I wrote this email to three ACLU staff I admire:
You are among those people in ACLU whom I
greatly admire. Therefore, I’d like to
offer this constructive feedback. There
is no need for you to respond to me.
I understand why ACLU chooses to support
transgender athletes. Disagreeing with ACLU on that issue does not
undermine my interest in donating to ACLU.
But ACLU’s lies about the issue do cause me
to consider discontinuing donations to ACLU.
In the message below, ACLU wrote: “the Court has allowed transphobic politicians to ban
trans girls from participating in school sports”. Other sources accurately reported that the Court banned trans girls from participating
in girls’ sports. They can still participate in boys’ sports. Similarly,
the ACLU wrote: “"Trans children shouldn't be denied the benefits of
teamwork and dedication because of who they are." The ACLU is
free to explain why it feels the alternative of competing in sports based on
birth gender is inadequate,
but lying is unacceptable.
It is also wrong to suggest
that people
who disagree with the ACLU on this issue are “transphobic”. I think “transphobic” was used
to trigger an emotional reaction painting people who disagree with this ACLU
position as reprehensible.
You might say the message technically labels only the politicians as
transphobic. But clearly it is wrong to paint all politicians who
support banning trans girls from girls’ sports as transphobic. I think if
someone wants to change their gender, they should be allowed to do so, with
appropriate safeguards. But if politicians who oppose trans girls
in girls’ sports are “transphobic” in your eyes, then I must be “transphobic”
in your eyes also.
ACLU says “We should be
removing barriers for girls and women in sports … not creating new ones.”
That is at best misleading. Most people in the country believe that the court DID remove a barrier. If ACLU feels that people born male don’t have
advantages in sports, why doesn’t it argue that no sports should be segregated
by gender?
In the past, ACLU insisted that
everyone benefits from allowing trans girls to participate in girls’ sports, which is patently false. Girls who lose
championships to trans girls are harmed.
Girls who lose scholarships as a result are harmed. Girls who are injured by trans girls or who
injure themselves by over-training in an attempt to compete with trans girls are
harmed. I understand that you might feel
such results are acceptable because of the benefits you see in allowing trans girls
to compete in girls’ sports. You should
acknowledge the point honestly and discuss the offsets. If you prefer, you could ignore this point,
but ACLU should publicly retract such lies.
I haven’t seen that statement recently, but
I don’t know if ACLU has decided to retire it
permanently.
ACLU writes “transgender
girls – who've asked for nothing more than the same opportunities afforded to
their peers.” Of course, the fundamental disagreement is “who are their
peers when it comes to sports”. ACLU is so disrespectful regarding the
attitudes of other people, disingenuously stating as a fact what is simply ACLU’s opinion.
When I see such communication, I’m ashamed to have supported ACLU. Again, not because of ACLU’s position supporting allowing trans girls to play in girls’ sports, but because of ACLU’s lies, misrepresentations, divisive tactics, and disrespect for opposing viewpoints.
From: ACLU <aclu@aclu.org>
Sent: Wednesday, July 1, 2026 8:34 AM
To: claude.thau@gmail.com
Subject: The Supreme Court ruled against trans kids
Trans children shouldn't be denied the benefits of
teamwork and dedication because of who they are.
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Claude,
the Supreme Court issued a heartbreaking ruling yesterday against transgender
girls – who've asked for nothing more than the same opportunities afforded to
their peers. By ruling
against our clients, the Court has allowed transphobic politicians to ban
trans girls from participating in school sports, keeping these kids from
playing with their friends simply because of who they are. We
should be removing barriers for girls and women in sports – like unequal pay
and harassment – not creating new ones. The handful of children
targeted by this ruling deserve to be treated with the same respect and
dignity as anyone else. However, the
fight is not over. Notably, the Court did not grant what we know the
politicians driving this issue wanted from the start – a broad precedent
restricting the freedom of all transgender people in our schools, workplaces,
and communities. They chose not to broaden the harm of this ruling to other
rights and contexts. We're already
preparing for what's next. We've been fighting a wave of anti-trans
legislation for years – and the politicians who wanted even more from the
Court will certainly introduce more sweeping attacks on our rights. In the
meantime, we're calling on Congress to pass the No Place for LGBTQ+ Hate Act
– a critical piece of legislation that would block the president from using
federal funds to carry out discriminatory, unconstitutional anti-trans
executive orders.
We cannot and
will not go backward. Thank you for staying with us in the fight for our
freedom. The
ACLU Team P.S. RSVP
to join us Tuesday, July 7, 5 – 6 p.m., at the ACLU Town Hall: Inside the Supreme
Court Term where we'll discuss this case and other major
civil liberties rulings of this term. The event will stream live on YouTube. |