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Extending Rights to Transgender People

Ruth Marcus on

-- The White House, in a blog post by senior adviser Valerie Jarrett, announced its support of moves to ban so-called "conversion therapy" for gay and transgender youth, citing its "potentially devastating effects."

-- The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ordered the Army to pay damages in a sex discrimination case brought by a civil employee who was -- here go the bathroom wars again -- barred from using the ladies' room and whose supervisor persisted in referring to her by her previous name.

If this sounds like a contradiction of the White House gender-neutral restroom, above, it's the difference between being barred from using the bathroom assigned to your gender and being given a choice.

These aren't the administration's only moves on transgender rights. Earlier, Medicare announced it would start paying for sex-reassignment surgery, and the Department of Veterans Affairs approved all "medically necessary care" for transgender veterans, although it does not provide sex-reassignment surgery. And the Army is providing hormone treatments for Chelsea Manning, convicted of espionage in the WikiLeaks case.

"This president has been the best president in history on trans issues and nobody is in second place," said Mara Keisling of the National Center for Transgender Equality. "Until this administration, no one even took us into account. It's not like they were off trying to hurt us or anything -- it's that they didn't consider us at all."

If you think that being transgender is creepy, or perverted, or fixable by conversion therapy, these developments probably do not impress you. If, however, you believe that some people are simply born into the wrong bodies -- if you trust medical experts who believe that gender dysphoria is a real phenomenon -- you probably think these are welcome developments.

 

One final, federal frontier is the military, where new Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, when asked about the ban on transgender service members, said that his test was simple: "Are they going to be excellent service members?"

The Pentagon is reviewing the issue, but the outcome seems foreordained. After Carter's remarks, White House press secretary Josh Earnest said Obama "agrees with the sentiment that all Americans who are qualified to serve should be able to serve."

This is an attitude at once obvious, revolutionary and overdue.

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Ruth Marcus' email address is ruthmarcus@washpost.com.


Copyright 2015 Washington Post Writers Group

 

 

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