ReadabilityThe Obvious Question Everyone is Ignoring In this Nasty Transgender Bathroom Story
Yesterday I saw this story that didn’t do a lot of good for those pushing Transgenderism:
A five-year-old girl allegedly was sexually assaulted at school in the girls’ bathroom by a boy who identifies as gender-fluid, sparking an investigation by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) into the Decatur, Georgia school’s transgender bathroom policy.
The details are not pleasant:
“As [Victim] was emerging from a stall, the Assailant pushed her against a wall, pushed his hand between her legs, and repeatedly felt and poked at her genitals … while she struggled and called out for him to stop,” reads the legal complaint, dated May 22, 2018. “No one came to help.”
That’s about as bad as it gets but there was a detail in the story that really jumped out at me, the boy, was also five years old.
Now while some might look at this story as an argument against Transgender bathrooms (it is) and others might look at is as a great example of the cowardice and fecklessness of a school district (it is) but the first thing that came to my mind is?
What kind of five-year old does this?
Regardless of the how fluid or non-fluid some kid thinks of himself, herself or itself as a general rule it doesn’t occur to a five-year old to push other kids against a wall, stick their hands between someone else’s legs and start exploring like Columbus looking for a faster route to India.
I submit and suggest that a five-year old doesn’t do this unless they are in an environment where such behavior is visible and common.
I don’t have a lot of trust in government when it comes to other people’s children but if there was ever a time that someone in authority needed to examine what’s going on a kid’s house this is it.
I presume that this will not be done as to do so might cause said authorities to be considered bigoted by the left, and what’s the safety of a few little girls next to making sure adults aren’t thought of badly by liberals.
As Stacy McCain often says, people need to wake the hell up.
Yesterday I saw this story that didn’t do a lot of good for those pushing Transgenderism:
A five-year-old girl allegedly was sexually assaulted at school in the girls’ bathroom by a boy who identifies as gender-fluid, sparking an investigation by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) into the Decatur, Georgia school’s transgender bathroom policy.
The details are not pleasant:
“As [Victim] was emerging from a stall, the Assailant pushed her against a wall, pushed his hand between her legs, and repeatedly felt and poked at her genitals … while she struggled and called out for him to stop,” reads the legal complaint, dated May 22, 2018. “No one came to help.”
That’s about as bad as it gets but there was a detail in the story that really jumped out at me, the boy, was also five years old.
Now while some might look at this story as an argument against Transgender bathrooms (it is) and others might look at is as a great example of the cowardice and fecklessness of a school district (it is) but the first thing that came to my mind is?
What kind of five-year old does this?
Regardless of the how fluid or non-fluid some kid thinks of himself, herself or itself as a general rule it doesn’t occur to a five-year old to push other kids against a wall, stick their hands between someone else’s legs and start exploring like Columbus looking for a faster route to India.
I submit and suggest that a five-year old doesn’t do this unless they are in an environment where such behavior is visible and common.
I don’t have a lot of trust in government when it comes to other people’s children but if there was ever a time that someone in authority needed to examine what’s going on a kid’s house this is it.
I presume that this will not be done as to do so might cause said authorities to be considered bigoted by the left, and what’s the safety of a few little girls next to making sure adults aren’t thought of badly by liberals.
As Stacy McCain often says, people need to wake the hell up.
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“I submit and suggest that a five-year old doesn’t do this unless they are in an environment where such behavior is visible and common.”
Exactly!
Which means either
A) they are in an environment where such behavior is visible and common.
OR
B) someone made the story up and coached their child to say it.