Montana
Montana GOP Lawmaker Suggested She’d Prefer Her Daughter Die By Suicide Than Transition
A Montana state lawmaker and sponsor of the state’s ban on gender-affirming take care of transgender youth has been blasted on-line after she commented on the state’s Home ground in March that she would moderately have her daughter be suicidal than permit her to transition.
Although Rep. Kerri Seekins-Crowe, a Republican, didn’t say that her daughter was transgender, she stated she was “a kind of dad and mom who lived with a daughter who was suicidal for 3 years.”
A video of her feedback has gone viral after being shared by the Twitter account of the web site The Intellectualist. The clip has been considered greater than 14 million occasions on Twitter.
“One of many large points that we’ve got heard immediately and we have talked about these days is that with out surgical procedure the chance of suicide goes means up. Properly, I’m a kind of dad and mom who lived with a daughter who was suicidal for 3 years,” Seekins-Crowe stated in her speech. “Somebody as soon as requested me, ‘Would not I simply do something to assist save her?’ And I actually needed to assume and the reply was, ‘No.’”
She added, “I used to be not going to present in to her emotional manipulation as a result of she was incapable of constructing these choices and I needed to make these choices for her.”
The GOP lawmaker went on to say that she wasn’t going to let her daughter “tear aside my household.”
“And I used to be not going to let her tear aside me as a result of I needed to be sturdy for her, I needed to have a imaginative and prescient for her life when she had none, was incapable of getting none,” she stated.
Seekins-Crowe continued that she had “spent home on the ground in prayer as a result of I did not know that after I awoke if my daughter was going to be alive or not. However I knew that I needed to make these proper choices for her in order that she would have a treasured, profitable maturity at the moment.”
The lawmaker did not reply to requests for remark from NBC Information or the Every day Beast.
One consumer on Twiter stated, “My intestine tells me that the hours she spent in prayer might have been used to search out her daughter actual assist.”
“Suicide as ‘manipulation.’ What a mom,” one other wrote.
And one other consumer replied, “Think about believing this after which telling everybody.”
“I vehemently disagree with this speech by GOP state rep Kerri Seekins-Crowe,” U.S. Rep. Ted Lieu, a Democrat from California, tweeted. “However you recognize what she didn’t say? That it must be the federal government’s function to make private choices for households. Why is she now shoving her non-public choice down different individuals’s throats?”
The backlash for her feedback comes after the state’s Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte signed a regulation banning gender-affirming care. Gianforte’s nonbinary homosexual son, David Gianforte, had spoken to native media about lobbying their father in opposition to signing the invoice.
It additionally comes after the state’s Home voted to kick out transgender lawmaker Zooey Zephyr, a Democrat, for the rest of the session. Zephyr, who’s the state’s first trans lawmaker, can nonetheless vote nearly, however can’t take part in debate. She was punished after she instructed GOP colleagues that passing the gender-affirming care ban would go away them with “blood in your palms.”
Since then, a whole lot have come to Montana’s Home to protest Zephyr’s therapy.
With Gianforte signing the regulation, Montana joins over a dozen states which have additionally restricted gender-affirming well being take care of transgender minors. Main medical organizations approve and assist such take care of transgender youth. They are saying that restrictions on the care pose well being dangers, together with the chance of suicide, to those youth.
In case you are having ideas of suicide or are involved that somebody you recognize could also be, assets can be found to assist. The 988 Suicide & Disaster Lifeline at 988 is for individuals of all ages and identities. Trans Lifeline, designed for transgender or gender-nonconforming individuals, could be reached at (877) 565-8860. The lifeline additionally gives assets to assist with different crises, akin to home violence conditions. The Trevor Mission Lifeline, for LGBTQ+ youth (ages 24 and youthful), could be reached at (866) 488-7386. Customers may also entry chat providers at TheTrevorProject.org/Assist or textual content START to 678678.
Montana
Montana transgender lawmaker on Capitol Hill's bathroom ban: 'Do not cede ground'
The question of who uses which bathroom on Capitol Hill has become a heated topic ahead of the 119th U.S. Congress convening next year.
This debate was sparked by the historic election of Sarah McBride, a transgender woman, to represent Delaware in Congress. In response, Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.) introduced a resolution aiming to require transgender individuals to use bathrooms corresponding to their sex assigned at birth.
Democratic state Rep. Zooey Zephyr, the first transgender woman in Montana’s state legislature, understands what it feels like to be singled out.
She joined Scripps News on Friday to weigh in on the controversy unfolding in D.C.
“It’s important to acknowledge that while these attacks on transgender people are always brought one bill at a time, they do not focus on specific issues,” Zephyr said. “The hate of trans people is boundless. We saw that when Nancy Mace went on far-right media earlier this week and claimed that it was ‘offensive’ that Congresswoman McBride views herself as an equal to Nancy Mace.”
“When we see policies targeting trans women just trying to live their lives in the restroom, trying to play sports with their friends — that is not where the hate stops from the right,” Zephyr said. “That hate is on display at every moment, which is why it’s important for us to resist these efforts to target our community.”
In 2023, Republican lawmakers in Montana voted to ban Zephyr from the House floor and from participating in debates after she spoke out against a bill banning gender-affirming care for minors. The incident led to legal challenges over Zephyr’s censure and to political activism from supporters of transgender rights.
