What A Day - The Fight Against Texas's Anti-Trans Agenda

Episode Date: March 4, 2022

Russian and Ukrainian delegates agreed to what’s being called “humanitarian corridors” so trapped Ukrainian citizens can leave the country. But after a phone call with Vladimir Putin, French Pre...sident Emmanuel Macron reportedly believes that the “worst is yet to come” as the invasion heads into its second week.A Texas judge issued a restraining order to halt the state’s investigation of a family that supported their trans kid’s gender-affirming health care. But an appeal by state Attorney General Ken Paxton put that order on hold, as well as a hearing that could’ve extended protections to more families. Adrí Perez with the Texas ACLU, which represents the family under investigation, explains how trans kids, adults and their families are all being harmed by the state’s anti-trans policies.And in headlines: A jury acquits the only officer on trial in the death of Breonna Taylor, Idaho advances its own Texas-like anti-abortion law, and Harvey Weinstein is caught with contraband Milk Duds. Show Notes:Transgender Education Network of Texas - https://www.transtexas.org/Equality Texas - https://www.equalitytexas.org/ACLU of Texas LGBTQ Equality - https://www.aclutx.org/en/issues/lgbtq-equalityFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 it's friday march 4th i'm gideon resnick and i'm trevelle anderson and this is what a day the podcast that when played at five percent speed lasts about as long as the new batman movie that's right and if you play them at the same time the news syncs up perfectly with the action and at one point paul dano and I say the same line at the same time, and it is super powerful. On today's show, we hear from ACLU of Texas, which is defending a family against the state's anti-trans policy that punishes parents for giving their kids the health care they need.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Plus, there was a major $6 billion settlement in the country's opioid crisis. Yeah, but first, there are obviously more updates from Ukraine as we go to record around 9.30 Eastern on Thursday night. So to start on the ground, reports said that Russian troops have been shelling the city of Mariupol. The mayor of the city said that that has resulted in a loss of power, water, and heat. The AP also reported later that Russian troops had been shelling Europe's largest nuclear power station in Ukraine. This was all over social media. A fire broke out, and shortly before we went to record,
Starting point is 00:01:15 American and European officials were in touch about it, but there was reporting that Ukrainian authorities said the situation was under control as we were speaking. In the midst of all of this, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky gave his first press conference since the invasion started. He talked about the resilience of Ukrainian people, requests for more support from Western allies, and his desire for a no-fly zone over the country. Russia, however, has rejected Ukrainian demands for a withdrawal and an end to the attacks on the country. And to add to that, French President Emmanuel Macron spoke to the Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday as
Starting point is 00:01:49 well. A French official told the Washington Post that the conversation left Macron with the impression that the, quote, worst is yet to come, yikes, and that Putin wants to control the entirety of Ukraine. So what can you tell us about the civilians on the ground who've been trying to flee the country? Yeah, this is still developing, but Russian-Ukrainian delegates agreed to what is being called, quote-unquote, humanitarian corridors so that trapped Ukrainian citizens can leave the country. Local ceasefires are going to operate in those areas for limited times, and both sides agreed to work out the details at some point in the future. Meanwhile, the European Union announced on Thursday that Ukrainians who are fleeing would
Starting point is 00:02:28 be granted the ability to live and work in the EU for up to three years. Notably, though, according to the New York Times, the same protection was not extended for non-Ukrainians who are also fleeing, foreign students, migrant workers, for example. There have been a lot of reports about that. The Biden administration also announced that it is offering temporary protected status to Ukrainians who have been living in the U.S. without legal documentation since March 1st or earlier. An estimated 30,000 Ukrainians could be eligible for those protections, and they would be allowed to stay and work in the U.S. for 18 months. So a lot has happened. Those are just some of the many updates in the last 24 hours or so. But as our listeners know, things are changing rapidly.
Starting point is 00:03:07 We are going to be back with a lot more on this in the days ahead. And I'm sure there will be many new developments in those days. Yes. So also making big news this week across the U.S. that we wanted to tell you about is some anti-trans foolishness. More anti-trans foolishness. And another huge blow to the trans community. Yesterday, Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds signed a law that bans transgender girls and women from competing on sports teams that align with their identities at Iowa schools, colleges, and universities.
