Pride Month Transitions to 'Title IX Month,' Adopts She/Her Pronouns
The Trump administration is celebrating biological women over those who would trample their rights.
After decades of being associated with gaudy displays of sexual deviance and debauchery, June is finally getting a rebrand, courtesy of the Trump administration.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon announced on June 2 that this year, her department will recognize June as Title IX Month, "to honor women’s hard-earned civil rights and demonstrate the Trump administration’s unwavering commitment to restoring them to the fullest extent of the law."
That's right. June now identifies with she/her pronouns. Please update your calendars accordingly.
The change will undoubtedly be welcomed by those who have grown weary of having rainbow-clad genitals shoved in their faces all month long. It also highlights an issue that has become a pillar of President Donald Trump's second term: defending the rights of women and girls.
Terry Schilling, president of American Principles Project, told Restoration News that he appreciated the president's "powerful stand for American women, whose safety and opportunities are under relentless attack from Democrat politicians who want men infiltrating women's sports and private spaces.
"It's absurd to dedicate an entire month to celebrating personal sex lives while ignoring the erosion of fairness and dignity for women and girls," he said. "This bold move restores the focus to Title IX's core promise—equal protection under the law—reaffirming biological reality with moral clarity and unassailable logic.”
Fighting for (Real) Women
While on the campaign trail last year, Trump repeatedly vowed to keep men out of women's sports. Since taking office, he's wasted no time in delivering on that promise.
In February, Trump signed an executive order directing McMahon to "take all appropriate action" to keep males from invading female bathrooms, locker rooms, and sports teams.
There was once a time when that direction would have been unnecessary. Title IX, after all, guarantees female students the same educational opportunities as their male counterparts, and that includes fair competition in sports and sex-segregated intimate spaces such as bathrooms and locker rooms.
President Richard Nixon signed those protections into law on June 23, 1972. But more than a half-century later, the Biden administration steamrolled them to pave the way for a new interpretation of Title IX—one that redefined sex discrimination to include discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation.
That move threw wide the doors of females' intimate school spaces nationwide to any male who desired to walk through them, threatening the safety of vulnerable women and girls.
It also allowed for male athletes to participate in female sports programs, upending what was once an even playing field and forcing female athletes to contend against males with an innate physical advantage.
In January, a federal district court struck down Biden's new rules. Now, at Trump's direction, the Education Department is restoring and honoring the original intent of Title IX.
As part of those efforts, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights recently launched Title IX probes into the University of Wyoming and Jefferson County School District in Colorado.
The University of Wyoming investigation concerns the school's alleged allowance of a male student to join a campus sorority, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and access female-only living areas in the sorority house.
Jefferson County, meanwhile, is under investigation for enforcing a policy requiring students to share overnight accommodations with others who share their "gender identity."
The department cited "several disturbing reports" of incidents in the county, including one where an 11-year-old girl would have had to share a bed with a male student on a school trip without her parents' knowledge or consent.
"Title IX provides women protections on the basis of sex in all educational activities, which include their rights to equal opportunity in sports and sex-segregated intimate spaces, including sororities and living accommodations," McMahon said.
"This administration will fight on every front to protect women's and girls' sports, intimate spaces, dormitories and living quarters, and fraternal and panhellenic organizations."
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