ADVERTISEMENT

Trump order targets transgender troops and ‘radical gender ideology’

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
79,327
62,337
113
Utterly deplorable:

President Donald Trump issued an executive order Monday night targeting transgender service members and an array of other people, saying that the U.S. military has been “afflicted with radical gender ideology to appease activists” and that “many mental and physical health conditions are incompatible with active duty.”


Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between in politics.

The list of conditions identified could affect tens of thousands of people, depending on how it is interpreted. The order cites diagnoses “from conditions that require substantial medication or medical treatment to bipolar and related disorders, eating disorders, suicidality, and prior psychiatric hospitalization.”
The order calls for the Pentagon to adopt updated policies on the medical standards required for military service. It also takes aim at transgender people in personal terms, accusing them of living in conflict “with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle, even in one’s personal life.”


“A man’s assertion that he is a woman, and his requirement that others honor this falsehood, is not consistent with the humility and selflessness required of a service member,” it adds.

The effort was quickly met with a lawsuit brought Tuesday by organizations advocating for transgender people. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington on behalf of six service members, challenges the legality of the order on constitutional grounds, stating that affected service members have built their lives around military service.
The Defense Department said in a statement that it “will fully execute and implement all directives outlined in Executive Orders by the President, ensuring they are carried out with utmost professionalism, efficiency, and in alignment with national security objectives. We will provide status updates as we are able.”


Trump’s order builds on a previous directive, issued hours after the president’s Jan. 20 inauguration, overturning a 2021 Biden administration measure that permitted transgender troops to serve openly, which reversed an earlier ban from Trump’s first term in office. The new executive order does not immediately ban transgender individuals from serving, but it directs the Defense Department and the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the Coast Guard, to revise medical standards and submit a report to the president outlining steps to comply with the directive.
While the Defense Department does not keep track of the number of transgender personnel across the force, the latest shift in the long-running policy back-and-forth could affect thousands of service members. It also represents one aspect of a far-reaching Trump administration effort to tamp down diversity initiatives across the government.
The order was a dangerous rollback of rights and equality, a key component of global human rights agreements to which the United States has been party, said Karla Gonzales Garcia, director of Amnesty International USA’s gender, sexuality and identity program.


“In its attacks on transgender people, whether in military service or through trying to redefine sex and gender in an attempt to erase transgender people, the Trump administration has made hate and discrimination its agenda,” she said in a statement. “Not only will today’s directive violate the human rights of thousands of Americans, it also sends a dangerous message to the rest of the world.”
Trump signed the new transgender order along with others calling for the reinstatement of troops who were discharged during the Biden administration for refusing coronavirus vaccines; the elimination of diversity, equity and inclusion offices in the Defense Department; and the creation of an “Iron Dome for America,” Trump’s vision for expanded missile defense.
Newly confirmed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former National Guard soldier who has said that “being transgendered in the military causes complications and differences,” promised in his first remarks to reporters at the Pentagon on Monday that he would ensure implementation of Trump’s priorities, which also include ordering the military to guard the southern border.


“This is happening quickly,” he said. “Our job is lethality and readiness and warfighting.”
In a November podcast, Hegseth said personnel receiving medication related to gender transitions would be unable to serve effectively.
Advocates for transgender people have said there may be as many as 15,000 in the U.S. military. A 2016 Defense Department survey found that about 9,000 service members identified as such. Both figures represent less than 1 percent of the 2 million people who serve in the active-duty, reserve or National Guard components of the military.
For decades, the military considered transgender people to be sexual deviants who were unfit for service. But in 2016, after a year-long policy review, the Obama administration repealed a ban on transgender service, citing the value of ensuring that all qualified individuals were able to serve their country in uniform.


“We have to have access to 100 percent of America’s population for our all-volunteer forces to be able to recruit from among them the most highly qualified — and to retain them,” Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter said at the time.
The repeal followed the Obama administration’s overturning in 2011 of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, which prohibited gay service members from serving openly, and the 2015 repeal of a ban on women serving in a wide array of jobs in ground combat units.
After taking office in 2017, Trump announced a ban on transgender military service in a series of tweets, without notifying key defense officials. The move triggered a scramble in the Pentagon, with then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis ordering another policy review.

In 2018, Mattis adopted a new policy with Trump’s tacit support that softened the full ban, effectively prohibiting new transgender service members from joining the military but allowing those already in uniform to stay on.

The policy was challenged in court, but the Supreme Court upheld Trump’s partial ban in 2019. The military began enforcing that policy later that year.
President Joe Biden quickly reversed Trump’s ban in an executive order after taking office in 2021.
SPARTA Pride, a rights group for transgender troops, said they serve in combat arms, military intelligence and other specialized roles.
“While some transgender troops do have surgery, the recovery time and cost is minimal, and is scheduled so as not to impact deployments or mission readiness,” the group said, rebutting a common criticism that surgery and care for these service members are disruptive.
 
Utterly deplorable:

President Donald Trump issued an executive order Monday night targeting transgender service members and an array of other people, saying that the U.S. military has been “afflicted with radical gender ideology to appease activists” and that “many mental and physical health conditions are incompatible with active duty.”


Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between in politics.

The list of conditions identified could affect tens of thousands of people, depending on how it is interpreted. The order cites diagnoses “from conditions that require substantial medication or medical treatment to bipolar and related disorders, eating disorders, suicidality, and prior psychiatric hospitalization.”
The order calls for the Pentagon to adopt updated policies on the medical standards required for military service. It also takes aim at transgender people in personal terms, accusing them of living in conflict “with a soldier’s commitment to an honorable, truthful, and disciplined lifestyle, even in one’s personal life.”


