With North Carolina, the NBA, and the NCAA Caving on Trans Rights, Texas Finds New Momentum for Discrimination

This post originally appeared on the ACLU National website

By By Chase Strangio, Staff Attorney, ACLU

Trans Protester

Lawmakers Horse-Trade Away Texans’ Health and Safety

In the backrooms of the Texas Capitol last week, members of the House of Representatives further chipped away Texans’ access to reproductive health care by voting to defund Planned Parenthood. Denying healthcare to thousands of Texans who depend on these services is bad enough, but the outrage shouldn’t end there. Worse still, the deal was struck in a seeming attempt to divide those who care about justice. Lawmakers tried to trade one wrong for another: defund Planned Parenthood or make it impossible for transgender Texans to participate in everyday life by barring them from the public restroom that corresponds to their gender identity.

By Lauryn Farris and Rebecca Marques

Texas Capitol building

Her reporting in Mexico could get her killed but she does it anyway. She has to. Here’s why.

More from ACLU of Texas’ Humans of the Border. An interview with a Mexican journalist who asked that her name not be used.

By Debbie Nathan

Journalist on the Texas/Mexico border

And You Thought The Bathroom Bill Was Bad

SB6 gets all the media attention, but it’s only the tip of the spear in Texas lawmakers’ sustained campaign to roll back LGBT equality.SB6 is a terrible bill. A spiteful, unnecessary, unenforceable piece of legislation the sole intent of which is to force transgender Texans to disappear from public spaces and public life. A similar bill cost North Carolina NCAA Tournament venues and $3.76 billion in lost business, and Texas should not expect to fare any better. The problem SB6 is meant to solve simply does not exist, but the solution it proposes would harm transgender Texans, Texas’s economy and Texas’s reputation as a warm and welcoming state.

By Mark Humphries

rainbow flag in blue skies

Immigrants versus Alt-Facts in South Texas

They used the bathroom at a ball game and got arrested. The community asked why. Turns out they’d been spied on by a government camera. But the Border Patrol told a different story.

By Debbie Nathan

Border patrol with mother and son at La Joya baseball game

Top 5 Reasons for Texas Lawmakers to Raise the Age of Criminal Responsibility

In Texas, adulthood usually means 18. Seventeen year olds cannot vote, serve in the military, or buy lottery tickets. There is an exception, though: kids are automatically charged, jailed, and imprisoned as adults the day they turn 17, even for the most minor, nonviolent offenses.

By Nick Hudson

Prison bars in the shape of the state of Texas

Humans of the Border: Gabriel Sanchez

A beginner drag queen discovers that in South Texas, queer history and family history can be one and the same

By Debbie Nathan

humans of the border

Texas Legislature Cheat Sheet

Step 1: Find out who represents you

Texas Capitol building

A Private Prison Already Failed Willacy County. And Now They Want it Back?

Ten years ago, Willacy County officials made a catastrophic mistake. And they’re about to make it again.

By Astrid Dominguez

Tent City