't have morals or are de facto immoral by their existence?

I find that very harsh and a false equivalency. And quite frightening from a State Senator, elected to represent a district that almost definitely has transgender and nonbinary constituents. Have you ever met any of them? Did you talk at length with any of them? What did they say or do that led you to believe they were "immoral"? How long generally do you need to speak with someone to judge whether they have morals, no morals, or just a different world view and life experience from your own?

Do you think if someone lives differently, they should be judged by you or anyone else? To what aim? Do you think they should have less rights than other people? Do you think their needs for safety and respect and food and shelter and the like are diminished because you have made a judgement about their morals after whatever length of time you have deemed appropriate? Or do you hear a label like "transgender" or "nonbinary" and decide you have all the information you need to make a judgement on their morals? Or are morals perhaps more complex than saying "moral/immoral" if it doesn't match your own? 

What are cases in which you've accepted other groups of people that live differently than yourself, yet you've still decided they have morals? Do people of other faiths have morals? Do people that don't profess faith have morals? How does a person prove they have morals? What morals don't hold value to you? If they are morals that others hold dear, but not morals you hold, does that other person seem "moral" or "immoral" to you? Why do you get to decide that? 

Part 2 to Answer 2: 
So you think that transgender and nonbinary youth are created or formed by someone else's agenda? You think that transgender people are pushing an agenda on the youth, perhaps to create more transgender or nonbinary people? Or do you believe in more sinister aims? I won't try to imagine those. 

How many transgender and nonbinary people do you know personally? Anyone in your family? In your friend group? In your church? Amongst your children's friends? Grandchildren's friends? 

From the people in my life, I can tell you, the trans agenda is TO SURVIVE. To THRIVE. To live a happy life, safe in a world that is fearful of them, a world that often brutally attacks and leaves trans people dead. I encourage you to look up some statistics on attacks against trans and nonbinary/gender non-conforming people. Queer people. It's heartbreaking.

The queer agenda is to be themselves, to have the same opportunities as cisgendered people to create a home for themselves, to get an education, to have a family, to be loved and accepted by the people who want them in their lives. To be called by the name they love to hear. To be loved and protected and celebrated. To be allowed to have moments of weakness and failure, because we are all imperfect people. To navigate life that is hard for anyone. To get financial security. To be able to eat, take care of their body. To be able to celebrate their body and love what they see in the mirror. To fall in love with someone who sees them on a soul-level. To have the joy they deserve. To travel safely. To be able to use a restroom without fear. To make it to old age.

Maybe you see it as an agenda being pushed on young people because you don't recall this type of visibility when you were growing up. You didn't see the pride and self-love and self-acceptance that we have today, which to me is a beautiful and special thing. The reason you didn't see that, the reason it seemed no one was "out", was because it wasn't safe. It's because the cisgender, heteronormative agenda was what was pushed on the youth. Maybe you're bristling at the words "cisgender, heteronormative", but it's the proper label for when your dad, grandpa, or uncles, or maybe the adult women too, chided you or other boys and said "don't be a sissy/pansy/wuss." or "Only little girls cry. Are you a little girl?" or maybe they said nasty things about girls or women. About how they should dress or behave. Or what they "needed". Gross things. 

Even if you were only ever straight and cisgendered, I know hearing those things had an effect on you. They shaped you. And maybe you were able to brush it off. But you KNOW, you have to know, that there were people around that WERE different. And you have to think, how did that affect them, to hear adults insinuate there was something wrong with them? Hearing that they were different and that it was shameful. How would that affect you? How could you go about your day to day being made to feel less worthy of love? That you needed to be different from what you were to be accepted? THAT is a dangerous agenda. 

I bet you know young men and women that killed themselves. Did you know in your heart it was because they were queer and couldn't fit in? The suicide rates of queer people are unfortunate. But it's higher among those who grow up with the agenda of hatred forced upon them. When you push anti-trans laws, you are contributing to making a hostile environment for these youth and adults.

It's an extraordinary act to be authentically oneself when society tells you to hate yourself, and to subject yourself to their rules. 

THE QUEER AGENDA IS TO SURVIVE.

It may look subversive to you, may look like "kids are just doing it because it's a fad, or XYZ" reason you've heard. It may look manufactured or dangerous. But it's more dangerous to not let people explore themselves and express themselves and have safety. QUEER PEOPLE DESERVE TO LIVE. THEY DESERVE TO BE WHO THEY ARE. THEY DESERVE TO BE PROTECTED. Queer Youth deserve to grow into adults, even if they stay queer or not. 