Starting point is 00:03:37 Iowa is now the 11th state that has limited trans students' ability to play in sports in some capacity. South Dakota, you'll remember, enacted a similar law back in February. Yeah, and the deeply saddening thing is I don't think 11 is where it's going to stop. We've also been reporting about Texas investigating the family of a transgender teen and the parents supporting their need for and use of gender-affirming health care. Some news happened there on Wednesday, but first, can you remind us a little bit, Travelle, about the background here? Yeah, so it's a little complex, so bear with me here. Last week, Republican Governor Greg Abbott directed officials to look into reports of such life-saving care as child abuse. And by the way, Abbott's directive came after the state's Attorney General Kenxton, said in a legally non-binding opinion
Starting point is 00:04:26 that gender-affirming care could constitute as child abuse under the Texas Family Code. Now, the first known family under investigation by the Department of Family and Protective Services sued the state. They are the parents of a 16-year-old girl. One of those parents also is an employee of the very department
Starting point is 00:04:45 that conducts these investigations, all right? Wow. But on Wednesday, a district judge temporarily halted the investigation, saying that the family, quote, faces the imminent and ongoing deprivation of their constitutional rights, the potential loss of necessary medical care, and the stigma attached to being the subject of an unfounded child abuse investigation. Yeah, so this sounds like great news that the investigation was halted, but it's unfortunately more complicated than that. Oh yes, the rabbit hole goes a little bit deeper. So the judge's order only applied to this one family and one investigation. It did not and does not stop the state from investigating other families.
Starting point is 00:05:25 That judge had also set a hearing for next week to rule on whether a broader order was appropriate to protect more families. That's what all of the outlets have been reporting. But Gideon, I talked yesterday with Ari Perez, a policy and advocacy strategist at Texas' ACLU. The Texas ACLU, along with Lambda Legal, they're the ones who've been defending the family that's currently under investigation. Perez said that almost immediately, Ken Paxton filed an appeal, leading to next week's hearing being put on hold and that family that they're representing no longer being protected by the restraining order.
Starting point is 00:06:02 49 minutes later, the state filed an appeal putting a stay on that temporary restraining order. So it is no longer in effect. So for us regular people who aren't involved in the legal stuff, that means that the investigations can continue going on until the hearing that's been set? We are still asserting that this is not an enforceable opinion or
Starting point is 00:06:25 directive from the attorney general or from the governor. Texas families should continue to prepare themselves with resources and legal counsel to ensure that if a CPS investigator does come knocking on their doors, they are prepared to protect themselves and their families. But care should continue on in the state of Texas as it has. Yeah, okay. So now you mentioned that it was a temporary restraining order. A lot of the reporting on this issue says that it's actually unclear whether or not Abbott's directive would actually hold up in court. I'm wondering, in your view, what seem to be the odds that these investigations will lead to actual charges against parents who are, you know, supporting their kids' gender journeys?
Starting point is 00:07:09 This isn't an empty threat. Our plaintiff just last Friday, a CPS investigator, come knocking on her family's door requesting medical records, requesting to speak to her child and to her and to her husband. And so these investigations are happening and they are extremely harmful and they cause irreparable harm to the family units and to the children in these homes. Supporting and loving your transgender child is not a crime and it should not be seen as one. I think above all, this is life-saving care and we should not be denying it to transgender youth under any circumstance. Yeah. Could you talk a little bit more about what the broader implications are of charging a parent with child abuse for supporting their trans children? What are these harmful effects that this would have, not only for these families, but for other trans people in Texas?
Starting point is 00:08:01 The broader effect of this attorney general opinion and the governor's letter is that it scares families out of supporting their kids. It scares the families that are supporting their kids. It scares the kids because they fear that they're going to be ripped away from their gender affirming parents. And it scares doctors out of providing this care. We've already heard from a number of hospitals and clinics and providers that have started to refuse to fill out prescriptions for their patients because they fear criminal and civil charges under this directive. One thing I think that I would like to add is that all of these legislative attacks on trans youth have resulted in a very real increase of bullying and harassment of trans kids on the ground.
