Two adolescent transgender athletes who demand the administration of President Donald Trump told Associated Press about his motivation for demand.
The two teenagers of New Hampshire, Parker Tirrell, 16, and Iris Turmelle, 15, are biological men who have played in women’s sports teams for their respective secondary schools. They and their families originally filed a lawsuit last year Challenge a New Hampshire law that prohibits transgender athletes from participating in girls’ sports.
In February, after Trump signed an executive order that prohibits trans athletes from sports girls throughout the country, a federal judge granted a request to add the Trump administration to the list of accused.
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Tirrell played women’s football in Plymouth Regional High School in autumn.
“I feel that the legislators and Trump are pointing to me at this time and only throughout the legislative system for something that I cannot control,” Tirrell said. “It simply does not feel great. It’s not great. It seems that they just don’t want it to exist. But I will not stop existing just because they don’t want me to do it.”
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Turmelle, who attends the Pembroke academy, is interested in joining the female tennis of that school and the follow -up teams, according to judicial presentations.
“We are not going to sleep in the day and we go out at night and we drink the blood of the people. We do not hate sunlight. We are human, like you,” Turmelle said.
Turmelle talked about not doing the softball team of the school.
“For the argument that it is not fair, I would like to point out that I did not get on the softball team,” Turmelle said. “If that was not fair, then I don’t know what you want from me.”
The federal judge of New Hampshire, Landya McCafferty, who was appointed for his seat by former President Barack Obama in 2013, granted a preliminary judicial order on September 10, which allowed Tirrell to play for regional Plymouth and pass state law to keep trans athletes of girls sports.
New Hampshire was already one of the 25 states with an established law to enforce similar prohibitions in trans inclusion before Trump’s executive order entered into force.
Trell and Turmelle’s lawyers argue Trump’s executive order, along with parts of a January 20 Executive Order That prohibits federal money from being used to “promote gender ideology,” submits adolescents and all transgender people to discrimination in violation of federal guarantees of equal protection and their rights under Title IX.
“The systematic orientation of transgender people in US institutions is chilling, but addressing young people in schools, denying them essential support and opportunities during their most vulnerable years, it is especially cruel,” said Chris Erchull, a happy lawyer.
The situation involving the two trans athletes has also caused a second demand after the parents used bracelets that said “XX” in reference to biological chromosomes and were supposedly banned on the land of the school to use them.
The plaintiffs Kyle Fellers and Anthony Fote sued the Bow School District after being expelled from the land of the school for using the bracelets in the football game of their daughters in September.
In The demand Archive by fellers and footing, they claim that school officials told them to remove the bracelets, or they would have to leave the game.
Both parents say that the intention of the bracelet was not to protest against Tirrell, but to support their own daughters in a game that presented a biological man.