Question 3 for Senators who support LB89 from Scribble Scribe:
Why do I think that policing anyone’s genitals makes girls and women safer, when it just puts them at risk? 

Answer 3 from Senator Z:
3). Risk?  I find it a risk to continue to push the liberal agenda upon everyone.  Please understand!  If you are a transperson - that is fine.  Do not expect everyone to buy into your ideals.  If you have a child who is trans - I am sorry.  But other people do not have to change their beliefs to buy into yours.   My education with LGBT issues begins with my faith. While I have compassion for all young people who may suffer from mental illness or from gender dysphoria, I do not have compassion for adults who continue to push their agendas on people who believe differently.

Response 3 from Scribble Scribe:
See notes about "agenda" in above response. 

You don't want everyone to "buy into [trans] ideals". It shouldn't be considered an optional "ideal" for transgender and nonbinary people to have equal rights. It's the law. LB89 is discriminatory. 

 If you have a child who is trans - I am sorry. Can you just sit with your statement for a moment? Do you have any idea of how insulting that comment is? Parents/families who love their transgender/nonbinary children aren't sorry their children are transgender or nonbinary. They're sorry that their children can't safely be who they are without people like you, trying to denigrate and demonize their existence. How terribly awful for you to say, as a parent, and I assume grandparent. If you have any trans/nonbinary/queer people in your family, I feel sorry for THEM. Knowing that you carry such limited, and insulting views of people like them. I REALLY hope you educate yourself so you can emerge from this a better, more loving, more accepting, safer person for the people in your life. 

My education with LGBT issues begins with my faith. - Perhaps your education with LGBTQ+ "issues" should begin with the PEOPLE themselves. You seem to lack a lot of information. And hiding behind your faith is not a good advertisement for your faith. I know PLENTY of people of faith, some in leadership roles, who support and celebrate LGBTQ+ peoples and are champions for their equal rights in face of discrimination such as this. 

While I have compassion for all young people who may suffer from mental illness or from gender dysphoria,.... Being Transgender and nonbinary IS NOT A MENTAL ILLNESS. I'll refer you to the American Psychological Association. I'm not sure my email will come through if I put a link, but it's an article from 2008 titled: "Understanding transgender people, gender identity and gender expression" updated July 8, 2024. You need to educate yourself on an issue you clearly struggle with understanding. And you should NOT be creating laws about things you don't understand. Now that you KNOW it's not a mental illness, I expect you will not say it again. And I expect that when it comes up in conversation, you will inform others that it's not a mental illness. Because now you know better. And you want to be a truthful person, right? Is that part of your faith or set of morals? It is for me. 

I do not have compassion for adults who continue to push their agendas on people who believe differently. Agreed. I hate when elected officials push their religions into law, instead of respecting the wide variety of beliefs of their constituents. I especially have no patience when the agenda that others push is incorrect, outdated, and discriminatory. Namely the agenda that supporters of LB89 seem to have - the ill-begotten idea that human gender is a binary. It is not. I do not have patience when religion or faith is used as a weapon, or a means to justify discrimination. 

If you've actually read to the end of this, you'll notice I'm less wordy. I'm tired. I've spent almost 2 hours by this point, trying to instruct a person who is supposed to vote with the safety and well-being of their constituents in mind, but they are lacking knowledge. They are pushing their own agendas without seeing the irony or hypocrisy. They are targeting a handful of young athletes and ignoring the outcry of the damage they are doing. 

Does your faith tell you to hurt and discriminate? Does your faith tell you to ignore the hurt you are causing when you are being specifically told YOU ARE HURTING US?

Other tidbits I'd like to share:
I've seen news reports about women who look butch or "manly" that they've been harassed while in the women's restroom. So, guess what? Policing restrooms based on perceived gender DOESN'T MAKE WOMEN SAFE. 

IT'S NOT ABOUT THE RESTROOMS. Just like it wasn't about water fountains for segregation. 
Learn from the mistakes of the past. Do better. 


Sadly, your overall message by the questions you chose to answer made you appear to be anti-trans. You didn't really have much to say about the merits of the bill. Or any statistics to prove it was sensible.  

If you are anti-trans, and are using faith as a means to discriminate, I really don't find you to be a safe legislator. I really hope you can do some praying, if that's what you're into, to open your heart. But you really need to educate yourself. 


