Texas Governor directs state agencies to begin investigating adults who provide trans children with gender affirming care for potential child abuse charges.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2022/02/23/greg-abbott-gender-affirming-care-child-abuse-directive/
Remains unclear how many local prosecutors will be willing to arrest parents for providing medical care for their trans children, though some have already publicly stated they will not.
Just to get it out of the way, I completely disagree with the governor and (presumably) the attorney general. (I haven't read the laws, so I'm not sure if his interpretation of the laws is correct, in which case they need changed, or if he is adding his own bias into the reading.)
For those for whom transition is the correct treatment, getting the treatment as early as possible is, obviously, beneficial. For those for whom it is
not the correct treatment, it is detrimental. We can find anecdotes on both cases. I don't think that's particularly controversial or worth debating. The real issue is that the diagnostics are not perfect. I think everyone should want better diagnostic tools that both identifies those needing treatment early and prevents false positives that result in inappropriate treatments.
Anyway, back to my comment on what ST posted.
Posting cases where politicians make bad policy doesn't really advance the subject of discussion. Nor does posting cases where politicians make good policy. It's kind of a sideline reflection of the debate that is happening here. "Texas makes stupid anti-trans law" doesn't provide data that relates to "should trans-women be able to...<insert variable here>." Nor does California passing a law allowing self ID provide data to that question.
As evidence to this, I'll refer to the types of things LJ and ST post. LJ's posts often cite the government stances as support for the pro-trans movement. He backs this up by citing the access the politicians who made that policy have to better information and experts than we have. ST, on the other hand, points to cases where politicians make anti-trans laws. But the politicians who make these policies
also have access to the same level of experts and information as the ones who made pro-trans policies.
Just to be clear, this is true of both sides. Government does bad stories are hardly uncommon. Sometimes people on both sides of an issue can even agree that a policy is bad. Politicians are not sages examining evidence to come to wise conclusions on how we should live. They are contestants doing whatever they think will help win the popularity contest. This is true of both ST's politicians and LJ's.
So Texas governor is an evil twit. News at eleven.
It doesn't really inform the issues we've been talking about here.