Families in the South had just learned to navigate care for their transgender kids when a slew of new laws put their health and futures in limbo

As bans on gender-affirming care for trans youth are signed into law across the country, families like Chrissie and Daniel’s are facing new and constantly changing obstacles to accessing vital health care. Twenty-one states have enacted laws that restrict care, and the highest concentration of these bills are where Chrissie and Daniel live, in the South. In this region alone, more than two thirds of states have an active ban as of Jan. 1, creating a sprawling landmass — more than 1.1 million square miles, larger than the entire country of Mexico — that families have to get through in order for their kids to access care.

  • Beetschnapps@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    This is how they gerrymander the whole country.

    Use hatred and intolerance to force enough people into states where the electoral college renders their vote useless. Shift a handful of voters via hatred you can lock down a state, lock down the right handful of states and a minority controls the nation.

    • quindraco@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      That’s not how this works. You’re getting it backwards. Every time a red state forces blue residents to move to a blue state, they reduce the power of gerrymandering/the broken power of the electoral college, because that reduces the extent to which people are “represented” by reps who disagree with them. Do it enough and you’ll shift whole.EC votes.

      Edit: this is supposed to be in reply to Beetschnapps. My comment keeps seeming to come out in reaponse to the wrong comment, very strange.