Now for questions you didn't answer.....
again, I ask, if you only answer another one, #7, #8 Maybe #4
  1. Why am I so concerned about other people’s genitals? 

  2. What is lacking in my life that I need to harass the youth of this state and their family and friends and allies? 

  3. Why do I think that policing anyone’s genitals makes girls and women safer, when it just puts them at risk? 

  4. Why am I unable to grasp the reality that trans and nonbinary people have existed since the dawn of time? 

  5. Why do I want to treat them as less than human and put them in harm’s way when they just want to safely use the restroom and live their lives?

  6. What would I do if someone told me I was in the wrong restroom and started yelling at me?

  7. Why am I willing to waste the time, money, and resources of this state to harass perhaps less than 10 transgender and nonbinary youth in Nebraska sports when the NSAA already has policies in place, when schools already support their students?

  8. Why can’t I see that I am hurting large populations of this state who are transgender, nonbinary, queer, or allies when I support hateful, discriminatory, unnecessary, legislation?

  9. Why do I say I support freedom when I am working to take away basic human rights and dignities?

  10. Why do I say I want a small government, when it ends up just being small-minded?

  11. Why do I attack transgender and nonbinary people, just like the Nazis did?

  12. Why can’t I make space for others and defend their rights and freedoms when I’ve taken an oath to do so?


So, now that I've spent 2+ hours trying to give you a different perspective, inspire you to self-educate, to think about your misconceptions, your improper labels about mental illness, has anything shifted for you? 

It would be easy for you to write me off as a 'crazy liberal' or something, but I want you to understand. I have very strong morals. I have loyalty to my friends and family. I will fight for them and their rights, even if it feels like I'm wasting my breath and my time. Because QUEER PEOPLE MATTER TO ME. And doing the right thing matters. Fighting against discrimination and injustice, and ignorance, THOSE ARE MY MORALS. At the end of the day, the end of this literal day, I want to be able to say I tried. That I fought for what is good and right. That I can look my friends and family in the eyes and say, I did what I could to use logic, compassion, and a belief in what's right to stick up for you. 

I really hope that this lengthy email has caused you to pause. To think about how your flippant answers reveal your lack, the spaces where you can still grow and educate yourself, be a person, a senator who listens and can admit they were wrong and change course.

I implore you, PLEASE OPPOSE LB 89. Talk to your fellow supporters of LB89 and let them know you are all wrong. Listen to the people of Nebraska, cisgendered and not. SAY NO TO LB89 AND OTHER DISCRIMINATORY BILLS.

Thank you.




We'll see if that gets any response. ;)

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

Fight the Ban - 10 Reasons to Safeguard Abortion - Nebraska oppose LB 781, 933, 1086

 Greetings, Senator X,

 

This is X from X


I’ve emailed you previously and you would send responses, which was always appreciated, but I haven’t received responses in a while. I’ve written a few times on the anti-abortion bills 781, 933, and 1086, and used the ACLU site for contact, and hope these message are being delivered to your inbox, and not the junk folder :) 


I did contact your office and briefly mentioned that and alerted your aide that I would send another email. 


Since discussion of one of these bills will be happening soon, I wanted to reiterate that I expect you to vote NO to these and any bill that jeopardizes women’s access to safe, legal abortions. 


I’ve collected 10 reasons you must oppose LBs 781, 933, and 1086: (Hopefully this makes it a little easier to peruse) 


  1. Those who insist abortions be made illegal are trying to put their religious beliefs into law that affects other people, and violates THEIR religious beliefs. We have separation of church and state for a reason.

  2. No one can be forced to have an abortion against their will, and no should be forced to carry a pregnancy against their will. Banning abortions forces women to carry pregnancies against their will.

  3. Pregnancy comes with many risks, the most severe being risk of death. If abortion is made illegal and pregnancies are required to be carried to term, that means women are not able to fully consent to the risks but are being sacrificed for an ideal by the state. 

  4. A person cannot be required to donate organ, tissue, or blood without consent, even if it saves another person’s life. This is still true after their death. Parallel to this is the obvious concept that a woman is not required to carry a pregnancy to term, even though the life of the fetus is in question. 

  5. Women are human beings and we have human rights and reproductive rights that mean we can choose if, how, and when to have children. Banning abortion is a violation of these rights.

  6. Abortion is a medical procedure and may be brought into play for a number of reasons, even by women who had initially chosen to carry the pregnancy to term. Outlawing medical procedures because certain people don’t like them…. Is nonsensical. 