Starting point is 00:08:45 And we live in a state where the murders of trans women of color has been the highest for several years in a row now. So we are in a crisis not only for trans youth, but for trans adults. And the ability for the government to continue to denigrate and dehumanize trans youth translates directly into very real and severe consequences for trans adults. Which is unfortunate and absurd. I'm also reminded of a lot of advocates who have been noting that these investigations are just a piece of the state's broader attacks on trans kids, on LGBTQ kids as a whole, on queer people and trans people. There's been reporting that Texas has been removing LGBTQ plus suicide prevention resources
Starting point is 00:09:31 from the state websites. Can you give our listeners an idea of the gravity of how much trans and queer folks are like facing and dealing with this political establishment in Texas. There are kids here in this state whose first memory is testifying at the Texas state capitol against a bathroom ban in 2017. And those kids have grown up having to return time and time again to the state capitol to defend their humanity against sports bans, against medical care bans. This has been constant since 2017. And it was constant in 2021 through not only one legislative session, but three special sessions that we kept showing up for. And immediately after that happened,
Starting point is 00:10:15 books started being banned from Texas schools that contained LGBTQ content and characters. And so this is a full-fledged attack from the state of Texas to erase the existence of transgender people, both in the written form and in the lived reality. Yeah, even with all of the efforts of the ACLU, I'm thinking about Biden's State of the Union earlier this week, where he spoke briefly about what's going on in Texas and around the country as it relates to anti-trans and anti-LGBTQ efforts. And on Wednesday, his administration under Health and Human Services Secretary
Starting point is 00:10:50 Xavier Becerra announced some informational guidelines they're sending to state child welfare agencies as a means of supporting and advocating on behalf of trans folks. But I'm wondering, from your vantage point, and I've heard other advocates say that like, courts won't save us, the federal government won't save us. Is there more that you think people can be doing to get involved, to be activated, to support trans kids in the efforts
Starting point is 00:11:18 that you and the ACLU are undertaking here? You know, I will always say that the courts are not going to save us. And neither is the government. This government was designed and built by people who did not look like us, like trans people of color in the state of Texas. And what we can always and have always relied on for decades is a support from within our own community to take care of each other, whether that means helping each other get health that means helping each other get healthcare, helping each other access hormones, housing, food, all of those aspects of life. We have built up support for each other through mutual aid networks for decades now. And building up
Starting point is 00:11:57 those systems of support is always going to be my fallback answer. I love that. And for the listeners out there who want to support, maybe they've got a little extra income that they can place somewhere. How can they get involved? What can they do? Well, I would suggest donating to trans-led organizations like the Trans Education Network of Texas, donating to Equality Texas. The ACLU of Texas is a great organization, but we are a large organization and we tend to take up a lot of space. So focusing in on those trans-led organizations, those LGBTQ-focused organizations, the resource centers in cities across Texas, but also across the country who provide that direct service support to trans youth who are in crisis, providing medically necessary best practice care that is supported by decades of evidence to be what is best for transgender
Starting point is 00:12:45 youth and teens is not child abuse. So Gideon, that's my conversation with Ari Perez from the Texas ACLU, which has been defending the family under investigation for supporting their trans child's life saving health care. Yeah, it's a vital conversation. And we're going to put links to all of those organizations they mentioned in our show notes. More on all of this to come. But that is the latest for now. Let's get to some headlines. Yesterday, a Kentucky jury acquitted the only officer on trial for the 2020 botched raid where police shot and killed Breonna Taylor.
Starting point is 00:13:30 The now former Louisville police officer, Brett Hankison, was found not guilty of, quote unquote, wanton endangerment for firing 10 rounds blindly into Taylor's apartment. While he didn't hit anyone, some of the bullets went through Taylor's apartment and into a neighboring one where a pregnant woman and her son were sleeping. Jurors had to decide whether Hankison's actions showed a disregard for the safety of Taylor's neighbors. The jury deliberated for three hours before making its not guilty verdict. The state did not charge the two other officers whose bullets did hit and kill Taylor, but they could be charged in an ongoing federal investigation. Idaho is one step closer to rebranding as North Texas because the state is also trying to restrict what a pregnant person can do with their own body. Yesterday, Idaho State Senate passed a
Starting point is 00:14:18 Republican bill that bans abortion after six weeks. It's modeled after Texas's SB-8, which allows any private citizen to sue anyone connected to an abortion. But Idaho's bill is more narrow. Only abortion providers can be sued, and only by a patient's immediate family or the fetus's father. The bill now heads to the state's house, where it's expected to pass. While Governor Brad Little hasn't yet commented on whether he would sign it into law, he did support last year's attempt by Idaho Republicans to ban abortions after six weeks before that law got blocked by the courts. I wish that there wasn't a big copycat syndrome among all these Republican governors. The original. Let's come up with something new. In your bigotry,
