No problem with the transgender person. You can go F yourself if you don't like it. Or move to Alabama or Saudi Arabia so you can repress people like that. |
More "tolerance" of course... |
I like you. |
Wow. Spoken like a truly dogmatic liberal. I've lived in Saudi Arabia, you have not and you are stereotyping. It is a wonderful, welcoming country. Perhaps more civilized than DC. |
Wow. If all of you are as tolerant and open minded to discourse and questioning authority as this board would seem. I don't think I'd want any of you as my neighbors or within miles of my children. |
Well at least you didn't try to excuse Alabama. |
I would have no issue with this, my primary focus would be on whether she is a good teacher for my child. Then again, I am one of those transgender "former males" myself. And as someone who has had some anxiety about how I, my family and most of all my child will be received upon starting in DCPS because of my life history: thank you for giving me hope, 90%+ of the posters in this thread. |
It doesn't matter so long as the teacher is gender-confirming in appearance and behavior after state-sanctioned gender reassignment surgery and corresponding changes to identity documents.
Signed, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini http://www.salon.com/2005/07/28/iran_transsexuals/ Seriously, OP, are you suggesting the capital of the United States should be less-tolerant than Iran??? This is America, d---n it! What happened to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness? What's next, keeping girls who don't wear pink clothes out of school? ![]() |
Aren't women not allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia and they stone you for adultery? |
Nice try. it's actually a brutal dictatorship where guest workers and women are horribly abused. Do you lobby for them? |
Janney has one.
She is awesome. Non issue. |
Provided the teacher is a good teacher and my kid likes her (or him, if it was a ftm change), I honestly don't care. It doesn't affect my child in any way whatsoever. If the worst that happens to my DCs in school is having questions about other people being different from them, they'd have had a great childhood and school experience. That is if they even notice - with plenty of transgender people, I'd never realize their birth sex from looking at them. |
Oh, right. They're just everywhere. Every second or third person you meet. |
THIS. |
God - who cares. Really. I wouldn't give one thought to it. |