  7. Outlawing abortion does not end abortion, but ends safe abortions. Women’s lives are put at risk when safe procedures are wrongfully taken away.

  8. Rapists in Nebraska have parental rights. This is unethical for one, but imagine a woman is raped and pregnancy is now required. You are possibly forcing women to co-parent or get in a custody battle with their rapists, who de facto, are not safe for children to be around. Why are women so despised that they have to suffer multiple indignities?

  9. According to the ACLU, Nebraska ranks 50th in state funding for family planning services that reduce unintended pregnancies. This makes sense as Nebraskans are afraid to teach comprehensive sex education in schools. Parents have raised enough stink that even public schools teach abstinence only and refrain from teaching about contraception. Abstinence only is a farce. It endangers youth and withholds information they need. Abstinence only has been proven to lead to unsafe sex and unwanted pregnancies. So not only are teens NOT learning about how to prevent unwanted pregnancies, banning abortion means they have no choice and are being punished for engaging in sex. Let’s catch up with the rest of the world and stop denying our children actual information they need to operate in the real world. 

  10. We are wasting taxpayer time and money with each anti-choice anti-abortion law. Let’s do like Colorado and safeguard the right to abortion so women don’t have to constantly fight for our basic human rights.


Thank you for taking the time to read my message. You can guess this is a very important issue to me, and I do trust you will vote NO with these items in mind. 


Thank you, 


X

Monday, April 4, 2022

Additional Contact: oppose LBs 781, 933, 1086, Nebraska anti-abortion laws

 Greetings, Senator X, 

 

I am again writing in opposition to LBs 781, 933, and 1086, which are: the “Heartbeat Act” introduced by Senator Slama, the “Human Life Protection Act” introduced by Senator Albrecht, and the Chemical Abortion Safety Protocol Act, introduced by Senator Geist.

 

I have written on this before but this issue is of utmost importance to me. Please respond to confirm that you have received my correspondence. If I don't hear from you, I’ll want to call the office to ensure that my concerns are being heard. As you can see from the length of my message, an email can better address my thoughts than a phone call. :) 

 

First of all, no one is forcing women to have abortions (that’s illegal), so these bills are needless. However, these bills take away the right to abortion thereby forcing women to give birth, which is dangerous and unethical, and should also be illegal.

 

With all of this anti-choice/anti-abortion legislation I do not feel that women are safe in the state of Nebraska and I do not feel there is an appropriate separation of church and state. 

 

I understand there are people who look at abortion and pregnancy a certain way, but I do not agree that women are obligated to carry a pregnancy to term. No one should be forced into pregnancy to satiate the beliefs of strangers. There are people of all religious beliefs who DO believe a woman maintains the right to make a decision, so these anti-abortion laws are being created to appease a few over-reaching uninvolved people, and that needs to stop. It’s extremely unethical to ban abortion for others, as it is a reproductive right related to bodily autonomy. 

 

I’ve reminded you in my previous correspondence that current legislation around organ donation reflects that a person has bodily autonomy. A person cannot be required to give blood, tissue, or organs to anyone else, even if it saves that person's life. The same should be held as true for pregnancy. 

 

I'm disturbed at the idea that so many people want women to be forced to carry pregnancies to term period, much less in cases of rape, incest, or when it endangers a hopeful mother later in the pregnancy. 

 

My mother mentioned to me just yesterday that two of our neighbors died giving birth and had to be revived, and were then told they should not have further pregnancies. Pregnancy has many risks and is not something to take lightly. Forcing women to continue pregnancies takes away the consent aspect needed in order for a woman to have freely chosen pregnancy. DEATH is a risk of pregnancy. If you force women to continue pregnancies against their will, the state has taken away a woman’s ability to freely consent to that risk. That is NOT freedom of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That is some dystopian government level stuff and needs to be avoided by protecting abortion as the health care it is.

 

You cannot force someone to have an abortion, so a pregnancy, with higher risks and more significant outcomes (a human life), cannot be forced upon a woman, as these anti-abortion laws do. 

 

Women who choose abortions are aware of the significance of either choice. Women have been aware of the seriousness of pregnancy and abortion since a young age and neither choice is made lightly. Women choose abortion for a plethora of reasons, including women who are already mothers, or women who wanted that child but must terminate for the safety of themselves of their child. Some women who are cancer patients must terminate a pregnancy so that they may undergo chemotherapy and radiation that would otherwise injure the fetus. Women need to be able to make these choices themselves, not have options stolen from them by uninvolved parties. 

