Anger At The Collapse Of Scientific Reason.
There is something profoundly broken in our public discourse when basic, long-established science is treated as a negotiable suggestion rather than a foundation. Law does not float in a philosophical vacuum. It relies on objective reality to function. When legal reasoning refuses to acknowledge the biological characteristics that define men, women, and the rare but real category of intersex (non-binary), it stops being law and becomes ideological theater.
This is not cruelty. It is not hatred. It is reality.
Biology Is Not A Political Opinion
Human reproduction is not a social construct. Men, by biological definition, do not become pregnant. Women, by biological definition, are the sex capable of gestation. This is not a belief system. It is a scientific axiom supported by anatomy, genetics, and physiology. Exceptions caused by medical intervention or abnormalities do not erase the rule; they prove it.
When lawmakers and activists cannot answer a simple question like, “Can a man become pregnant?” without spiraling into evasive wordplay, the problem is not complexity. The problem is denial. A legal system that cannot speak plainly about biological facts cannot enforce coherent laws.
Absurdity Is Not Equality
The push to redefine legal categories based on subjective self-identification rather than objective characteristics invites absurdity. If self-perception alone is sufficient to override reality, there is no logical stopping point. Reductio ad absurdum is not mockery; it is a stress test. A claim that collapses under basic logic was never stable to begin with. Perhaps the question should be, “If a man self-identifies as a car, does he have the legal right to demand oil changes be covered by healthcare insurance?”
Personal identity is a private matter. Law is not.
Freedom Does Not Mean Compelled Belief
You may see yourself however you wish. Others may choose to affirm that view socially. What crosses the line is legislation that compels citizens—under threat of legal penalty—to affirm beliefs they do not hold or statements they know to be untrue. That is not tolerance. That is coerced speech.
The law exists to guarantee equal treatment, not preferential treatment based on ever-expanding identity classifications. Historical injustice does not justify a permanent legal imbalance.
Division As A Political Strategy
Exploiting race, sex, or sexuality to fracture society into controllable blocs is intellectually lazy and morally corrosive. When ideology replaces biology and grievance replaces reason, the result is not justice—it is manipulation. Dividing people into categories of victim and enforcer is not progress. It is power politics dressed up as compassion.
Bottom Line
A legal system that abandons scientific reality abandons legitimacy. You cannot build fair laws on fiction, enforce equality through coercion, or sustain a society that treats objective truth as optional. Biology is not bigotry, and reality does not need legislative approval.
We are so screwed.
— Steve
During recent Supreme Court oral arguments in Little v. Hecox, Justice Alito questioned attorney Kathleen Hartnett on the definition of “sex” for equal protection, asking how courts can determine discrimination without a clear definition.
MS. HARTNETT: Sorry, I misunderstood your question. I think that the underlying enactment, whatever it was, the policy, the law, the — would have to — we’d have to have an understanding of how the state or the government was understanding that term to figure out whether or not someone was excluded.
We do not have a definition for the Court. And we don’t take issue with the — we’re not disputing the definition here. What we’re saying is that the way it applies in practice is to exclude birth-sex males categorically from women’s teams and that there’s a subset of those birth-sex males where it doesn’t make sense to do so according to the state’s own interest.
JUSTICE ALITO: Well, how can you — how can a court determine whether there’s discrimination on the basis of sex without knowing what sex means for equal protection purposes?
MS. HARTNETT: I think, here, we just know — we — we — we basically know that the — that they’ve identified pursuant to their own statute that Lindsay qualifies as a birth-sex male and she’s being excluded categorically from the women’s teams as the statute — so we’re taking the statute’s definitions as we find them and we don’t dispute them. We’re just trying to figure out, do they create an equal protection problem?