Transgender Teen Defends Trans Student-athletes on Capitol Hill
The Washington Post reports on Stella Keating, a 16-year-old transgender high school student from Tacoma, Wash, who addressed the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee during the Equality Act hearing

writes:
Keating was testifying in support of sweeping legislation, decades in the making, that would ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. The Equality Act would amend federal civil rights laws to ensure protections for LGBTQ Americans in employment, education, housing, credit, jury service and other areas. It is a top legislative priority for President Biden, who called the bill “a critical step toward ensuring that America lives up to our foundational values of equality and freedom for all.”
[Keating] talked about how she was beginning to look at colleges, and how all she could think about was the fact that fewer than half of the states provide equal protection for transgender people like her under the law.
“What happens if I want to attend a college in a state that doesn’t protect me? Right now, I could be denied medical care or be evicted for simply being transgender in many states. How is that even right? How is that even American?” she said.
“What if I’m offered a dream job in a state where I can be discriminated against? Even if my employer is supportive, I still have to live somewhere. I have to eat in restaurants, and I have to have a doctor. And why am I having to worry about all of this at the age of 16?”
See also The GenderCool Project, where young champions help people understand that transgender and non-binary kids are just like all other kids.
In the video below Stella Keating joins MSNBC’s Tiffany Cross to discuss her impact.
Here’s her full Congress testimony:
Photo by Jessica Uhler from 2018 Teen Vogue.
Video Clip from HRC.

