 

“Your right to swing your fist, ends where my face begins.” A person can choose to not have an abortion for themselves, but they can’t make that decision for someone else. This is common sense and needs to be applied in Nebraska by protecting the right to abortion and opposing LBs 781, 933, and 1086 immediately. 

 

The fact that Nebraska is a state in which rapists have parental rights is disturbing. In the Nebraska that some of these zealots want, a woman could be forced to birth a child from rape and co-parent with her rapist. That is NOT a world I want, nor a world that values women, or their ability to live a dignified life. 

 

Women's reproductive rights MUST be protected from these overreaching attacks on our liberty and bodily autonomy. You must oppose this legislation, or you are complicit in the suffering of women in Nebraska. 

 

Abortion should remain legal and accessible for all who seek it. 

 

If people want to claim pro-life, they need to separate themselves from thinking of it only in terms of birth. 

 

Universal Health Care, Universal Child Care, an Actual Living Wage, comprehensive sex ed in school (abstinence only is a sham in which youth are ill prepared for reality), working to abolish war, and more.... THOSE are all more pro-life than forcing women to give birth by taking away the right to abortion. 

 

Thank you for your time. I sincerely hope I can count on you to oppose LBs 781, 933, 1086 to ensure that women are safe in Nebraska. 

 

Thank you 

 

X


Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Nebraska: OPPOSE LB 1077 Prohibit education about race and sex introduced by Senator B. Hansen

Committee: Government, Military and Veterans Affairs

OPPOSE LB 1077 Prohibit education about race and sex introduced by Senator B. Hansen


Greetings, Senator X, 


My name is X from X, District X.

I write in opposition to LB 1077, prohibiting teaching “certain concepts” about race and sex, introduced by Senator B. Hansen.


When looking at the summary of intent and then the bill itself, I’m just struck by how absurd, vague, needless, and reactionary this bill is, as well as how difficult it would be to enforce, especially because it censors free speech. 


Limiting our education system to avoid talking about “race and sex” is dooming our education system. Our nation is built upon injustices and if we cannot fully discuss history with the aim of addressing it and improving the present and future, we are doomed to repeat the bad parts of history. 


This bill is created by people who are unwilling to view history as it really is, and how it affects the world today. We will never advance as a nation if we are not willing to have difficult discussions, to LISTEN to the people who have been systematically disenfranchised in this country and around the world. This bill essentially tells people to “shut up” because it makes others “uncomfortable” to hear about what other people experience. That “discomfort” pales in comparison to the uncomfortable realities that are being silenced with a bill like LB 1077.


One thing that especially struck me was Section 4, 4a-b. A student couldn’t get extra credit for doing what I am doing right now… reaching out to legislators, being civic-minded and engaged in the democratic process, expecting my concerns to be of interest to elected officials who are supposed to represent me and uphold my best interests. Being engaged in the legislation of our nation SHOULD be encouraged. Trying to make the laws better SHOULD be encouraged. 


LB 1077 does NOT make sense, not as it is written, nor as a concept in general. It restricts education and free speech. It is counteractive to the growth and compassion and empathy that should be happening in classrooms and in places of discussion. 


Some of the most important conversations and discussions I’ve been privy to HAVE been uncomfortable truths about race and gender and I am GLAD. Learning about history in all its ugliness, listening to others who have backgrounds and experiences different from my own, being encouraged to change the world to be a better place, to be civic-minded and engaged in creating better places for EVERYONE, this has molded me to be a person who cares about others and who wants to improve life for others. 


This bill is horrendously antithetical to education and is a disservice to students, educators, and the general public. Places of learning should be for learning, discussion, and improvement, NOT censorship and ignorance. 


I am strongly opposed to LB 1077 and I urge the Committee and Senators to vote NO. 


Thank you for your time


X

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Email to School Superintendent in August - Nebraska - re Covid, sex ed, critical race theory

This email was sent to the local rural county school superintendent Thurs Aug 5th and received no response. As of 9/2 the school website says 6 staff and 6 students have covid and that masking is a personal choice. (small rural area). 

Greetings, X, 

    I don't currently have any family in the X County School system, but received a newsletter in my mailbox. As a member of the community, I wanted to mention some concerns/thoughts related to your letter. I'll try to be brief, or at least concise, as I know you are busy getting ready for the new school year! :) 

"Post-Covid" phrase/Masks & Vaccinations
    In your letter, you used the phrase "post-Covid" but, at the very least, that is inappropriate wording. I'm sure you know cases are rising in the state, the country, and the world. We're not out of it yet and it's unwise to indicate it's over.

