Yes, Trans Exhibitionists Showing Their Junk To Kids Is Directly Downstream Of Redefining Marriage

Indulging and endorsing falsehoods about the nature of marriage and sex only leads to more lies and more injuries.

Though Not Victorious, The Christian Right’s Consistent Resistance To Child Sexualization Has Been Vindicated

Though Christian belief and community are not necessary for morality and human flourishing, they are often essential to helping people live by them.

Don’t Give Up On Conservatism

Conservatism is already counter-revolutionary. We don’t need to abandon the name just because some grifters and pundits have abandoned the substance.

Social conservatives strongly praise new Fairness in Women's Sports bill proposed by Gov. Kristi Noem



South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem (R) has released the draft text of a new version of the "Fairness in Women's Sports" legislation she rejected earlier this year. The new bill, which was sent to reporters Tuesday, would prohibit any student at a state school from joining a sports team that does not match his or her biological sex.

“This is about fairness. Every young woman deserves an equal playing field where she can achieve success, but common sense tells us that males have an unfair physical advantage over females in athletic competition. It is for those reasons that only girls should be competing in girls’ sports,” Noem said. “Women have fought long and hard for equal athletic opportunities, and South Dakota will defend them, but we have to do it in a smart way.”

Controversy erupted last March when Noem opposed a previous version of this legislation, H.B. 1217, on the grounds that the way the state House bill was written was "unrealistic in the context of collegiate sports." At the time, the governor argued that flaws in the bill's design would make South Dakota vulnerable to litigation from out of state organizations like the NCAA.

Social conservative groups that backed H.B. 1217 accused Noem of betrayal and of gutting the bill when she issued a "style and form" revision of the legislation and sent it back to the state legislature with changes. The legislature ultimately rejected Noem's changes, and she vetoed the bill.

In its place, Noem issued two executive orders on Mar. 29 designed to keep gender dysphoric males from competing against girls at the K-12 and collegiate level. The new legislation proposed by Noem would codify her executive orders.

“Only female athletes, based on their biological sex, shall participate in any team, sport, or athletic event designated as being for females, women, or girls,” the draft text says. Noem's proposal defines “biological sex” as “the sex listed on the student's official birth certificate issued at or near the time of the athlete’s birth.”

The bill would also give any athlete that "suffers direct or indirect harm" as a result of a school that violates the law the right to take legal action for relief.

“This legislation does not have the problematic provisions that were included in last year’s House Bill 1217,” the governor said. "Those flawed provisions would have led to litigation for our state, as well as for the families of young South Dakota athletes – male and female alike.”

The new transgender sports bill appears to be winning over at least some of Noem's conservative critics.

"No exaggeration: It's probably the strongest bill I've seen to date. Especially with the birth certificate stuff and the private causes of action," Jon Schweppe, the director of Policy and Government Affairs for the American Principles Project, said.

In a statement, APP President Terry Schilling, who had sharply criticized Noem for opposing H.B. 1217, praised her new proposal as well.

"We're pleased that Gov. Noem is finally taking action in South Dakota to adequately protect female athletes. Our initial impression of her proposed legislation is that it is a strong measure to defend the integrity of women's sports from K-12 to college. We encourage state lawmakers to support it and officially make South Dakota the tenth state to enshrine protections for women's sports into law," Schilling said.

He added that it was "unfortunate" Noem waited nine months after the issue first came up in the South Dakota legislature to release this proposal, criticizing her executive orders as "toothless."

"Although it's good to see her correcting her mistake, she missed a golden opportunity to show leadership on this issue. We hope she will learn from this experience and choose to stand up to woke business interests and leftist institutions the next time a similar fight arises. She still has much work to do to gain back conservatives' trust," Schilling said.

The Death Of Marriage Proves Yet Again That Social Conservatives Were Right

Leftist changes to our understanding of marriage naturally make it seem less important, and unworthy of special status or consideration.

Mike Pence booed and called 'traitor' at Faith & Freedom Coalition conference



Former Vice President Mike Pence was greeted Friday with boos and shouts of "traitor!" as he began an address to a group of social conservative activists in Kissimmee, Florida.

Pence talked over the boos, which came from a minority of the audience at a conference hosted by the Faith and Freedom Coalition. There were also loud cheers and applause when he began his speech and when he delivered his signature line: "I'm a Christian, a conservative, and a Republican, in that order."

Pence gets drowned out by hecklers at the Faith & Freedom Coalition summit, some of whom appear to be chanting "tra… https://t.co/Exan1ojWxQ

— Andrew Solender (@AndrewSolender) 1624034568.0

Pence was the final speaker to address the evangelical activist voters Friday morning, following other Republican officials including Sens. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), Rick Scott (R-Fla.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), and Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.). Socially conservative Christians represent a significant voting bloc in the Republican Party.

According to the Tampa Bay Times, none of the other speakers were heckled by the crowd, which consisted of hundreds of the Republican Party's activist evangelical voters. But dozens of attendees left the room as Pence approached the podium to speak. The hecklers were quickly removed from the audience by security.

The accusation of "traitor" hurled at Pence is a reference to the former vice president's refusal to obey former President Donald Trump's demands to unconstitutionally block the certification of the 2020 presidential election results for President Joe Biden as he presided over a joint session of Congress.

Trump had pressured Pence to discount certain Electoral College votes from states where he contested the election results, claiming widespread fraud had rigged the election for Biden. Pence had refused to do so. In a statement to Congress, the former vice president explained that he did not have the constitutional authority to "determine which electoral votes should be counted and which should not."

On Jan. 6, after it became clear that Pence would not stop the certification of the election results for Biden, a mob of President Donald Trump's supporters marched on the U.S. Capitol building and then trespassed inside in an attempt to interrupt the joint session of Congress. Violence broke out, and several Capitol Police officers were assaulted and severely injured by rioters who ransacked government offices and stole government property. One of the Trump supporters, Ashli Babbitt, was shot to death by a USCP officer who remains unidentified.

Some of the rioters made calls to "hang Mike Pence" for betraying Trump.

After the hecklers were removed from the Faith & Freedom Coalition event, Pence finished his speech, praising the Trump administration's accomplishments over the previous four years including funding the development of several COVID-19 vaccines and protecting religious liberty. He strongly criticized the Biden administration on several points, claiming Biden is insufficiently supporting Israel and weak on the immigration issue.

"When I was vice president, I visited the southern border," said Pence, taking a veiled shot at Vice President Kamala Harris, who has not yet visited the southern border since being appointed by Biden to handle the ongoing immigration crisis.

Pence is widely assumed to have presidential ambitions in 2024, should Trump decide against running again. Though a significant portion of Trump's supporters regard Pence with hostility after the events on Jan. 6, a poll conducted in March that asked Republican voters who they would support in 2024 if Trump does not run had Pence leading the prospective GOP field with 19% support, followed by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis at 17%.