Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Gay Alabama Lawmaker Tears GOP Colleagues To Shreds For Passing Anti-Trans Law In Blistering Speech

Gay Alabama Lawmaker Tears GOP Colleagues To Shreds For Passing Anti-Trans Law In Blistering Speech
Rep. Neil Rafferty/Facebook

Alabama Democratic legislator Neil Rafferty drew accolades after delivering a blistering speech to his Republican colleagues after they passed a raft of transphobic bills in the state.

Within days of each other, the Alabama legislature passed an anti-trans bathroom bill and a version of Florida's so-called "Don't Say Gay" bill that is even more restrictive than the one recently signed by Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis.


But it was the third bill the Republican legislature passed that ignited Rafferty's ire—one that criminalizes gender-affirming healthcare for transgender people and punishes doctors who provide it with jail time.

Rafferty, who is gay, laid into his colleagues, attacking their ignorance on how transgender healthcare works and their focus on invading trans people's privacy.

Hear his comments below.

In his speech, Rafferty first spoke of his colleagues' obsession with attacking transgender children, which has become the all-consuming focus of Republican politicians all over the country despite scores of other more pressing problems.

“I don’t know how this became a platform issue for y’all."
“I don’t know where it became a central core issue to pick on these kids, to pick on these families... or why y’all think that this is something that we need to vote on—not just vote on, but put off the top of the calendar like it’s a priority.”

Rafferty then laid bare an overwhelmingly common dynamic among right-wing politicians attacking transgender rights—their fundamental misunderstanding of how medical providers treat transgender patients.

“It’s a priority for us to be getting involved in private family medical decisions that are made with a team of healthcare providers... [and] mental health professionals who are guiding them through this process?”
"You want to think you’re just going to a doc-in-a-box or willy-nilly, just getting prescribed this stuff because somebody just said, hey, this is it.”
"That’s not how being transgender works.”

Whether willful or not, Republican politicians repeatedly show a total ignorance of transgender healthcare.

Transitioning is a painstaking process that requires extensive consultation with both doctors and psychotherapists, often over the course of years.

And Republicans' claims they are passing these bills in order to protect children from potentially damaging medical interventions are based on total fallacies.

Surgical interventions on children are illegal, and treatments like hormone therapy and puberty blockers are rarely administered to patients under the age of 16 and are entirely reversible if they are.

Much like the right's legislative obsession with Critical Race Theory in schools, the right's raft of anti-trans legislation tackles problems that do not exist, leading many to accuse the party of simply trying to terrorize transgender people with invasive laws.

Rafferty went on to address this, too, by relating it to his own experience as a gay man.

“Trust me, if I didn’t have to be gay, I wouldn’t be. You know how much easier my freaking life would be? This is personal y’all.”
“I’m trying to appeal to you that this is not small government. This is invasive.”

He then concluded with a directive to his colleagues.

“Just don’t you dare call me a friend after this,”

On Twitter, people applauded Rafferty and joined him in his criticisms of the GOP.








The bill to criminalize transgender healthcare was signed into law by Alabama Republican Governor Kay Ivey.

LGBTQ+ and civil rights advocacy groups have vowed to challenge it in court.

More from Trending

NBC Chicago

Scientists Just Uncovered The Surprising Truth About Chicago's Infamous 'Rat Hole'

Every major city has a truly iconic building or landmark that tourists flock to so they can leave with a photo of themselves in front of it.

New York has the Empire State Building, London has Big Ben, and Paris has the Eiffel Tower.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from Donald Trump's AI-generated feces video
@realDonaldTrump/Truth Social

Trump Slammed After Sharing Bonkers AI Video Of Himself Dumping Feces On 'No Kings' Protesters

President Donald Trump was criticized after he took to Truth Social to share a bizarre AI-generated video of himself dumping poop on crowds of demonstrators from a fighter jet after a reported 7 million Americans turned out for "No Kings" protests around the country.

The video depicts Trump wearing a crown and flying a fighter jet emblazoned with the words “King Trump.” Set to Kenny Loggins’ “Danger Zone,” the doctored clip shows him releasing a massive load of feces onto protesters gathered in New York City’s Times Square.

Keep ReadingShow less
Shannon Kobylarczyk
@DailyLoud/X

Brewers Fan Loses Both Her Jobs After Threatening To 'Call ICE' On Latino Dodgers Fan

Well, well, well, if it isn't the consequences of her own actions...

A Milwaukee Brewers fan has found herself fired following the racist harassment she hurled at a fellow baseball fan at a recent game.

Keep ReadingShow less
two men in front of NYC skyline
The Good Brigade/Getty Images

MAGA Influencer Dragged After Claiming That Only 'Single Gay Males' Live In Cities

Will Chamberlain, a MAGA minion who works for a Republican-aligned legal group, claimed suburban living is where all the good families live, rather than cities.

While that notion has been around since redlining and "White flight," Chamberlain's "those people" aren't BIPOC. No, Chamberlain's claim revolved around something else that seems to often makes conservatives squirm—or, at least, closeted conservatives. He claimed cities are full of...gay men.

Keep ReadingShow less
Tucker Carlson
Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images

Tucker Carlson Turns Heads After Claiming Members Of Congress Are Having All Kinds Of 'Orgies'

Far-right provocateur Tucker Carlson weirded people out after he, in conversation with Tennessee Republican Representative Tim Burchett, alleged that members of Congress engage in group sex far more often than most Americans would imagine.

Speaking on the October 10 episode of his eponymous podcast, Carlson said he thinks “people’s personal lives are getting weirder in Congress.” In fact, he said that "some people that members of Congress are sleeping with, either legally or not, are employed by forces that want to control members of Congress."

Keep ReadingShow less