    I'm very disappointed that masks are not required in the schools. I know masks can be a hassle, but it's a simple method of prevention. Especially when any child under age 12 is at a larger risk without a vaccine. 

    I'm very concerned that you didn't encourage people to get vaccines. I realize unfortunately covid and vaccines have morphed into a political issue, instead of basic science. I presume that science is still taught in schools and would hope that you and your staff encourage its use. :) As was mentioned elsewhere in the newsletter, the state requires certain vaccines for children, so this shouldn't be something unusual to encourage, especially in light of the statistics that show unvaccinated people bear the brunt of covid cases now.

    As I'm sure you're aware, the CDC is highly recommending every eligible person to get vaccinated AND for everyone to wear masks indoors, vaccinated or not. It should follow suit that schools, institutions of learning, would follow these recommendations from experts. 

     You mention safety as the school's top priority. Masks and vaccinations against this global virus is prevention that will keep the children, staff, families, and communities safe. I highly encourage you to reconsider the school's stance and focus on prevention, instead of being reactionary. As the saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure!

Department of Education Health and Safety Standards
    I also noticed mention of the Department of Education's revisions on Health and Physical Education Standards as an issue that came up in the past few months. I appreciate your simple update that the standards haven't been finalized, so nothing has been changed yet for X. 
    
    You mention that you will reach out to the community for input. Here is mine: After reading the proposed lessons, I reached out to the Department of Education and highly encouraged them to keep what they had, so I was very disappointed that the Governor encouraged fear-mongering in the general public and, as a result, crucial information about gender identity was removed. 

    I want to tell you how important it is that all people, children and adults, feel safe and respected, and I believe this is touted as a value in your schools. I have family and friends that are transgender, non-binary, LGBTQ+ and a fair number of them live in Nebraska or grew up in Nebraska, including small towns where they didn't feel safe or welcome. That can't continue.

    As an institution funded by taxpayer money, the schools cannot discriminate on the facts that are taught. I don't want to feel that fear-based religious teachings and misinformation seep into public schools and prevent students from learning about the real world. I'm sure there will be pressure from some families, but it's a matter of reality and more complete education. Pretending LGBTQ+ people don't exist is NOT a viable option. There are plenty of resources to help enlighten staff, students, and families, and I hope to hear about how they are being implemented.

    I sincerely hope that current teaching and future teaching provides students and families with fair, respectful, balanced information that includes and provides a safe/welcoming space for LGBTQ+ people. Whether or not you know it, there are people that are LGBTQ+ in your student body, on staff, and in families. If our school or county isn't welcoming for them, that is something that needs to be addressed. 

Critical Race Theory/History Classes
    Lastly, you mentioned Critical Race Theory and simply stated it hasn't been added to the curriculum and the district has not been asked to teach it. That's a pretty simple way to address it without delving into it, which seems like the best way to handle it! 
    
    My understanding is that Critical Race Theory 1) is a graduate collegiate level concept, 2) people have gotten upset about it without knowing what it is or trying to investigate/learn, and 3) some people that are upset are masking certain feelings or misconceptions that could be problematic. 

    I don't know what the current curriculum is, but I should hope that the history being taught is honest about the inequalities in the founding of this nation (and that still exist today). It can be VERY touchy territory, as I'm sure you know, but admitting a problem is the first step to fixing problems. And it often is uncomfortable, but that's growing pains, right? :) If and when it's deemed appropriate, I know there are resources and organizations that can help facilitate for these kinds of conversations. 

    Our county and state may lack diversity (98.7% White in X County, 88% in Nebraska), but that shouldn't prevent us from preparing children (and adults!) for meeting people from different backgrounds and having empathy and understanding. As you see every day, schools allow children to learn about the world outside of their home, and their own community. This encompasses both "LGBTQ+" and "race" and much more!




    As I said, I don't have family in the school system in this county at this time, but I do find the newsletters interesting for a variety of reasons. (For one, they helped give information that helped with my vote on construction! I'm excited to know there will be growth in the arts and resources for students!) 

    I hope that my concerns and comments are well-received and provide some insight and encouragement for moving people in this community out of fear of the unknown and into inclusiveness, growth, understanding, and fostering welcoming environments that encourage lifelong learning.

Wishing you and your staff well, 

Friday, April 2, 2021

Nebraska Senators Fearful of Comprehensive Fact-Based Sex Education

REFERENCE:  https://journalstar.com/news/local/education/senators-object-to-proposed-nebraska-sex-education-standards/article_777126b5-2377-5dd9-b72a-b4eba9f4c34c.html?fbclid=IwAR0d0UwuFU0CCVPyARUh1CtPg1JSqyR694DSRU7ux9afX-J9Hokdcd5vpgk  


Greetings, Senator X,

I was very disappointed to see your name listed as one of several Senators who opposes the potential sex education updates. The fact that so many Senators are opposed to the proper education of our youth is upsetting, but not surprising. In fact, it proves to me why this change in education is so important.

When Governor P. Ricketts tried to scare people to speak out against it, I went to the NE Education site as he prompted and examined the document on projected Health Education. Contrary to his expectations and scaremongering, I found it to be quite inclusive, important, and age-appropriate. I wrote to the Governor and those in charge of the proposed changes and let both parties know as much.

First of all, the document was created with input from educators across the state and with advice from doctors, psychologists and other behavioral and mental health experts, not scary "political activists" as Ricketts tried to frighten people. Secondly, the health standards are not mandatory, but are guidelines so schools can adjust as needed.

I thought that the lesson plans did a great job because they relied on facts and information about what children may be noticing or experiencing about their world. For young children, I noticed a lesson about different family structures, like adoptive parents, or same sex parents, or divorced parents, etc. There's no reason to hide this information, as some students live in families divergent from "mom, dad, kids". Children should understand there is no shame in these families, and should learn to not shame their friends who have different situations. This allows children to be knowledgeable and care about each other. 

Likewise, children learning about the different people in this world helps them to understand we ALL have a right to be acknowledged and respected. This most definitely includes LGBTQ+ people. To think that children shouldn't know about this very important aspect of human sexuality is absurd. To treat it like something that should be hidden, or something shameful IS THE SHAMEFUL ASPECT. A good percentage of children already know someone who is LGBTQ+ or will meet someone who is or WILL REALIZE THEY ARE part of the LGBTQ+ grouping. To NOT give children factual and supportive information is detrimental to EVERYONE. 

How many youth have been bullied or had to hide who they were, even from their own families? How many have attempted suicide or self-harm? When we deny youth information about facts or information, we are denying them to be who they are AND denying them the resources to become strong supportive people who accept the differences of others. 

If Senators can't wrap their heads around the existence of LGBTQ+ people and their responsibility to protect their LGBTQ+ constituents, I should think they should spend some time with these lesson plans, as it would make them more mindful of their duties and who they represent. Denying education is absurd. 

To think that parents should be the source of information on these issues, as Ricketts promoted, is also absurd. If parents have bias and hatred and ignorance, they will be examples of that to their children and the cycle continues. Having scientific facts about our varied society in the classroom is essential. Imagine a child who feels "different". They hear all the time about how their parent hates [insert awful words here]. This child feels shame, and fear, and unloved. Imagine this same child hears in school that it's fine to be different, and it's perfectly normal to be non-heterosexual. This child has been empowered. This child has hope that there are adults they can turn to for support and information because their parents lack education, information, and perspective. 

Another important aspect I noticed is younger children learning the appropriate names for genitalia and learning about who is allowed to touch their bodies and how. There is no age limit for sexual abuse of children. If this information was left out of education so that "parents can talk about it"... can you imagine what happens to a child who is being abused by a family member? They don't have supportive people in the education system who can tell them what is happening to them is wrong or who can help them be removed from that harmful situation. Schools can be a place of protection for youth and they need to know that adults aren't afraid to be there for them and talk about these scary things and get help.

My own education in Nebraska was in Catholic school for K-12 and I had to rise above so much misinformation and ignorance in their sex education programs to get where I am today. I'm not the only one. It's a talking point among my family and friends how the sex education system failed us and gave us shame and misinformation. And at age 12, I already knew people who were LGBTQ+ and wish I had been given a better education to be more supportive and knowledgeable back then. If we can fix the education system so that there is less of a struggle for facts, information, and support, we must do it now, and the proposed lesson plans do this. The time for fear-mongering and handwringing is gone. We must rely upon facts and understanding to make Nebraska a more safe, welcoming, and educated place. 

I am very passionate about LGBTQ+ people being honored and supported and protected because they exist among my family and among my friends. Even if they weren't among those I love, I can't stand the idea that lawmakers in the year 2021 STILL want people to be ashamed of who they are. If that's the case, those people need to step down. This state, this country, this world is for EVERYONE. Ignoring these people doesn't mean that kids will never meet them or learn about them or BECOME them. Denying this part of our humanity is dangerous. 

