When the Politicians Are in Your Pants
When the Politicians Are in Your Pants
You know how it is when you've tried to access medical care, make sure your kid isn't being harassed at school, get a prescription filled, or even just keep track of your “monthly visitor,” and you find it unsafe, difficult, or impossible to do because the politicians are in your pants? If not, consider yourself lucky, and then gird those tender loins because they're probably coming for you, too, not too far down the road.Here's where and how they're sniffing around our collective parts lately...Last week, Virginia Republicans blocked a bipartisan bill that would have protected menstrual tracker app data from being made available to police and the courts via subpoena. After Roe v. Wade was overturned last year, rights advocates worried that people who track their cycles using smartphone apps like MyFLO, Eve, or Ovia could be surveilled by law enforcement and prosecuted if irregularities indicated they might have illegally terminated a pregnancy.Maggie Cleary, Virginia's deputy secretary of public safety and homeland security, explained that while the Administration “understands the importance of individuals’ privacy,” they oppose the bill because it would be the first bill that she knew of (anywhere!) that would “set a limit on what search warrants can do” (because if there's anything that says “small government” and “freedom,” it's making sure that Big Brother can check to see if you're bleeding regularly.) It's worth remembering, even if Cleary doesn't, that HIPAA (The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996) sets some limits on health information that can be disclosed by covered providers under subpoena (for example, certain privacy and notification qualifications must be met), but it doesn't protect health data collected by typical menstrual tracker apps. Virginia politicians are in your pants, checkin' your flow.Over in South Dakota, Republican Governor Kristi Noem signed a bill into law a week ago which not only prevents doctors from prescribing puberty blockers or hormone therapy after July 1st for minors experiencing gender dysphoria, but also requires doctors currently treating trans youth to gradually reduce treatment and de-transition the minors in their care by the end of the year. Noem isn't alone, though. Republicans have introduced legislation in nearly half the fifty states that would ban trans youth from accessing treatment, and governors in six states have signed trans-restrictive bills into law (some of which are pending judicial review).Why do these politicians care so much about what your kid's bits look like?
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis in 2021. Photo by Gage Skidmore, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. Image has been cropped. CC BY-SA 2.0
Sources:
Virginia Republicans reject menstrual app privacy bill
Youngkin blocks bill keeping menstrual histories private from law enforcement
Court Orders and Subpoenas
No, health data from most period-tracking apps is not protected under HIPAA
Kristi Noem signs bill forcing trans kids to de-transition then flies to D.C. to stir up 2024 chatter
U.S. Republicans target transgender youth healthcare in legislative push
Haley says DeSantis didn’t go ‘far enough’ with ‘Don’t Say Gay’
Judge tosses challenge to Florida's 'Don't Say Gay' law
Ron DeSantis requested the information of trans students who sought care at Florida's public universities. Now students are planning a statewide walkout.
DeSantis threatens to revoke licenses of doctors who perform teen trans surgery
Upset by military ‘wokeness,’ Rubio proposes bill to ban many trans people from serving
US Military Faces Biggest Recruiting Hurdles in 50 Years
Let's talk about hypersonic tech and masculine militaries....
Texas attorney general sought data on gender changes to state IDs
Wyoming GOP defends child marriage while claiming it’s trans rights that harm children
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.