Teachers could choose whether to use students' preferred pronouns, names under proposed bill
- A proposed bill in Colorado would classify "misgendering" and "deadnaming" as forms of child abuse in custody cases, impacting parental rights.
- The bill, titled "The Kelly Loving Act," aims to protect children's rights regarding gender identity and to define new forms of "coercive control" in legal settings related to children.
- If passed, the bill would prevent Colorado courts from enforcing out-of-state laws that conflict with the rights of parents providing gender-affirming care.
- The measure would also prohibit local education providers from enforcing sex-based dress codes and would require schools to adopt policies for using students' chosen names.
11 Articles
11 Articles
John McWhorter's preferred pronouns - Washington Examiner
“To mess with our pronouns is to mess with our sense of the order of things, what’s up and what’s down — life itself,” the Columbia University linguist, prolific author, columnist, and podcaster John McWhorter emphasizes in his new book, Pronoun Trouble: The Story of Us in Seven Little Words. “Pronouns are used so frequently, so below the level of consciousness, and correspond to categories so fundamental to human experience that they are all de…
Teachers could choose whether to use students' preferred pronouns, names under proposed bill
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — Teachers and school staff wouldn't be required to use someone's preferred pronouns and name under proposed legislation that passed the House Education Committee Wednesday. The bill, sponsored by Rep. Mark Cochran (R-Englewood), would let teachers and school staff choose whether to use another person's or student's requested pronouns and/or name if they are inconsistent with the person's sex and/or legal name. "This is t…
Colorado bill adding protections for transgender people — including against “deadnaming” — passes first hurdle
Transgender Coloradans, particularly children and supportive parents, would get more legal protections under a bill passed by a committee Wednesday morning in the Colorado legislature.
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