To neglect the factual information about varying genders or sexualities is to neglect reality and to neglect the youth. Not providing this information as part of lesson plans will in fact lead to heightened problems with depression, suicide, abuse, and more. Everything is connected.

I need for anyone who doesn't "understand" LGBTQ+ people to find a way to learn about it and understand that they are every bit worthy of the human rights they have. 

THERE IS NO AGE TOO YOUNG to introduce these ideas because these children ALREADY KNOW. They already have LGBTQ+ people among their family and their friends, and may already feel different themselves. If there is a fear of "normalizing" this, then the problem is the fear itself. It's already "normal" to be different. Have you heard the idea that if black children already know about racism at a young age, then white children should too? Same concept. We get stronger together with facts, information, support, and truth.

We need to empower and strengthen our youth to recognize these differences in themselves and others, to not carry the shame put upon them by the ignorant, and to protect and support each other. I find that this knowledge-based health and sexuality plan for Nebraska schools does just that, and is very necessary for the citizens of our state to rise from fear and ignorance and embrace inclusivity, facts, education, and progress.  

Sincerely,

X

Monday, March 15, 2021

Nebraska Governor Fearful of Teaching Children About Their Bodies

Context: Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts (Republican) put out a press release against updates to Nebraska Health Education updates that aim to teach children about their bodies, gender identities, and how to identify unwanted touch etc. He included the instruction for parents to read the update proposals and contact about this issue, most likely with the assumption that fearful parents would be appalled by the idea of educating children. 

https://www.1011now.com/2021/03/12/gov-ricketts-wants-proposed-sex-education-standards-scrapped-calls-some-updates-age-inappropriate/ 

The new sex education and health standards can be viewed by clicking here. The public can submit formal comments by emailing nde.standardsinput@nebraska.gov.

I wrote a thank you to those who would update the standards:

To Whom It May Concern, 

I am not a parent, but I am a taxpayer and an aunt to 10 children, at least one of whom has told us of her transgender status. After being directed to your pdf of updates and given your email by our fear-mongering governor, I wanted to advise you I applaud the updates to Nebraska's Health Education Standards.

As you know, it is crucial to teach children at an early age about how to be aware of different genders and identifications as well as to have control over their bodies and understand what to do about inappropriate and unwanted touch or attention. It's never too early because abusers aren't waiting for a certain age, and our governor proves not all children are living with safe or well-informed adults. This kind of information can prevent children from abuse and even suicide and is well worth pursuing despite fearful attacks you may be receiving. 

It is disheartening that an elected public servant is trying to motivate people based upon fear, miseducation and hatred of others. This only proves the need for this instruction. I thank you for trying to advance Nebraska Health Education to be truthful, inclusive, proactive, and progressive. Children need to have actual facts and information as our own governor makes it evident there are people (parents/guardians) who are unwilling or unfit to have truthful conversations with youth that need answers. 

Again, thank you for your updates to the Health Education system for Nebraska. I wanted to reach out and be a positive voice to tell you that you are doing the right thing by being truthful, inclusive, and proactive. This is what is needed to protect and empower future generations.

Best of luck

Sincerely,
X


 I also wrote an email to PRicketts telling him that he is unfit, something I get to do way too often.


Greetings, Gov. P. Ricketts,

In regards to your press release on updating Nebraska Health Education Standards, I am disappointed that you want to deny essential education to young children. You rely on fear-mongering and your own miseducation and you put Nebraska children and families at risk from your ignorance. 

You claim this information is "age-inappropriate". If you are not aware, children of any age can be bullied or abused and it is essential that they are given the knowledge and tools to identify this and seek help. Abusers don't wait until children reach a certain age. Not giving children proper information can lead to abuse or even suicide. 

There is nothing "political" about children learning the proper terms for their genitalia, or learning about differing genders, or learning about adoption, or same sex parents, as shown in the lessons for the younger classes. You don't seem to grasp what science is since you claim this is non-scientific instruction. 

If you are unaware, as a public servant to Nebraskans, you answer to hundreds of thousands of LGBTQ+ people and the people who love and support them, including me and my family. If you are unwilling to serve ALL Nebraskans, I ask that you step down from your position. Your ignorance and misinformation is disruptive and dangerous to everyone in this state. 

Disappointed in you as always, 

X