“The attacks we see on trans people will escalate. This will not be the last attack on Congresswoman McBride,” Zephyr said. “In my perspective, it is important that we make sure as trans people in this country that we do not cede ground to someone who wants to erase us — regardless of whether they want to erase us in the Capitol, or if they want to erase us as we go through our daily lives in public. We have to stand strong.”
Rep. Nancy Mace to introduce bill on restroom use tied to sex at birth
In an interview with Scripps News this week, Mace said her resolution was specifically targeted at Rep.-elect McBride, who stated she will “follow the rules as outlined” even if she disagrees with them.
“I’m not here to fight about bathrooms,” McBride said. “I’m here to fight for Delawareans to bring down the costs facing families.”
Despite McBride’s statement, Mace said her effort to ban transgender individuals from certain bathrooms extends beyond Washington. She is advocating for legislation requiring transgender people to use restrooms that align with their sex assigned at birth on any property receiving public funds.
“I have PTSD from the sexual abuse I have suffered at the hands of a man. We have to as women draw a line in the sand, a big fat red line, about our rights,” Mace said. “And the basic question today is, do women have rights or do we not? And I will tell you just the idea of a man in a locker room watching me change clothes after a workout is a huge trigger and it’s not OK to make and force women to be vulnerable in private spaces.”
RELATED STORY | As House GOP targets McBride, she says ‘I’m not here to fight about bathrooms’
Montana
Powerhouse Football Team Drops Incredible Hype Video For Legendary Rivalry Game
Montana State brought its fastball for the team’s Brawl of the Wild hype video.
The Bobcats will take the field Saturday against the Montana Grizzlies in the latest installment of one of the greatest rivalries in all of sports.
Fans of the Bobcats and Grizzlies hate each other. They’re the only two major schools in the state, and both are FCS powerhouses.
The bitterness runs deep between the fans, and once a year, they come together on the gridiron to earn bragging rights for a year.
Montana State drops epic hype video for Brawl of the Wild against Montana.
If you’re going to play in a monster college football game, then you need a great hype video to get the fans juiced up.
Well, the Bobcats brought their A-game with a hype video featuring Journey’s classic hit song “Separate Ways (Worlds Apart).”
Smash the play button below, and then hit me with your reactions at David.Hookstead@outkick.com.
That video goes insanely hard. That’s one of the best hype videos I’ve seen all season long, and I’m not at all surprised that it’s for the Brawl of the Wild.
The 11-0 Bobcats battling it out with the 8-3 Grizzlies is exactly what fans want to see in the final game of the regular season, and the stakes couldn’t be higher.
MSU is looking to go undefeated. Montana is looking to play spoiler and improve their position for the FCS playoffs.
This is what it’s all about, and do not sleep on the Brawl of the Wild simply because it’s FCS action. As someone who used to live in Bozeman, I can tell you that the environment will be nuts Saturday and the city and Bobcat Stadium will be rocking.
You can catch the game at 2:00 EST on ESPN+. It should be one of the best of the weekend. Let me know your thoughts on the Brawl of the Wild at David.Hookstead@outkick.com.
Montana
'Montana Bar Fairies' expanding to Bozeman starting Cat-Griz weekend as Gallatin County DUIs increase
BOZEMAN — People in downtown Bozeman who choose not to drink and drive after a night out will soon see fairies giving them a gift to thank them for their good choices.
“Montana Bar Fairies is a nonprofit that my daughter and I started because my son was killed by a drunk driver in the Flathead, on March 23rd, after celebrating his 21st birthday,” says Beth McBride.
Bobby Dewbre was set to graduate from Flathead Valley Community College with a welding certificate before he was hit by a drunk driver while waiting for his sober ride.
To ensure no other family experiences the grief they do, Beth McBride and her daughter Carli Dewbre decided to start Montana Bar Fairies.
“My daughter drove by a bar early in the morning on her way to work and she saw some cars in the parking lot. And she called me up and she said, ‘Mom I wish there was a way that we could thank people for not drinking and driving, for leaving their cars,’” McBride recalls.
The nonprofit began in Kalispell almost a year ago, but an increase in DUI-related accidents in Gallatin County brought the Bar Fairies to Bozeman.
“There seems to be a desire for the community here to say, ‘You know what? We’re done.’ It’s over. We’re not accepting drunk driving anymore. It’s time to save lives,” says McBride.
According to the Gallatin County DUI Task Force, Gallatin County consistently ranks in the top five most dangerous counties in Montana for impaired driving—with Bozeman Police issuing a majority of all DUIs in the county.
Bozeman’s Bar Fairies chapter director and MSU student, Patricia Hinchey, says there’s no better time to start their work in Bozeman than the weekend of Cat-Griz.
“Sunday morning, we’re going to be going really early and placing coffee cards on cars, around downtown, in the parking lots, along the streets. And so, if you’re lucky, you might get a coffee card thanking you for not drinking and driving after the Cat-Griz game,” Hinchey says.
Included with each coffee card is a card with a story of someone who lost their life to a drunk driver. Patricia says they’re looking for Bozeman families willing to share their story, as well as more volunteers.
“We want to take Montana from the worst state for DUI fatalities to zero. And we need the community’s help to do that,” says McBride.
Contact Hinchey for help with Bozeman’s chapter at Patricia@montanabarfairies.org
Learn more about Montana Bar Fairies at their website.
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