BreakPoint

Not My Shower

  colson2Mary Ann Andree was drying her hair in the Rio Sport and Health Club in Gaithersburg, Maryland, last month when the door to the women’s locker room suddenly opened. In came a man, wearing a blue ruffled skirt and make-up. As Andree later told reporters, “I was very upset. There is a lot he could have seen.” Andree is far from alone. A lot of other women in Montgomery County, Maryland, are upset over a new law that demands co-ed locker rooms and bathrooms in all public accommodations. Montgomery County, adjacent to Washington, D.C., passed the law last November to accommodate “transgendered people”—that is, men who perceive themselves to be women, and women who perceive themselves to be men. The law adds gender identity to the list of protected classes to the Montgomery County Code banning discrimination. In effect, it means men will have full access to a woman’s restroom and locker room. A woman taking a shower after her aerobics class might look up to find a man turning on the shower next to hers. A little girl using a movie theater restroom will now have to worry that a strange man might walk in. Michelle Turner, who leads a citizens group opposing the law, says, “Any biological male who is willing to wear a dress and who is feeling transgendered at that particular moment can enter the ladies room or locker room.” And what is to stop non-transgendered men from entering the ladies’ room? Nothing. A child molester or rapist could put on a dress and go right in. So could pornographists. It is an appalling, shocking law. And get this: There is no exemption for religious schools, book stores, churches, and daycares. As Turner notes, “The act will use the force of law to make these organizations accept transgenders, transvestites, and cross-dressers as employees.” The American Psychiatric Association classifies gender identity disorder as a mental disorder. Supporters of the Montgomery County law refuse to accept this, and they have decided that you and I are not going to be allowed to accept it, either. Dana Beyer, a “transgendered” person employed by the Montgomery County Council, says that if you believe that XY chromosomes and male genitalia make someone male, you are a bigot. In effect, transgendered persons are demanding that Montgomery County erase the distinctions between males and females. Make no mistake: This is not about the need for co-ed bathrooms. This law is simply being used to normalize gender identity disorder—much in the same way the gay lobby uses laws to normalize homosexuality. Montgomery County officials passed this law despite the fact that citizens opposed it by an eight-to-one margin. The good news is that concerned citizens have gathered enough signatures to put the issue on the November ballot. But Montgomery County is not the only jurisdiction passing laws like these. Check out what your own local leaders are doing to protect your privacy rights. And parents, make sure your kids know the difference between the Christian view of sexuality and that being propagated by those who think they ought to be allowed to choose their gender and their bathroom.  
Today's BreakPoint Offer
Sharpen your biblical worldview: Learn more about the Wide Angle worldview video series with Chuck Colson and Rick Warren—perfect for small-group Bible studies!  
For Further Reading and Information
Learn more about Michelle Turner’s group, Citizens for Responsible Government. Anne Morse, “Good News for the Modest,” The Point, 20 February 2008. Anne Morse, “No Place to Hide,” The Point, 19 February 2008. Mike S. Adams, “Sometimes You Feel like a Nut, Sometimes You Don’t,” Townhall.com, 8 January 2008. Anne E. Marimow, “Transgender Bill May Be Close to Passing: Legislation to Protect Against Gender Identity Bias Drops Bathroom Stipulations,” Washington Post, 11 November 2007. Marc Fisher, “Montgomery Wisely Keeps Anti-Discrimination Law For Transgender People Out of Public Restrooms,” Washington Post, 11 November 2007. Alan Sears, “Under-the-Radar Cultural Change: Inflicting Damage on Future Generations,” BreakPoint Online, 7 February 2007. Autumn Conley Bittick, “Is Our Nation Going to Pot? Transgender Bathrooms at Ivy League Schools,” Associated Content Online, 31 May 2006. James Paine, “Painfully Right: Transgender bathrooms are stupid,” The New Hampshire, 22 February 2008. BreakPoint Commentary No. 040401, “Checking Boxes: Transgender Chic.” BreakPoint Commentary No. 050616, “The Wisdom to Know the Difference: Is Sexual Identity Malleable?”

03/5/08

Chuck Colson

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