Starting point is 00:15:01 please. Just come on now. Yeah. spend time regulating uh how many sunflowers there are in the state something useful anyway uh the family that thought that it could buy back its soul by donating to art museums the sackler family of purdue pharma reached a deal yesterday to pay up to six billion dollars to settle lawsuits that allege that it sparked the opioid crisis by aggressively and dishonestly marketing its product, OxyContin. The agreement comes after weeks of negotiation with a group of states that objected to a previous settlement that would have seen the Sacklers pay $4.3 billion. The deal still needs to be approved in bankruptcy court, but if it is approved,
Starting point is 00:15:39 Purdue Pharma will cease to exist, the payout will go towards communities affected by the opioid crisis, and the Sacklers will be shielded from all present and future opioid-related civil litigation. That liability shield does not apply to criminal prosecutions. Aha. Additionally, one judge is recommending that some of the Sacklers be made to attend a hearing where people who suffer from addiction to OxyContin can speak to them directly. The Sacklers issued a statement that is quite a masterclass on how to apologize without apologizing. I hope everybody's ready for this. They wrote, quote,
Starting point is 00:16:09 End quote. Mm-mm. Mm-mm-mm. No. After letting the tension build for months, the House Committee investigating the January 6th insurrection finally dropped the C-word on Wednesday, crime, in reference to Trump. In a court filing, the committee alleged that actions undertaken
Starting point is 00:16:43 by the president and his lawyer, John Eastman, to compel former Vice President Mike Pence to obstruct Congress's certification of the election amount to, quote, criminal conspiracy. These are the most serious accusations that the committee has made against Trump so far, and they're being issued to further the committee's goal of obtaining private communications between Trump and Eastman, which Eastman is blocking based on attorney-client privilege. Those documents would not be protected by attorney-client privilege if they contain legal advice given with the intent of committing a crime. The committee itself has no authority to charge the president with a crime, but this filing offers a clue that it could make a criminal referral to the Justice Department. Also, in January 6th news, a member of the far-right extremist group called the Oath Keepers pled guilty to seditious conspiracy on Wednesday, becoming the first person accused of this crime to take a plea deal. He admitted in court that he and other members of
Starting point is 00:17:40 his group stormed the Capitol with the explicit intention of stopping the certification of the election, which we already knew because we watched it, but glad that we have it on paper now. Yes, I feel very strongly with this guy, John Eastman, that there's always like a new character that's introduced in these every time, like a new guy connected to the crimes somehow. I just think that it's impressive that there are so many people roped into such silliness. They brought it on themselves. Yes, you did. I hope you're listening. John, we are disappointed in you specifically.
Starting point is 00:18:15 And those are the headlines. We'll be back after some ads. it's friday wad squad and for today's temp check we are discussing what is definitely one of the more forgivable transgressions ever committed by known awful person harvey weinstein the disgraced film producer is currently imprisoned in an la county jail while he awaits trial on charges of rape and sexual assault. And according to Variety, he was caught with contraband milk duds back in November, leading to a reprimand from jail guards. Weinstein claimed that he had the milk duds since entering prison in July, which would have made the candies jaw-breakingly old. Guards disagreed with that timeline and said they would begin searching the possessions of Weinstein's lawyer whenever he visits the facility.
Starting point is 00:19:07 A different set of Weinstein's lawyers made this statement, quote, We have been informed about this and are very sorry it happened. It had not happened before and never happened since. So, Travelle, what is your take on this story? Of all the candies you could have as contraband, okay? Of all. You gonna go with Milk Duds? The Milk Duds thing is peculiar to me.
Starting point is 00:19:26 Like, I wonder if these are loose in the lawyer's pocket. If there are other movie theater candy items that are being delivered here. Yes, you know, some Crunch, some Sour Patch Kids. Yeah, Harvey gets caught with Dots in prison. He could be hot stuff on the yard if he's got the connect to movie theater candy. You know? Yeah, I don't understand
Starting point is 00:19:48 what is going on here. I'm confused. Just like that, we have checked our temps. They are normal because we have not tried to eat year-old milk duds. That is all for today. If you liked the show, make sure you subscribe. I'm Gideon resnick and save gotham batman it's your only job it's your only job and you have three hours to do it and if you do it in this one you know maybe that's it we don't do this again i don't know they like resurrecting
Starting point is 00:20:42 mr batman every couple years or so. It's true. Gotham is persistently in trouble. Troubled city, I would say. What a Day is a production of Crooked Media. It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance, Jazzy Marine, and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers. Our head writer is John Milstein,
Starting point is 00:21:03 and our executive producers are Leo Duran and me, Gideon Resnick. Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.

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