“A man’s assertion that he is a woman, and his requirement that others honor this falsehood, is not consistent with the humility and selflessness required of a service member,” it adds.

The effort was quickly met with a lawsuit brought Tuesday by organizations advocating for transgender people. The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Washington on behalf of six service members, challenges the legality of the order on constitutional grounds, stating that affected service members have built their lives around military service.
The Defense Department said in a statement that it “will fully execute and implement all directives outlined in Executive Orders by the President, ensuring they are carried out with utmost professionalism, efficiency, and in alignment with national security objectives. We will provide status updates as we are able.”


Trump’s order builds on a previous directive, issued hours after the president’s Jan. 20 inauguration, overturning a 2021 Biden administration measure that permitted transgender troops to serve openly, which reversed an earlier ban from Trump’s first term in office. The new executive order does not immediately ban transgender individuals from serving, but it directs the Defense Department and the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees the Coast Guard, to revise medical standards and submit a report to the president outlining steps to comply with the directive.
While the Defense Department does not keep track of the number of transgender personnel across the force, the latest shift in the long-running policy back-and-forth could affect thousands of service members. It also represents one aspect of a far-reaching Trump administration effort to tamp down diversity initiatives across the government.
The order was a dangerous rollback of rights and equality, a key component of global human rights agreements to which the United States has been party, said Karla Gonzales Garcia, director of Amnesty International USA’s gender, sexuality and identity program.


“In its attacks on transgender people, whether in military service or through trying to redefine sex and gender in an attempt to erase transgender people, the Trump administration has made hate and discrimination its agenda,” she said in a statement. “Not only will today’s directive violate the human rights of thousands of Americans, it also sends a dangerous message to the rest of the world.”
Trump signed the new transgender order along with others calling for the reinstatement of troops who were discharged during the Biden administration for refusing coronavirus vaccines; the elimination of diversity, equity and inclusion offices in the Defense Department; and the creation of an “Iron Dome for America,” Trump’s vision for expanded missile defense.
Newly confirmed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former National Guard soldier who has said that “being transgendered in the military causes complications and differences,” promised in his first remarks to reporters at the Pentagon on Monday that he would ensure implementation of Trump’s priorities, which also include ordering the military to guard the southern border.


“This is happening quickly,” he said. “Our job is lethality and readiness and warfighting.”
In a November podcast, Hegseth said personnel receiving medication related to gender transitions would be unable to serve effectively.
Advocates for transgender people have said there may be as many as 15,000 in the U.S. military. A 2016 Defense Department survey found that about 9,000 service members identified as such. Both figures represent less than 1 percent of the 2 million people who serve in the active-duty, reserve or National Guard components of the military.
For decades, the military considered transgender people to be sexual deviants who were unfit for service. But in 2016, after a year-long policy review, the Obama administration repealed a ban on transgender service, citing the value of ensuring that all qualified individuals were able to serve their country in uniform.


“We have to have access to 100 percent of America’s population for our all-volunteer forces to be able to recruit from among them the most highly qualified — and to retain them,” Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter said at the time.
The repeal followed the Obama administration’s overturning in 2011 of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, which prohibited gay service members from serving openly, and the 2015 repeal of a ban on women serving in a wide array of jobs in ground combat units.
After taking office in 2017, Trump announced a ban on transgender military service in a series of tweets, without notifying key defense officials. The move triggered a scramble in the Pentagon, with then-Defense Secretary Jim Mattis ordering another policy review.

In 2018, Mattis adopted a new policy with Trump’s tacit support that softened the full ban, effectively prohibiting new transgender service members from joining the military but allowing those already in uniform to stay on.

The policy was challenged in court, but the Supreme Court upheld Trump’s partial ban in 2019. The military began enforcing that policy later that year.
President Joe Biden quickly reversed Trump’s ban in an executive order after taking office in 2021.
SPARTA Pride, a rights group for transgender troops, said they serve in combat arms, military intelligence and other specialized roles.
“While some transgender troops do have surgery, the recovery time and cost is minimal, and is scheduled so as not to impact deployments or mission readiness,” the group said, rebutting a common criticism that surgery and care for these service members are disruptive.
Probably my favorite thing he's done so far. The madness needs to end, and the line in the sand needs to be drawn. We can lead the world in call this what it is, a mental disorder. Others will fall in line.
 
Uncontionable.
funny-giggle.gif
 
Thread title should be, “It was never about girls sports”.
This was always the goal. The marginalization and destruction of a group of citizens. I look forward to all the posters who assured me they would stand up for trans citizens as soon as girls sports were saved hiding from this thread. Brave, patriotic Americans who volunteered to serve are being targeted.
It won’t stop at the military. All federal jobs are at risk. Insurance, public and private will be targeted. Doctors are already being targeted. This has been, and always will be about trans bigotry.
 
An
“A man’s assertion that he is a woman, and his requirement that others honor this falsehood, is not consistent with the humility and selflessness required of a service member,” it adds.
an administration lead by a man who wears that amount of makeup has no business making this kind of comment about soldiers
f23976a0-f103-4c43-844a-d879a60eb609_750x422.jpg
 
I don't know what happens legally, but the press release was clearly written for an audience of one, and the dullards who watch Fox/Newsmax. Hyperbolic and extremist. Trump needs his Jews and Gypsies level of internal enemy to whip up the rage against.
So, again, for all of you folks who assured me this was only about girls sports, when do you raise your hand and say you support trans citizens in America?
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT